Research Report 2006 (Including the Centre for Popular Memory)
Head of Department: Associate Professor Richard Mendelsohn
Departmental Profile
Research and research-linked scholarly work in the Department of Historical Studies concentrates mainly upon modern and contemporary history reflected through written, oral and visual sources, and is both lively and varied in focus. Fields of southern African investigation include environmental history, economic and social history, urban history, medical history, gendered history, the history of war and warfare, public history and heritage, film and history, and the history of slavery. History of Art research into visual representations of the past comprises studies in the history of African, Southern African and Western painting, graphic art and sculpture, as well as the study of art collecting and curatorship, photography, printing, and popular culture. Historical Studies at UCT is a major source of expert research scholarship on the Western Cape region and Cape Town in particular, and its established proficiency in postgraduate film and history teaching has led to the production of an annual series of Cape-based historical documentaries for wider educational use.
The Department houses the Centre for Popular Memory which focuses on the development of oral history and digital archive construction through both local community links and international collaboration. Other substantive funded projects include the history of Groote Schuur Hospital, local histories of slave life and identity, and the reclamation and study of West African Arabic manuscripts. The Department also continues to manage the important Faculty resource in the visual arts, the Slide Library with around 80,000 images. The rich research culture of Historical Studies at UCT is fertilised by constantly expanding scholarly links nationally and into the African continent and beyond, and by an active complement of distinguished Honorary Research Associates.
Departmental Statistics
Permanent and long-term contract staff
Professors
|
6
|
Associate Professors
|
5
|
Senior Lecturers
|
3
|
Lecturers
|
2
|
Visiting Professors
|
1
|
Administrative and Clerical Staff
|
2
|
Total
|
19
|
Honorary Staff
Honorary Research Associates
|
8
|
Centre for Popular Memory
Director
|
1
|
Training co-coordinator
|
1
|
Researcher
|
3
|
Archivist
|
2
|
Administrative staff
|
1
|
Total
|
8
|
Students
Doctoral
|
14
|
Masters
|
10
|
Honours
|
10
|
Undergraduate
|
2174
|
Total
|
2208
|
Research Fields and Staff
Dr Mohamed Adhikari
Coloured identity and politics in the 19th and 20th centuries
Professor Vivian Bickford-Smith
Urban history, Cape Town history, film and history; race and ethnic identity in South Africa
Dr Sean Field
Popular memory, oral history, visual history and the archival location and dissemination of stories
Professor Michael Godby
19th century colonial artists; contemporary South African artists; documentary photography
Dr Shamil Jeppie
19th century Middle East and North Africa; District Six and Cape Flats history
Associate Professor Anne Mager
Gendered history in the Ciskei 1945-1960; gender and development; alcohol in South Africa
Associate Professor Richard Mendelsohn
South African Jewish history; Film and history; Jewry in the South African War
Dr Maanda Mulaudzi
Rural South African history focusing on land dispossession, agrarian change, identity and chieftainship with particular emphasis on Venda in the Northern Province
Professor Bill Nasson
South African War 1899-1902; South Africa and the Great War
Associate Professor Nigel Penn
The Cape north-western frontier in the 18th century; Khoisan history; Dutch colonial history
Professor Howard Phillips
Medicine, health and disease in South Africa; history of higher education in South Africa
Professor Christopher Saunders
Cape history; South African historiography; recent Namibian history
Ms Anna Tietze
History of art collecting and museum policy; 19th century French art and society; the history of the print; history and theory of art training institutions
Dr Liese van der Watt
Contemporary Art; Contemporary African and South African Art; Art, Theory and Criticism
Associate Professor Lance van Sittert
Environmental history
Professor Nigel Worden
Indian Ocean slave trade in the 17th and 18th centuries; slavery and post-emancipation labour in the Western Cape; 18th century Cape Town; public history
Contact Details
Postal address: Department of Historical Studies, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701
Telephone: +27 21 650 2742
Fax: +27 21 689 7581
E-mail: Brenda.Beneke@uct.ac.za
Web: http://www.uct.ac.za/depts/history
Research Output
ARTICLES IN PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS
Adhikari, M. 2005. Contending approaches in Coloured identity and the history of the Coloured people in South Africa. History compass, 3: 1-16.
