Kafka’s African nightmare — bureaucracy and the law in pre- and post-apartheid South Africa
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Date
Authors
Du Plessis, M.
Pete, S.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Faculty of Law, University of the Free State
Abstract
Showing abstract in English
English: This article sets out to examine the legal system of both pre and post-apartheid South
Africa, through the lens of Franz Kafka’s seminal novel “The Trial”. The central contention
of the article is that Franz Kafka’s nightmare vision serves not only as a historical point
of reference anticipating the insanity of the apartheid legal bureaucracy, but also acts
as an injunction to South Africa’s judges and lawyers to ensure that the legacy of the
apartheid period does not negatively affect service delivery in post-apartheid democratic
South Africa. The article begins with a discussion of the truly Kafkaesque nature of law
in South Africa during the apartheid era. The main legislative pillars of the apartheid
system are discussed, as well as the human cost exacted by apartheid policies. The
article then moves to a discussion of the South African legal system following the apartheid
era. While acknowledging the massive shift away from the nightmare of apartheid,
certain disturbingly Kafkaesque trends are noted within the bureaucracy serving the
democratic South African state.Various efforts by the South African legislature and courts
to combat these trends are analysed and discussed, including various legislative
measures enacted since the demise of apartheid, and the development of innovative
supervisory interdicts by the courts.
Description
Citation
Du Plessis, M., & Peté, S. (2006). Kafka’s African nightmare — bureaucracy and the law in pre- and post-apartheid South Africa. Journal for Juridical Science, 31(1), 39-60.