From childs to heroes: constructions of masculinity in the African National Congress during Apartheid and post-Apartheid South Africa
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Author
Other authors
Publication date
2021Abstract
In line with feminist analyses of the gendered dimensions of domination, the present
research work is aimed at developing an intersectional understanding of the processes
through which the figures of the “manly dominant” and the “emasculated native” are
constructed and the ways they shape successive resistance and nation-building processes.
For the South African case in particular, this research work provides a qualitative analysis of
the tension between, on the one hand, the apartheid project as a driver of black men’s
emasculation and, on the other, constructions of masculinity embedded in both responses and
resistances to it and the subsequent nation-building process, with attention payed to the
African National Congress. In this respect, it identifies the apartheid’s politics of
racialisation and spatial and sexual seggregation as determinants of hierarchic relationships
between white dominant and black marginalised and subordinate - and ultimately
emasculated - masculinities. Furthermore, and in relation to the African National Congress,
the present research work sheds light on the formation and enactment of constructions of
masculinity aimed at reasserting black men’s virility and embodying the new South Africa in
the context of nation-building.
Document Type
Project / Final year job or degree
Language
English
Keywords
Relacions internacionals
TFG
Apartheid
Masculinitat
República de Sud-àfrica
Pages
48 p.
Note
TFG del Grau en Relacions Internacionals tutoritzat per Oscar Mateos
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© L'autor/a
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/