Zoë Wicomb’s three fictional works – You Can’t Get Lost in Cape Town (1987), David’s Story (2000) and Playing in the Light (2006) – all engage with the question of a South African ‘coloured’ identity both under apartheid with its racialised discourse of black and white, and in the context of the postapartheid language of multiculturalism andcreolisation. This essay examines the representation of ‘colouredness’ in Wicomb’s writing in terms of the two different conceptions of cultural identity that Stuart Hall has defined: an essential cultural identity based on a single, shared culture, and the recognition that cultural identity is based not only on points of similarity, but also on critical points of deep and significant difference and of s...
This thesis will interrogate the ways in which the most recent novels of Zoë Wicomb and Chimamanda N...
The 1990s saw significant political changes in countries like South African or Northern Ireland. Pri...
The literature of post-apartheid South Africa suggests that the atrocities of the past still linger ...
This article examines Zoë Wicomb’s wide-ranging use of intertextuality in the novel Playing in the L...
Zoë Wicomb’s novel Playing in the Light (2006) critically examines the perilous times of apartheid i...
From the acclaimed South African novelist, a lyrical tale of self-discovery in post-apartheid cape t...
Zoë Wicomb ́s novel Playing in the Light, published in 2006, is set in Cape Town in the 1990s at the...
This thesis offers a comparative reading of Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man, Percival Everett’s Erasur...
In this study theatre, as staged performance and as text, will be used as an exploratory and discurs...
Issues of ethnicity and gender, neglected in the discourse of South Africa's national liberation str...
This article aims to map out the spatial strategies of Zoe Wicomb's Playing in the Light (2006) thro...
In Zoë Wicomb's Playing in the Light, the main character's troubled sense of identity (brought about...
Acts of “passing” inform the plots of Zoë Wicomb’s Playing in the Light and Nella Larsen’s Passing. ...
Inspired by the South African novelist and theorist, Zoë Wicomb, this doctoral thesis is based in th...
Acts of “passing” inform the plots of Zoë Wicomb’s Playing in the Light and Nella Larsen’s Passing. ...
This thesis will interrogate the ways in which the most recent novels of Zoë Wicomb and Chimamanda N...
The 1990s saw significant political changes in countries like South African or Northern Ireland. Pri...
The literature of post-apartheid South Africa suggests that the atrocities of the past still linger ...
This article examines Zoë Wicomb’s wide-ranging use of intertextuality in the novel Playing in the L...
Zoë Wicomb’s novel Playing in the Light (2006) critically examines the perilous times of apartheid i...
From the acclaimed South African novelist, a lyrical tale of self-discovery in post-apartheid cape t...
Zoë Wicomb ́s novel Playing in the Light, published in 2006, is set in Cape Town in the 1990s at the...
This thesis offers a comparative reading of Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man, Percival Everett’s Erasur...
In this study theatre, as staged performance and as text, will be used as an exploratory and discurs...
Issues of ethnicity and gender, neglected in the discourse of South Africa's national liberation str...
This article aims to map out the spatial strategies of Zoe Wicomb's Playing in the Light (2006) thro...
In Zoë Wicomb's Playing in the Light, the main character's troubled sense of identity (brought about...
Acts of “passing” inform the plots of Zoë Wicomb’s Playing in the Light and Nella Larsen’s Passing. ...
Inspired by the South African novelist and theorist, Zoë Wicomb, this doctoral thesis is based in th...
Acts of “passing” inform the plots of Zoë Wicomb’s Playing in the Light and Nella Larsen’s Passing. ...
This thesis will interrogate the ways in which the most recent novels of Zoë Wicomb and Chimamanda N...
The 1990s saw significant political changes in countries like South African or Northern Ireland. Pri...
The literature of post-apartheid South Africa suggests that the atrocities of the past still linger ...