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Countering Colonial Memory Through Public and Popular Culture in Cape Town

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Historical legacies of enslavement and apartheid structural violence underpin the societal fabric of Cape Town. Walking through the city of Cape Town, colonial reminders and bastions of white supremacy remain evident in statues, street names and the continued spatial apartheid present in the public space. Sites of intergenerational trauma remain scattered through the city, retraced and reclaimed through the efforts of community members, activists, artists and museums. This paper focuses on how race and memory are represented, resisted and challenged within popular culture in Cape Town, South Africa. Through considering museums and music as sites of public memory, this paper highlights how collective memory is being constructed in post-apartheid South Africa in ways that challenge white supremacist and colonial memory. Focusing on two case studies, the Iziko Slave Lodge and Youngsta CPT’s song YVR, this paper shows how colonial and apartheid conceptualisations of race are constantly being contested in post-apartheid popular culture to resist colonial memory and recreate new public memories.
Original languageEnglish
Article number78
Number of pages17
JournalGenealogy
Volume9
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Aug 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the author.

Keywords

  • Cape Town
  • anti-apartheid
  • colonial memory
  • post-apartheid
  • public culture
  • racialisation
  • rememorying

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