Wounding apertures: violence, affect and photography during and after apartheid

Between March and September 2012 there have been sixteen instances of 'necklacing' in the townships just outside of Cape Town. This article argues for understanding these events in relation to the violence of apartheid. It approaches the question of the meanings of the persistence of neckl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kylie Thomas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Western Cape, Centre for Humanities Research and the History Department 2012-01-01
Series:Kronos
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0259-01902012000100010
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spelling doaj-2761c55ccf3a46a28508d928e9bf733e2020-11-24T20:56:17ZengUniversity of the Western Cape, Centre for Humanities Research and the History DepartmentKronos0259-01902012-01-01381204218Wounding apertures: violence, affect and photography during and after apartheidKylie ThomasBetween March and September 2012 there have been sixteen instances of 'necklacing' in the townships just outside of Cape Town. This article argues for understanding these events in relation to the violence of apartheid. It approaches the question of the meanings of the persistence of necklacing through an analysis of photographs of people who had been subject to vigilante violence in the 1980s. The article focuses on the work of Gille de Vlieg, a photographer who, during apartheid, was a member of the Black Sash and of the Afrapix photography collective. I read de Vlieg's photographs as a series of 'wounding apertures' that open a space for affective engagements with the violence of both the past and of the present. The importance of such engagements, the article argues, lies in what political philosopher Hannah Arendt has theorised as the constitutive relation between feeling, thinking and judging.http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0259-01902012000100010
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kylie Thomas
spellingShingle Kylie Thomas
Wounding apertures: violence, affect and photography during and after apartheid
Kronos
author_facet Kylie Thomas
author_sort Kylie Thomas
title Wounding apertures: violence, affect and photography during and after apartheid
title_short Wounding apertures: violence, affect and photography during and after apartheid
title_full Wounding apertures: violence, affect and photography during and after apartheid
title_fullStr Wounding apertures: violence, affect and photography during and after apartheid
title_full_unstemmed Wounding apertures: violence, affect and photography during and after apartheid
title_sort wounding apertures: violence, affect and photography during and after apartheid
publisher University of the Western Cape, Centre for Humanities Research and the History Department
series Kronos
issn 0259-0190
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Between March and September 2012 there have been sixteen instances of 'necklacing' in the townships just outside of Cape Town. This article argues for understanding these events in relation to the violence of apartheid. It approaches the question of the meanings of the persistence of necklacing through an analysis of photographs of people who had been subject to vigilante violence in the 1980s. The article focuses on the work of Gille de Vlieg, a photographer who, during apartheid, was a member of the Black Sash and of the Afrapix photography collective. I read de Vlieg's photographs as a series of 'wounding apertures' that open a space for affective engagements with the violence of both the past and of the present. The importance of such engagements, the article argues, lies in what political philosopher Hannah Arendt has theorised as the constitutive relation between feeling, thinking and judging.
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0259-01902012000100010
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