Adhikari, M. 2006. "God made the white man, God made the black man...": Popular racial stereotyping of Coloured people in apartheid South Africa. South African Historical Journal, 55: 142-164.
Adhikari, M. 2006. Hope, fear, shame and frustration: Continuity and change in the expression of Coloured Identity in white supremacist South African 1910 – 1994. Journal of South African Studies, 32(3): 467-487.
Bickford-Smith, V. 2005. How should historians engage with feature films? Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in History and Archeology, 2(1): 141-155.
Bickford-Smith, V. 2006. How urban South Africa life was represented in film and films consumed in South African cities - in the 1950s. Journal of the Interdisciplinary Crossroads, 3(2): 431-442.
Deacon, H. and Boulle, A. 2006. Commentary: Factors affecting HIV/AIDS-related stigma and discrimination by medical professionals. International Journal of Epidemiology, December: 1-2.
Deacon, H. 2006. Towards a sustainable theory of health-related stigma: Lessons from the HIV/AIDS literature. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 16(6): 418-425.
Deacon, H. 2006. Unravelling the contexts of stigma: From internalisation to resistance to change. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 16(6): 411-417.
Devenish, A. 2005. Negotiating healing: Understanding the dynamics amongst traditional healers in KwaZulu-Natal as they engage with professionalisation. Social Dynamics, 31(2): 243-284.
Field, S.P. 2006. Beyond "healing": Trauma, oral history and regeneration. Oral History, 34(1): 31-42.
Godby, M.A.P. 2006. Aesthetics and activism. Art South Africa, 5(2): 56-61.
Godby, M.A.P. 2006. Confronting horror: Emily Hobhouse and the Concentration Camp Photographs of the South African War. Kronos, 32(November): 34-48.
Godby, M.A.P. 2006. Inside and outside: Mikhael Subotzky in conversation with Michael Godby. Kronos, 32(November): 6-15.
Mager, A.K. 2006. Trafficking in liquor, trafficking on heritage: Beer branding as heritage in post-apartheid South Africa. International Journal of Heritage Studies, 12(2): 159-175.
Phillips, H. 2005. Treating white poverty in interwar South Africa: “Civilised labour” and the construction of Groote Schuur Hospital 1926-1938. South African Journal of Economic History, 20(2): 109-130.
Phillips, H. 2006. "A Move for the better": Changing health status among Jewish immigrants in Cape Town, 1881-1931. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 32(4): 591-601.
Saunders, C.C. 2005. Remembering negative pasts. Safundi: The Journal of South African and American Comparative Studies, 19(July): 1-5.
Saunders, C.C. 2006. Beyond white supremacy. Safundi: The Journal of South African and American Comparative Studies, 21(January): 1-10.
Saunders, C.C. 2006. Britishness in South Africa: Some reflections. Humanities Research, 13(1): 61-70.
Van Sittert, L. 2006. The integration of South African fisheries into the global economy: Past, present and future. Marine Policy, 30(1): 18-29.
Van Sittert, L. and Hauck, M. 2006. Introduction: Post-apartheid marine fisheries in South Africa: Through the ten-year looking glass. Marine Policy, 30(1): 1-2.
Van Sittert, L., Branch, G.M., Hauck, M. and Sowman, M. 2006. Benchmarking the first decade of post-apartheid fisheries reform in South Africa. Marine Policy, 30(1): 96-110.
Van Vuuren, L. 2006. "The Africa I know": Film and the making of "Bushmen" in Laurens van der Post's Lost World of Kalahari (1956). Kronos, 32(November): 139-161.
BOOKS
Digby, A. 2006. Diversity and division in medicine: Health care in South Africa from the 1800s: 1-460. UK and Switzerland: Peter Lang Publishing.
CHAPTERS IN BOOKS
Devenish, A. and Skinner, C. 2006. Collective action in the informal economy: The case of the self-employed Women's Union, 1994-2004. In R. Ballard, A. Habib and I. Valodia (eds), Voices of Protest: Social Movements in Post-Apartheid South Africa: 255-278. Pietermaritzburg: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press.
Godby, M.A.P. 2006. David Goldblatt: A life in photography. In G. Knape (ed.), David Goldblatt: Hasselblad Award 2006: 9-15. Sweden: Hasselblad Center.
