LEADER 06580nam 2200541zu 450 001 996248296003316 005 20240209223958.0 010 $a0-231-50376-8 024 7 $a2027/heb99016 035 $a(CKB)3780000000081615 035 $a(SSID)ssj0000669091 035 $a(PQKBManifestationID)11378822 035 $a(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000669091 035 $a(PQKBWorkID)10708876 035 $a(PQKB)10663185 035 $a(dli)HEB99016 035 $a(MiU)KOHA0000000000000000002751 035 $a(EXLCZ)993780000000081615 100 $a20160829d2010 uy 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurmnummmmuuuu 181 $ctxt 182 $cc 183 $acr 200 10$a"I saw a nightmare-- " doing violence to memory : the Soweto uprising, June 16, 1976 205 $aACLS Humanities E-Book electronic edition. 210 31$a[Place of publication not identified]$cColumbia University Press$d2010 215 $a1 online resource $cill 225 1 $aACLS Humanities E-Book 225 1 $aACLS Gutenberg-e series 300 $aBibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references. 327 $tPrologue and Readers' Guide --$tIntroduction to the Electronic Space of this Book --$tA few suggestions for navigating this website --$tHector Pieterson's Name --$tTerminology: Black/African --$tDigital Image Archive --$tA Note on the Archive --$tSummaries of Chapters --$tChapter 1: Introduction "The Child Is Also Wondering What Happened to the Father" --$t[Epigraph] Overview --$tStory Without End --$tThe Uprising: Soweto Erupts --$tAuthor's Story --$tContext of the 1990's Political Changes --$tThe Story in the Archive: Cillié Commission of Inquiry into the Riots at Soweto --$tCreating a Space for Memory: The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)--$tHistoriography of Soweto/Literature Review --$tThe City --$tThe Uprising --$tBlack Consciousness --$tCillié Commission --$tThe Truth and Reconciliation Commission --$t[Intro] --$tViolence --$tMethodology and Conceptualization --$tShift in Perspective --$tContext of Change and Violence --$tSources --$t[Intro] --$tOral --$tDocuments --$tStudent Documents --$tPolice Statements --$tTranscribed Oral Testimonies?Cillié Commission --$tTranscribed Oral Testimonies?Truth and Reconciliation Commission --$tStrengths and Weaknesses, or Memory and Violence --$tSummary of Arguments --$t[Intro] --$tSolidarity in the Face of Ambiguity and Difference --$tAfrikaans --$tBlack Consciousness --$tThe Apartheid Government and the African National Congress--$tViolence --$tChapter 2: "I Heard There Was a Riot in Soweto . . . :" A Narrative of June 16, 1976 --$t[Epigraph] A Winter Morning --$tWarnings --$tThe March --$tThe Confrontation--$tThe Shooting --$t[Intro] --$tTremor --$tEvening --$tAftermath --$tConclusion --$tChapter 3: Official Stories Telling Soweto, June 16, 1976?The Appropriation of the People's Story into Official Histories --$t[Epigraph] Introduction --$tResponses to the Event --$t[Intro] --$tImmediate Reactions --$tEarly Accounts --$tSecondary Discourses --$tPart 1: Commission of Inquiry into the Riots at Soweto and Elsewhere (Cillié) from the 16 June, 1976 - 28 February, 1977 --$tGenesis of the Cillié Commission --$tMethods of the Cillié Commission --$tRhetoric and Argument --$tAudience --$tPrivileged and Knowing Position of the Author --$tPrivileging of Narrative Time --$tConsidering Causes --$tRepresenting Participants--$tMeans and Method of Appropriation/Exclusion --$tWitnesses --$tStudent Participants --$tAuthor Analysis: Witnesses --$tMethods of Coercion --$tAuthor Analysis: Statements --$tExperts --$tPart 2: Narrative of Resistance: The African National Congress (ANC) --$t[Intro] --$tGenesis of the ANC's Account --$tAudience --$t[Intro] --$tClaiming Authority--$tRhetoric --$tThe ANC's Informants --$tNarrative Time for the ANC --$tParticipants as Represented by the ANC: Heroes or Threats?--$tClaiming Authority --$tThe ANC and Black Consciousness --$tThe ANC: What Really Happened?The Confrontation --$tThe ANC's Means and Method of Appropriation--$tPart 3: Confronting Each Other: the ANC and the Cillié Commission --$tPart 4: The Last Official Narrative: The Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) --$t[Intro]--$tNature of the TRC Commission Hearings (as opposed to the Cillié Commission):--$tConclusion--$tChapter 4: The Participants --$t[Epigraph] Introduction --$tLife Histories: Four Voices --$t[Intro] --$tBeginnings--$tEducation --$tExperience --$tFamily--$tStatus--$tShifting the Point of View --$t[Intro] --$tInvisible Women? The Gendered Nature of the Uprising--$tUrban-Rural Connections?The Zoutpansberg Students' Organisation (ZOSO) --$tDissent, Division, Difference?Solidarity--$tIdentity and Representation--$tConclusion --$tChapter 5: Afrikaans "We Are Fed the Crumbs of Ignorance with Afrikaans as a Poisonous Spoon"?Historical Context and Precipitating Factors --$t[Epigraph] --$tPerspectives on the Role of Afrikaans --$tAfrikaans: Precipitating Factor? --$t[Intro ] --$tThe Urban Bantu Council, UBC --$tThe State --$tThe Opposition in Parliament --$tThe ANC --$tThe Press --$t"Not the True Cause . . . :" Analysis of the Literature --$tDocile for Too Long:" The Cillié Report as a Record of Mounting Dissatisfaction over the Afrikaans Issue: Cillié Commission --$t"To Hell with Boere Taal:" Student Voices--$tConclusion --$tChapter 6: "I Saw a Nightmare . . . :" Violence and the Construction of Memory --$t[Epigraph] Introduction: Individual and Collective Memory, Violence, and Silence--$tThe Making of Memory: People, the State, the ANC, and Violence--$tOn Violence and the Body: The Dead--$tThe Disappeared--$tThe Wounded: " . . . But the Pain You Feel Alone"--$tConclusion --$tChapter 7: Final Thoughts 410 0$aACLS Gutenberg-e series. 517 $a"I Saw a Nightmare . . ." 606 $aBlack people$zSouth Africa$xPolitics and government 607 $aSouth Africa$xHistory$ySoweto Uprising, 1976 607 $aSouth Africa$xHistory$ySoweto Uprising, 1976$vPersonal narratives 607 $aSoweto (South Africa)$xHistory 607 $aSoweto (South Africa)$xSocial conditions 615 0$aBlack people$xPolitics and government. 700 $aPohlandt-McCormick$b Helena$01019784 712 02$aAmerican Council of Learned Societies 801 0$bPQKB 906 $aBOOK 912 $a996248296003316 996 $a"I saw a nightmare-- " doing violence to memory : the Soweto uprising, June 16, 1976$92406351 997 $aUNISA