The Ghost in the House: Women, Race, and Domesticity in South Africa

被引:12
作者
Baderoon, Gabeba [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Penn State Univ, Womens Studies, State Coll, PA 16801 USA
[2] Penn State Univ, African Studies, State Coll, PA 16801 USA
关键词
Domestic workers; domesticity; maid; madam; South Africa; apartheid; slavery; intimacy; performance; visual art; black women; white women; race; autobiography; production; Zoe Wicomb; Playing in the Light; Helene Cixous; Reveries of the Wild Woman; Zanele Muholi; Mary Sibande; photography; sculpture; post-apartheid; ghost-writing; house; subjectivity; 'DRACULA';
D O I
10.1017/pli.2014.17
中图分类号
I0 [文学理论];
学科分类号
0501 ; 050101 ;
摘要
In South Africa, the house is a haunted place. Apartheid's separate publics also required separate private lives and separate leisures in which to practice ways of living apartheid's ideological partitions into reality. This essay analyzes the compulsive interest in black domesticity that has characterized South Africa since the colonial period and shows that domestic labor in white homes has historically shaped the entry of black women into public space in South Africa. In fact, so strong is the latter association that the Dictionary of South African English on Historical Principles reveals that in South African English the word maid denotes both "black woman" and "servant." This conflation has generated fraught relations of domesticity, race, and subjectivity in South Africa. Contemporary art about domestic labor by Zanele Muholi and Mary Sibande engages with this history. In their art, the house is a place of silences, ghosts, and secrets. Precursors to these recent works can be found in fiction, including Sindiwe Magona's short stories about domestic workers in her collection Living, Loving and Lying Awake at Night (1994) and Zoe Wicomb's novel Playing in the Light (2006), in which a woman passing for white allows her mother into her house only under the pretense that she is a family servant. Muholi and Sibande have engaged the legacy of black women in white households by revisiting the ghosts of the house through performance, sculpture, and photography. Both were inspired by the intimate reality of their mothers' experiences as domestic servants, and in both cases the artist's body is central to the pieces, through installations based on body casts, performance, embodied memories, and the themes of haunted absences, abandonment, and longing.
引用
收藏
页码:173 / 206
页数:34
相关论文
共 38 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1984, REPRESENTATIONS, V8, P130
[2]  
[Anonymous], IRISH J GOTHIC HORRO
[3]  
Arata Stephen D., 1990, VICTORIAN STUD, P635
[4]  
Ashcroft Bill, 1989, EMPIRE WRITES BACK T, P2
[5]  
Baderoon G., 2006, A 100 SILENCES, P63
[6]  
Carlyle Thomas., 1882, Reminiscences of My Irish Journey in 1849
[7]  
Cleary Joe, 2012, The Cambridge History of Post-colonial Literature, V1, P539
[8]  
Cleary Joe, 2006, OUTRAGEOUS FORTUNE C, P20
[9]  
Corbett Mary Jean, 2000, ALLEGORIES UNION IRI, P84
[10]  
Deane Samuel, 1790, NATL COLONIALISM LIT, P6