Godby, M.A.P. 2006. Stern, Irma (1894-1966). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. [online]. Available: http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/94126. United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
Godby, M.A.P. 2006. Settlers and Travellers: Different Ideas of "Home" in the Representation of the South African Landscape by Thomas Bowler (1812-1869) and Thomas Baines (1820-1875). In T. Barringer, G. Quilley and D. Fordham (eds), Art and the British Empire: 84-96. United Kingdom: Manchester University Press.
Nasson, W.R. 2006. Anglo-Boer War: Spioenkop, 1900 and Paardeber, 1900. In M. Rayner (ed.), Battlefields: Exploring the Arenas of War, 1805-1945: 84-97. UK: New Holland Publishers.
Nasson, W.R. 2006. Contesting racism in South Africa. In C. Fink, F. Hadler and T. Schramm (eds), 1956: European and Global Perspectives: 215-232. Germany: Leipziger Universitatsverlag 2006.
Saunders, C.C. 2006. Aboveground organisations and activities: Part 1 Aspects of aboveground activity. In B. Theron (ed.), The Road to Democracy in South Africa – Volume 2 (1970-1980): 847-856. South Africa: Unisa Press.
Saunders, C.C. 2006. African Organisations and Conferences; Angola-Zambia-Malawi; Guinea Bissau-Cape Verde-Sao Tome and Principe. Annual Register, Vol. 247: 386-388; 247-251; 238-240. Oxford.
Saunders, C.C. 2006. Britain and South Africa. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. May 2006. [Online]. Available: http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/theme/95383. United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
Saunders, C.C. 2006. Dower, William (1837-1919). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. May 2006. [Online]. Available: http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/45502. United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
Saunders, C.C. 2006. Genocide in Namibia, 1904-1905, from a 2004 perspective. In C. Tatz, S. Tatz and P. Arnold (eds), Genocide Perspectives III: Essays on the Holocaust and Other Genocides: 140-147. Australia: Brandl and Schlesinger Pty Ltd.
Saunders, C.C. 2006. Lesotho: Recent History; Malawi: Recent History; Namibia: Recent History; South Africa: Recent History; Zimbabwe: Recent History. In I. Frame (ed.), Africa South of the Sahara, 2007: 112-117; 709-713; 832-838; 1088-1097; 1298-1306. London: Routledge.
Saunders, C.C. 2006. Seme, Pixley ka Isaka (1882-1951). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. May 2006. [Online]. Available: http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/92369. United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
Saunders, C.C. 2006. South West Africa People’s Organisation. In T. Leonard (ed.), Encyclopaedia of the Developing World, Vol. 3: 1444-45. Routledge.
Worden, N.A. 2006. Coercion and freedom in the Cape Colony 1652 – 1856. In M. Kleijwegt (ed.), The Faces of Freedom: Slavery and Freedom in the Atlantic World: 185-213. Netherlands: Brill.
Creative Output
Godby, M.A.P. 2006. Robert Hodgins: From a far South. In S. Mee (ed.), Robert Hodgins: From a far South: 3. United Kingdom: Simon Mee Fine Art.
ONLINE WORKS
Tietze, A. 2006. The Sir Abe Bailey Collection. http://www.abebailey.org.
School of Languages and Literatures
Research Report 2006
Head of School: Professor Joan Hambidge
School Profile
The School of Languages and Literatures was formed in 2002 through the amalgamation of the Department of Southern African Languages and the Department of Modern and Classical Languages and Literatures. The School brings into one organisational unit the teaching of language and literature (excluding English Language & Literature and Hebrew) at the University of Cape Town.
We recognise the complexity of our position at the southern end of Africa, in a University which strives to be fully part of Africa and the wider world. The range of languages taught in the School and the research done by staff and students of the School reflect this.
The teaching and research area of the School is wide, covering language, literature and cultural studies in Afrikaans, Arabic, Dutch, French, German, ancient Greek, Italian, Latin, Portuguese, Sotho, Spanish, Swahili, Xhosa, and Zulu. There is also a strong emphasis on the role that these languages and literatures and the cultures they embody, have played and are playing in Africa. Research in the School also encompasses Literary Semantics, Literary Theory, Afrikaans Media Studies and Creative Writing, Historiography and Fiction Multimedia, Literature and the Internet, War Literature and Children’s Literature, problems in ancient historiography, literature, ruler cult, and rhetoric representations of Greece and Rome in film; French literature and rhetoric from the 17th century to the present, and the linguistics, sociolinguistics and didactics of French; German colonialism and post-colonial theory, the writings of German missionaries; contemporary German literature; Literary theory and women’s studies from the 1770s to the present; Italian and German post-war cinema; Asian cinema; the Renaissance dialogue, Italian manuscripts of the 15th century.
