Equivocations of power: an investigation of the post-colonial crisis of identity in four winners of the CNA literary award
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Authors
Van Straaten, Dina Elyza
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University of the Free State
Abstract
This thesis aims to investigate the post-colonial crisis of identity in four winners of
the CNA Literary Award. Identity is explored from a deconstructive perspective by
examining the master/slave, white/black, male/female and parent/child dialectics
so as to demonstrate the variability and indeterminacy of the sign and the
subsequent destabilizing of hierarchical discourses of power. The examining of
identity from a deconstructive angle not only lays bare the instability underpinning
positions of power, but also exposes the problematic of identity as a shifting,
unfixed and decentred phenomenon. The research is focused on probing the
dialectic between subjugator and subjugated, the empowered and the
disempowered in order to develop an understanding of how imbalances of power
inform and impact on the formulation of identity within the post-colonial context. It
questions the decidability implied by binary structuring and challenges precepts
of absolutism and totalization imbedded in the discourses pertaining to power
relations and power differentials.
