Towards a new public space: performance culture in 1980s South Africa
Towards a new public space: performance culture in 1980s South Africa
Going as far as to discuss political violence and funerals alongside poetry and theatre, this article adopts an inclusive approach to culture and explores the changing nature of performance in 1980s South Africa. Focusing initially on trade unions and worker culture, before widening the discussion, it is shown that those marginalized by apartheid society were able to work at the boundaries of established genres to perform messages of mobilization that simultaneously created temporarily liberated areas inscribed with new forms of authority and agency. The article considers poetry by Alfred Qabula and Mzwakhe Mbuli; new developments in theatre; and political events and argues that each, by blurring the distinction between the performer and the audience, similarly acted as popular tools of communication. They replaced the literary imaginary of previous decades and created new public spaces.
CITATION: Penfold, Tom. Towards a new public space: performance culture in 1980s South Africa . : Taylor & Francis Group , 2015. Journal of African Cultural Studies, Volume 27, Issue 3, Sept 2015, pp. 311-325 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frtowards-new-public-space-performance-culture-1980s-south-africa-2