06580nam 2200541zu 450 99624829600331620240209223958.00-231-50376-82027/heb99016(CKB)3780000000081615(SSID)ssj0000669091(PQKBManifestationID)11378822(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000669091(PQKBWorkID)10708876(PQKB)10663185(dli)HEB99016(MiU)KOHA0000000000000000002751(EXLCZ)99378000000008161520160829d2010 uy engurmnummmmuuuutxtccr"I saw a nightmare-- " doing violence to memory : the Soweto uprising, June 16, 1976ACLS Humanities E-Book electronic edition.[Place of publication not identified]Columbia University Press20101 online resource illACLS Humanities E-BookACLS Gutenberg-e seriesBibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: MonographIncludes bibliographical references.Prologue and Readers' Guide --Introduction to the Electronic Space of this Book --A few suggestions for navigating this website --Hector Pieterson's Name --Terminology: Black/African --Digital Image Archive --A Note on the Archive --Summaries of Chapters --Chapter 1: Introduction "The Child Is Also Wondering What Happened to the Father" --[Epigraph] Overview --Story Without End --The Uprising: Soweto Erupts --Author's Story --Context of the 1990's Political Changes --The Story in the Archive: Cillié Commission of Inquiry into the Riots at Soweto --Creating a Space for Memory: The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)--Historiography of Soweto/Literature Review --The City --The Uprising --Black Consciousness --Cillié Commission --The Truth and Reconciliation Commission --[Intro] --Violence --Methodology and Conceptualization --Shift in Perspective --Context of Change and Violence --Sources --[Intro] --Oral --Documents --Student Documents --Police Statements --Transcribed Oral Testimonies—Cillié Commission --Transcribed Oral Testimonies—Truth and Reconciliation Commission --Strengths and Weaknesses, or Memory and Violence --Summary of Arguments --[Intro] --Solidarity in the Face of Ambiguity and Difference --Afrikaans --Black Consciousness --The Apartheid Government and the African National Congress--Violence --Chapter 2: "I Heard There Was a Riot in Soweto . . . :" A Narrative of June 16, 1976 --[Epigraph] A Winter Morning --Warnings --The March --The Confrontation--The Shooting --[Intro] --Tremor --Evening --Aftermath --Conclusion --Chapter 3: Official Stories Telling Soweto, June 16, 1976—The Appropriation of the People's Story into Official Histories --[Epigraph] Introduction --Responses to the Event --[Intro] --Immediate Reactions --Early Accounts --Secondary Discourses --Part 1: Commission of Inquiry into the Riots at Soweto and Elsewhere (Cillié) from the 16 June, 1976 - 28 February, 1977 --Genesis of the Cillié Commission --Methods of the Cillié Commission --Rhetoric and Argument --Audience --Privileged and Knowing Position of the Author --Privileging of Narrative Time --Considering Causes --Representing Participants--Means and Method of Appropriation/Exclusion --Witnesses --Student Participants --Author Analysis: Witnesses --Methods of Coercion --Author Analysis: Statements --Experts --Part 2: Narrative of Resistance: The African National Congress (ANC) --[Intro] --Genesis of the ANC's Account --Audience --[Intro] --Claiming Authority--Rhetoric --The ANC's Informants --Narrative Time for the ANC --Participants as Represented by the ANC: Heroes or Threats?--Claiming Authority --The ANC and Black Consciousness --The ANC: What Really Happened—The Confrontation --The ANC's Means and Method of Appropriation--Part 3: Confronting Each Other: the ANC and the Cillié Commission --Part 4: The Last Official Narrative: The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) --[Intro]--Nature of the TRC Commission Hearings (as opposed to the Cillié Commission):--Conclusion--Chapter 4: The Participants --[Epigraph] Introduction --Life Histories: Four Voices --[Intro] --Beginnings--Education --Experience --Family--Status--Shifting the Point of View --[Intro] --Invisible Women? The Gendered Nature of the Uprising--Urban-Rural Connections—The Zoutpansberg Students' Organisation (ZOSO) --Dissent, Division, Difference—Solidarity--Identity and Representation--Conclusion --Chapter 5: Afrikaans "We Are Fed the Crumbs of Ignorance with Afrikaans as a Poisonous Spoon"—Historical Context and Precipitating Factors --[Epigraph] --Perspectives on the Role of Afrikaans --Afrikaans: Precipitating Factor? --[Intro ] --The Urban Bantu Council, UBC --The State --The Opposition in Parliament --The ANC --The Press --"Not the True Cause . . . :" Analysis of the Literature --Docile for Too Long:" The Cillié Report as a Record of Mounting Dissatisfaction over the Afrikaans Issue: Cillié Commission --"To Hell with Boere Taal:" Student Voices--Conclusion --Chapter 6: "I Saw a Nightmare . . . :" Violence and the Construction of Memory --[Epigraph] Introduction: Individual and Collective Memory, Violence, and Silence--The Making of Memory: People, the State, the ANC, and Violence--On Violence and the Body: The Dead--The Disappeared--The Wounded: " . . . But the Pain You Feel Alone"--Conclusion --Chapter 7: Final ThoughtsACLS Gutenberg-e series."I Saw a Nightmare . . ."Black peopleSouth AfricaPolitics and governmentSouth AfricaHistorySoweto Uprising, 1976South AfricaHistorySoweto Uprising, 1976Personal narrativesSoweto (South Africa)HistorySoweto (South Africa)Social conditionsBlack peoplePolitics and government.Pohlandt-McCormick Helena1019784American Council of Learned SocietiesPQKBBOOK996248296003316"I saw a nightmare-- " doing violence to memory : the Soweto uprising, June 16, 19762406351UNISA