Maternal Incest as Moral Panic

Maternal Incest as Moral Panic

Subtitle: 
Envisioning Futures without Fathers in the South African Lowveld
Author: 
Niehaus, Isak
Publisher: 
Taylor & Francis
Record type: 
Journal Title: 
Journal of Southern African Studies (JSAS)
Source: 
Journal of Southern African Studies,Vol.36,No.4,December 2010,pp.833-849
Abstract: 

During 2008, rumours about revolting incestuous encounters between sons and their mothers circulated in the Bushbuckridge municipality of the South African lowveld. This article views these rumours as expressing moral panic, paying particular attention to the historical contexts of their emergence and circulation, and to their temporal orientation. I locate these rumours in the periphery of South Africa's de-industrialising economy, marked by increased unemployment and criminality among men and by a growing prominence of women-headed households. They express a regressive temporalisation and pessimistic vision, not of development, progress and civilisation, but rather of deterioration and de-civilisation. Through the alleged act of incest, sons who engage in crime usurp the authority of fathers who once produced value in strategic industries and mines. As such the rumours envision a dystopia marked by the 'death of the father' and chaotic disorder without morality and law.

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CITATION: Niehaus, Isak. Maternal Incest as Moral Panic . : Taylor & Francis , . Journal of Southern African Studies,Vol.36,No.4,December 2010,pp.833-849 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frmaternal-incest-moral-panic-3