Understanding whiteness in South Africa with specific reference to the art of Brett Murray.
The white male artist whose self-interrogation attaches to his whiteness, difference and former centrality, inevitably exposes himself to the critical scrutiny of current discourse on race and whiteness studies. In this dissertation I examine the concept and emergence of whiteness as a dominant cons...
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-ukzn-oai-http---researchspace.ukzn.ac.za-10413-10422014-02-08T03:49:17ZUnderstanding whiteness in South Africa with specific reference to the art of Brett Murray.Passmoor, Ross P.Theses--Fine art.Artists--South Africa.White men--South Africa.Whites--Race identity--South Africa.Whites in art.The white male artist whose self-interrogation attaches to his whiteness, difference and former centrality, inevitably exposes himself to the critical scrutiny of current discourse on race and whiteness studies. In this dissertation I examine the concept and emergence of whiteness as a dominant construct in select socio-historical contexts, more particularly in the colonial sphere. While colonial whiteness has often failed to acknowledge or foreground the faceted nature of its composition, this became particularly marked in a South African context with polarisation in the political, cultural and linguistic spheres. However in encounters with the colonised, unifying pretensions of whiteness prevailed, reinforcing difference along racial lines. I examine the work of white South African male artist Brett Murray, in which the interrogation of whiteness and associated marginalization and invisibility is again foregrounded, but predominantly in a postcolonial context. As Murray cautiously navigates his satirical gaze at the culturally and conceptually flawed hybridity of South African (male) whiteness, he inadvertently exposes a nostalgic gaze at erstwhile racial centrality. I further consider whether as a postcolonial other Murray has in fact been able to transcend racially based self-interrogation by addressing more polemic issues associated with power, corruption and inhumanity that transcend race.Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2009.Leeb-du Toit, Juliette Cecile.2010-09-09T10:51:09Z2010-09-09T10:51:09Z20092009Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10413/1042en |
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Theses--Fine art. Artists--South Africa. White men--South Africa. Whites--Race identity--South Africa. Whites in art. |
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Theses--Fine art. Artists--South Africa. White men--South Africa. Whites--Race identity--South Africa. Whites in art. Passmoor, Ross P. Understanding whiteness in South Africa with specific reference to the art of Brett Murray. |
description |
The white male artist whose self-interrogation attaches to his whiteness, difference and former centrality, inevitably exposes himself to the critical scrutiny of current discourse on race and whiteness studies. In this dissertation I examine the concept and emergence of whiteness as a dominant construct in select socio-historical contexts, more particularly in the colonial sphere. While colonial whiteness has often failed to acknowledge or foreground the faceted nature of its composition, this became particularly marked in a South African context with polarisation in the political, cultural and linguistic spheres. However in encounters with the colonised, unifying pretensions of whiteness prevailed, reinforcing difference along racial lines. I examine the work of white South African male artist Brett Murray, in which the interrogation of whiteness and associated marginalization and invisibility is again foregrounded, but predominantly in a postcolonial context. As Murray cautiously navigates his satirical gaze at the culturally and conceptually flawed hybridity of South African (male) whiteness, he inadvertently exposes a nostalgic gaze at erstwhile racial centrality. I further consider whether as a postcolonial other Murray has in fact been able to transcend racially based self-interrogation by addressing more polemic issues associated with power, corruption and inhumanity that transcend race. === Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2009. |
author2 |
Leeb-du Toit, Juliette Cecile. |
author_facet |
Leeb-du Toit, Juliette Cecile. Passmoor, Ross P. |
author |
Passmoor, Ross P. |
author_sort |
Passmoor, Ross P. |
title |
Understanding whiteness in South Africa with specific reference to the art of Brett Murray. |
title_short |
Understanding whiteness in South Africa with specific reference to the art of Brett Murray. |
title_full |
Understanding whiteness in South Africa with specific reference to the art of Brett Murray. |
title_fullStr |
Understanding whiteness in South Africa with specific reference to the art of Brett Murray. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Understanding whiteness in South Africa with specific reference to the art of Brett Murray. |
title_sort |
understanding whiteness in south africa with specific reference to the art of brett murray. |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10413/1042 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT passmoorrossp understandingwhitenessinsouthafricawithspecificreferencetotheartofbrettmurray |
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