by Pumla Dineo Gqola
Much has been made about South Africa’s transition from histories of
colonialism, slavery and apartheid. “Memory” features prominently in the
country’s reckoning with its pasts. While there has been an outpouring
of academic essays, anthologies and other full-length texts which study
this transition, most have focused on the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission (TRC). Pumla Dineo Gqola’s What is slavery to me?
links with that research in its concern with South Africa’s past and
the meaning-making processes attendant to it, but reads specifically
memory activity which pertains to colonial slavery as practiced
predominantly in the Western Cape for three centuries by the British and
Dutch.
What is slavery to me? is the first full-length study of
slave memory in the South African context, and examines the relevance
and effects of slave memory for contemporary negotiations of South
African gendered and racialised identities. It draws from feminist,
postcolonial and memory studies and is therefore interdisciplinary in
approach. It reads memory as one way of processing this past, and
interprets a variety of cultural, literary and filmic texts to ascertain
the particular experiences in relation to slave pasts being fashioned,
processed and disseminated.
Much of the material surveyed across disciplines attributes to
memory, or “popular history making”, a dialogue between past and present
whilst ascribing sense to both the eras and their relationship. In this
sense then, memory is active, entailing a personal relationship with
the past which acts as mediator of reality on a day to day basis. The
projects studies various negotiations of raced and gendered identities
in creative and other public spaces in contemporary South Africa, by
being particularly attentive to the encoding of consciousness about the
country’s slave past.
This book extends memory studies in South Africa, provokes new lines
of inquiry, and develops new frameworks through which to think about
slavery and memory in South Africa.