Gender-Based Violence (GBV) in South Africa: An Interdisciplinary Discourse Analysis of One Selected isiZulu and One Selected isiXhosa Literary Text

M. Diko
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Abstract

Gender-Based Violence (GBV) in South Africa is a post-colonial social ill. Women and young girls suffer double oppression in the country. First, they are oppressed for being women and young girls; and second, they are oppressed for being women and young girls of the lower class. This article aims to utilise one selected isiZulu and isiXhosa drama, respectively, to effectuate a meticulous examination of how and why GBV is a recurring pattern. The ultimate aim is to underline the unprejudiced reality that South African literature (isiZulu and isiXhosa, for example) engages contemporary social ills such as GBV, subordination of women and young girls, gender discrepancies, and neolithic stereotypes. African feminist technique is utilised as a conceptual framework to advance the said aims of the article. In the process, the qualitative research methodology is employed to describe and explain the nature of the data source. The discussions and findings demonstrate that although women and gender discourses research has been undertaken extensively, the fact that women and young girls continue to be tormented is enough to prove that there is a conundrum in South Africa and possibly, elsewhere.
南非的性别暴力:一篇伊祖鲁语和一篇伊祖萨语文学文本的跨学科话语分析
性别暴力(GBV)是南非后殖民时代的社会弊病。妇女和年轻女孩在这个国家遭受双重压迫。首先,她们因为身为妇女和年轻女孩而受到压迫;其次,她们因为是下层阶级的妇女和年轻女孩而受到压迫。这篇文章的目的是利用一个选择的isiZulu和isiXhosa戏剧,分别来实现一个细致的检查如何和为什么GBV是一个反复出现的模式。最终目的是强调南非文学(例如isiZulu和isiXhosa)涉及当代社会弊病的客观现实,如性别暴力、妇女和年轻女孩的从属地位、性别差异和新石器时代的刻板印象。非洲女权主义技术被用作一个概念框架,以推进文章的上述目标。在此过程中,采用定性研究方法来描述和解释数据源的性质。讨论和调查结果表明,虽然对妇女和性别问题进行了广泛的研究,但妇女和年轻女孩继续受到折磨这一事实足以证明,在南非和可能在其他地方都存在一个难题。
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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