Rensing, Julia. Namibia-Germany: A Post-Colonial Heterotopia? Narratives and Negotiations of Colonial Legacies in Namibia and Germany. Doctoral Thesis, University of Basel, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.
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Official URL: https://edoc.unibas.ch/75619/
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Abstract
Germany’s and Namibia’s entangled colonial histories cast a long shadow on the countries’ presents. As both societies grapple with the troubled legacies of the past, they tend to overlook the obscured, other places in the German-Namibian (post-)colonial cultural contexts. In order to generate a more nuanced understanding of the shared colonial past, my project wants to uncover some of these hidden, alternative places in German-Namibian history. Therefore, I will analyze a variety of historical, literary and visual representations. In my exploration of contemporary art and literature as well as documents from archives of both countries, I will focus on depictions of particular places – so-called heterotopias – that have hitherto remained unnoticed in the official historiographies.
In developing a theoretical framework for my analyses, I will engage with Foucault’s conception of heterotopia. With this notion, Foucault describes alternative, partially utopic but real places, which exist in every society. Bringing Foucault’s theory into the study of German-Namibian art and literature allows to appreciate cultural nuances that often remain underrepresented in mainstream academic and public discourses. To achieve this, I will focus on individual accounts of the past and bring marginalized perspectives, particularly those of women, to the fore. I am interested in seeing how Namibian women artists engage with colonial legacies, how German-Namibian authors question their family biography as well as how German photographers portray and reassess German colonial settler history. By bringing a wide variety of cultural representations and individual perspectives into a single study, my project strives towards an understanding of the German-Namibian history that is polyphonic and attuned to differences. In doing so, my project aspires to not only contribute to the academic scholarship on colonial legacies, but ultimately help to step outside the established epistemological frameworks and propose counter-narratives that renegotiate German-Namibian entangled history.
In developing a theoretical framework for my analyses, I will engage with Foucault’s conception of heterotopia. With this notion, Foucault describes alternative, partially utopic but real places, which exist in every society. Bringing Foucault’s theory into the study of German-Namibian art and literature allows to appreciate cultural nuances that often remain underrepresented in mainstream academic and public discourses. To achieve this, I will focus on individual accounts of the past and bring marginalized perspectives, particularly those of women, to the fore. I am interested in seeing how Namibian women artists engage with colonial legacies, how German-Namibian authors question their family biography as well as how German photographers portray and reassess German colonial settler history. By bringing a wide variety of cultural representations and individual perspectives into a single study, my project strives towards an understanding of the German-Namibian history that is polyphonic and attuned to differences. In doing so, my project aspires to not only contribute to the academic scholarship on colonial legacies, but ultimately help to step outside the established epistemological frameworks and propose counter-narratives that renegotiate German-Namibian entangled history.
Advisors: | Rizzo , Lorena |
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Committee Members: | Tischler, Julia |
Faculties and Departments: | 04 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences > Departement Geschichte > Bereich Geschichte Afrikas > Geschichte Afrikas (Tischler) 04 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences > Fakultär assoziierte Institutionen > Zentrum für Afrikastudien Basel |
UniBasel Contributors: | Rizzo, Lorena and Tischler, Julia |
Item Type: | Thesis |
Thesis Subtype: | Doctoral Thesis |
Thesis no: | UNSPECIFIED |
Thesis status: | Complete |
Last Modified: | 12 Mar 2024 10:43 |
Deposited On: | 17 Feb 2020 11:38 |
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