As the body must appear: contemporary performances in post-Marikana South Africa

On the 16th of August 2012 34 Lonmin miners lost their lives at Marikana in South Africa. Marikana bears witness to the socio-economic inequality and precarious work and living conditions in South Africa’s new globalized state. Two site-specific contemporary performances Mari and Kana (2015) and Iqh...

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Main Authors: Sofie De Smet, Marieke Breyne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Gents Afrika Platform, Afrika Brug 2017-02-01
Series:Afrika Focus
Online Access:https://ojs.ugent.be/AF/article/view/5412
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spelling doaj-1d21614d1e3a4af59cb736ee9e277c732020-11-24T22:04:09ZengGents Afrika Platform, Afrika BrugAfrika Focus0772-084X0772-084X2017-02-0130110.21825/af.v30i1.54125412As the body must appear: contemporary performances in post-Marikana South AfricaSofie De Smet0Marieke Breyne1Faculty of Arts and Philosophy Ghent UniversityFaculty of Arts and Philosophy Ghent UniversityOn the 16th of August 2012 34 Lonmin miners lost their lives at Marikana in South Africa. Marikana bears witness to the socio-economic inequality and precarious work and living conditions in South Africa’s new globalized state. Two site-specific contemporary performances Mari and Kana (2015) and Iqhiya Emnyama (The black cloth, 2015) voice this sad event in a remarkable way. In this article we critically reflect on the performances’ avenues of creating transformative encounters between performers, spectators and the performance sites in South African society. Both performances invoke for the audience members a remarkable awareness of the performance site as the spectator is obliged to navigate him- or herself in a politically induced public landscape in Cape Town’s Company Garden. We concur that Mari and Kana and Iqhiya Emnyama both elicit a profound reflection on the daily life struggle of mourning women against inhumanity and socio-economic inequality in a neoliberal South Africa. Unsettling the dominant focus on resilient subjects, the omnipresence of women’s vulnerability in the two performances nurtures a rethinking process on structural justice. In doing so, we more closely analyse the performances’ intention to subvert the constructed category of ‘the mourning South African woman’ via multiple representations of mourning precedents as cultural elements. We conclude that both performances entail unique driving forces that question existing power systems that impact on SA and the problematic structural injustice at the heart of the massacre. Key words: Marikana, South Africa, Infecting the City, performance, gender inequality, neoliberalism, widowhoodhttps://ojs.ugent.be/AF/article/view/5412
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sofie De Smet
Marieke Breyne
spellingShingle Sofie De Smet
Marieke Breyne
As the body must appear: contemporary performances in post-Marikana South Africa
Afrika Focus
author_facet Sofie De Smet
Marieke Breyne
author_sort Sofie De Smet
title As the body must appear: contemporary performances in post-Marikana South Africa
title_short As the body must appear: contemporary performances in post-Marikana South Africa
title_full As the body must appear: contemporary performances in post-Marikana South Africa
title_fullStr As the body must appear: contemporary performances in post-Marikana South Africa
title_full_unstemmed As the body must appear: contemporary performances in post-Marikana South Africa
title_sort as the body must appear: contemporary performances in post-marikana south africa
publisher Gents Afrika Platform, Afrika Brug
series Afrika Focus
issn 0772-084X
0772-084X
publishDate 2017-02-01
description On the 16th of August 2012 34 Lonmin miners lost their lives at Marikana in South Africa. Marikana bears witness to the socio-economic inequality and precarious work and living conditions in South Africa’s new globalized state. Two site-specific contemporary performances Mari and Kana (2015) and Iqhiya Emnyama (The black cloth, 2015) voice this sad event in a remarkable way. In this article we critically reflect on the performances’ avenues of creating transformative encounters between performers, spectators and the performance sites in South African society. Both performances invoke for the audience members a remarkable awareness of the performance site as the spectator is obliged to navigate him- or herself in a politically induced public landscape in Cape Town’s Company Garden. We concur that Mari and Kana and Iqhiya Emnyama both elicit a profound reflection on the daily life struggle of mourning women against inhumanity and socio-economic inequality in a neoliberal South Africa. Unsettling the dominant focus on resilient subjects, the omnipresence of women’s vulnerability in the two performances nurtures a rethinking process on structural justice. In doing so, we more closely analyse the performances’ intention to subvert the constructed category of ‘the mourning South African woman’ via multiple representations of mourning precedents as cultural elements. We conclude that both performances entail unique driving forces that question existing power systems that impact on SA and the problematic structural injustice at the heart of the massacre. Key words: Marikana, South Africa, Infecting the City, performance, gender inequality, neoliberalism, widowhood
url https://ojs.ugent.be/AF/article/view/5412
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