The Family as Black Nationalism: Cosmopolitan Archetypes in Black Popular Township Television Films

N. Selekane
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Abstract

The apartheid regime conspired to advance black ethnic divisions to facilitate the homelands and diminish the threat of black people to South Africa. From 1994, the democratic dispensation has engaged in various nation-building attempts to solidify a united South Africa that is multicultural and multilingual in conjunction with a progressive Constitution. Popular township films by Ekasi: Our Stories and Lokshin Bioskop have ventured into this arena which was the forte of the South African Broadcasting Corporation, to engage in storylines that encourage nation-building. In this article, I argue that popular films have emerged to represent cosmopolitan tropes that galvanise Black Nationalism. Also, the films engage negative black tribal stereotypes that, if not attended to, could result in black disunity. It can also be argued that the latter has been a stimulant for African conflicts, occasionally causing genocides. This article explores the role popular films play in conveying a nation-building narrative that sustains Black Nationalism and reconciliation in post-apartheid South Africa.
作为黑人民族主义的家庭:黑人流行乡镇电视电影中的世界主义原型
种族隔离政权密谋推动黑人种族分裂,以促进家园建设,减少黑人对南非的威胁。自1994年以来,民主体制进行了各种国家建设努力,以巩固一个多元文化和多种语言的统一的南非,并结合一部进步的宪法。Ekasi的流行乡镇电影:我们的故事和Lokshin Bioskop冒险进入这个南非广播公司的强项领域,参与鼓励国家建设的故事情节。在这篇文章中,我认为流行电影的出现代表了激发黑人民族主义的世界主义修辞。此外,这些电影涉及负面的黑人部落刻板印象,如果不加以注意,可能会导致黑人不团结。也可以说,后者一直是非洲冲突的兴奋剂,偶尔导致种族灭绝。本文探讨了流行电影在传达国家建设叙事中所起的作用,这种叙事在种族隔离后的南非维持了黑人民族主义和和解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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