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Democracy at Home in South Africa: Family Fictions and Transitional Culture

Part of the Gender and Cultural Studies in Africa and the Diaspora series
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Since its liberation in 1994, South Africa has been an object of world attention, as an example of how to end conflict without bloodshed and how to create a constitutional regime based on universal human rights - as well as an example of how these dreams can falter when faced with the realities of "freedom" in the neo-liberal world order.

Focusing on aesthetic figuration - novels, performance, photography, visual art installations - of diverse home spaces, modes of domestic life, and family histories, Bystrom argues that writers and artists depicting the first fifteen years of democracy as they unfold literally at home present a compelling portrait of intimate and everyday aspects of political change.

They reveal the challenges of the democratic transition and point to unexpected futures.

Further, by enacting a form of intimate politics, Bystrom contends, they position private life at the heart of public culture.

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£44.99
Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
1137556927 / 9781137556929
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
05/11/2015
England
English
193 pages
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