This essay presents the argument for a model of postcoloniality that disavows the axiomatic determinations of oppositionality. It presents a case,in the history of nascent African nationalism in South Africa, in which subject formation by Africans under late colonialism was framed in apparent complicity with prescribed forms of Western civility. The essay argues that conventional notions of postcolonial resistance are unable to provide an adequate explanation for identity politics which are based on thedesire for Western acculturation instead of resistance to it. By recourse to the idea of a “civil imaginary,” the essay offers an alternative framework for understanding the intermeshing processes of colonial subjectification and African nationalism in South Africa.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Summer 2001
Issue Editors
Research Article|
June 01 2001
Sitting for the Civilization Test: The Making(s) of a Civil Imaginary in Colonial South Africa
Poetics Today (2001) 22 (2): 391–412.
Citation
Leon de Kock; Sitting for the Civilization Test: The Making(s) of a Civil Imaginary in Colonial South Africa. Poetics Today 1 June 2001; 22 (2): 391–412. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/03335372-22-2-391
Download citation file:
Advertisement