The School’s awareness of its location in Africa is reflected in many of its research projects. Among these are studies of language learning in the African context, Xhosa linguistics; African oral traditions and orature; the influence of French on Afrikaans; French travellers’ descriptions of the Cape of Good Hope; literature and cinema in Francophone West Africa; the translation of Southern African literature into French; Sephardi women writers from the Maghreb; German colonial discourse in Africa; German missionary writings; comparative perspectives on German/Afrikaans literature.
The School has a number of formal and informal links with universities elsewhere in Africa, such as the National University of the Ivory Coast at Abidjan, the University of St Denis in Réunion, and the University of Zimbabwe.
School Statistics
Permanent and long-term contract staff
Professors
|
5.5
|
Associate Professors
|
5
|
Senior Lecturers
|
1
|
Lecturers
|
6
|
Assistant Lecturers
|
2
|
Administrative Staff
|
3
|
Total
|
22.5
|
Students
Doctoral
|
11
|
Masters
|
28
|
Honours
|
7
|
Undergraduate
|
2 729
|
Total
|
2 775
|
Honorary staff
Honorary Research Associates
|
3
|
Research Fields and Staff
Permanent staff
Dr Clive Chandler
Section Head (Classics); Senior Lecturer; ancient philosophy and rhetoric; Philodemus
Dr Joel Claassen
Lecturer, Literary Semantics
Professor Jean-Louis Cornille
Section Head (French) 19th - 20th century French literature
Dr Ruth De Oliveira
Lecturer; didactics of French as a foreign and second language; French Linguistics
Ms Vanessa Everson
Senior Lecturer; Women writers from the Maghreb (1990 onwards); translation; modern language methodology
Associate Professor Sandile Gxilishe
Sociolinguistics; Child Language Acquisition/Development, Second Language Teaching/Learning
Professor Joan Hambidge
Director of School. Poetry; theory of literature and criticism; gender studies; creative writing
Ms Pamela Maseko
Lecturer; second language acquisition; sociolinguistics; translation
Dr Abner Nyamende
Senior Lecturer, African Literature
Associate Professor Gunther Pakendorf
Section Head (German); writings of German missionaries in South Africa; Goethe; post-1945 literature; comparative perspectives on Afrikaans and German literature
Professor Sizwe Satyo
Section Head (African Languages), Sociolinguistic studies with particular reference to Xhosa, oral and written texts, the development of Xhosa literature from the Missionary period to the present. Xhosa orature and the struggle of freedom. Apartheid and the development of the study of African Languages. Freedom songs in South Africa. Xhosa humour and Apartheid oppression. Women and the struggle for freedom
Associate Professor Nelia Saxby
Section Head (Italian) semester 2; culture and civilization of North Italian courts; applied historical linguistics; textual criticism; palaeography (15th century North Italian hands)
Ms Brigitte Selzer
Lecturer; German language and literature; woman/gender studies; satire; language scepticism 19th/20th century; turn-of-the-century literature; German Romanticism
Mr Wilhelm Snyman
Section Head (Italian) semester 1; German and Italian 20th century literature and post-war cinema; Asian cinema; colonial literature and history of Asia and Africa; paedogogics of German & Italian
Mrs Gail Solomons
Lecturer; paedagogics of Latin; language acquisition for second language speakers; the teaching of etymology
Associate Professor Chris van der Merwe
Section Head (Afrikaans and Netherlandic Studies); Afrikaans and Netherlandic studies; city and country in South African fiction; Afrikaans and Flemish fiction - similarities and differences; Afrikaans fiction on the Anglo Boer War and the South African border wars; narrative as therapy
Professor Etienne van Heerden
Historiography and fiction; Caribbean Dutch literature in the former Dutch colonies; theory of literature; creative writing; the Internet as educational medium.
Professor David Wardle
Roman history and historiography; Roman exemplary literature; Roman religion and ruler cult
Professor Richard Whitaker
Translation of Homer’s Iliad into Southern African English; translation theory and practice; Ancient Greek and Southern African orality; reception of the Classics in 20th century literature
Distinguished Visitors
Professor Philippe Baudorre, Univ. Bordeaux III, France.
Professor Margaret Orr, Centre of Learning, Teaching & Development, WITS
Professor M. Lamb-Faffelberger, Lafayette College, USA.
Dott. Antonio Lavieri, ISIT, Paris.
Professor Richard Seaford, Classics, Exeter Univ. UK.
Honorary Research Associates
Emeritus Professor John Atkinson
Associate Professor Anny Wynchank. French Literature
Professor Edgar Sienaert, Oral Studies, Medieval Studies
Postdoctoral Research Fellows
Dr D. Mwepu
Dr B. Assam
Contact Details
Postal address: School of Languages and Literatures, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch, 7701
Telephone: +27 21 650 2607
Fax: +27 21 685 5530
E-mail: leeb@humanities.uct.ac.za
Research Output
ARTICLES IN PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS
Atkinson, J.E. 2006. Ethnic cleansing in Roman Alexandria in 38. Acta Classica, XLIX: 31-54.
Chandler, C.E. 2005. First Impressions: Eschatological Allusions in Petronius, Satyrica. Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History, XII: 324-333.
Snyman, J.W.O. 2006. An Italian view of the East: The function of the exotic in Christmas in Ceylon by Guido Gozzano. Studi D'itialianistica Nell'africa Australe/Italian Studies in Southern Africa, 19(1): 8-43.
Van der Merwe, C.N. 2006. Surviving a lost war. Journal for the Study of Religion, 19(2): 87-98.
Van Ryneveld, H. 2006. Writing from the margins - and beyond. Journal for the Study of Religion, 19(2): 115-124.
Wardle, D. 2005. Unimpeachable sponsors of imperial autocracy, or Augustus Dream Team. Antichthon, 9: 29-47.
Wynchank, A. 2006. Racines et parcours dans le film Touki-Bouki ou le voyage de la hyene de D.Diop Mambety. French Studies in Southern Africa, 36: 135-148.
BOOKS
Chandler, C. 2006. Philodemus on Rhetoric Books 1 and 2: Translation and Exegetical Essays: 1-231. New York/London: Routledge.
Sienaert, E. 2005. Fundamentals of human expression and communication: Seven lectures by Marcel Jousse. Translated and presented by E. Sienaert and J. Conolly: 216. RSA: Mantis.
Sienaert, E. 2006. Be yourself. Seven lectures on Colonisation, self-colonisation and decolonisation. Translated and presented by E. Sienaert and J. Conolly: 179. RSA: Mantis.
Sienaert, E. 2006. Jousse M. De La memoire, Serie Cours de Marcel Jousse: Choix thematique: 172. Paris: Publications de l'Association Marcel Jousse.
Wardle, D. 2006. Cicero on Divination: De divinatio book 1 translated, with introduction and historical comment: 469. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
CHAPTERS IN BOOKS
Pakendorf, G. 2006. Breyten lees Brecht. Aantekeninge by 'n paar vroee gedichte. In D. Herzog, E. Britz, A. Henderson (eds), Gesprek sonder grense. Huldigingsbundel ter ere van J. Degenaar se 8oste verjaardag: 232-250. Stellenbosch: H & B Uitgewers.
Sienaert, E. 2006. The oral tradition and research: Principles, perspectives and practices. In T. Magwaza, Y. Seleti and M.P. Sithole (eds), Freedom sown in blood: Memories of the Impi Yamakhanda: An indigenous knowledge system perspective: 157-188. RSA: Ditlou.
Creative Writing
Hambidge, J.H. 2006. Dad: 1-45. Cape Town: Genugtig.
Nyamende, M.A.B. (ed.) 2005. amazwi amatsha: 7-109. Athlone: Realities Xhosa.
UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS AND WORKS OF A POPULAR NATURE
Atkinson, J.E. 2005. Wothington,I, 2005. Alexander the Great: Man and god (2004). Classical Review, 55: 589-591.
Sienaert, E. 2005. Le Holisme de marcel Jousse: Au-dela de l'anthropologie. Il Cannocchiale, January: 171-181.
South African College of Music
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