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https://doi.org/10.12759/hsr.48.2023.48

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Melancholy as Witness and Active Black Citizenry in the Writing of A.S. Vil-Nkomo

Melancholie als Zeuge und das aktive schwarze Bürgertum in den Schriften von A.S. Vil-Nkomo
[journal article]

Nkomo, Nkululeko
Nkomo, Sibusiso

Abstract

This article highlights the importance of viewing an author's body of work through an emotive lens as a sociological source of archives from which we can extract a biographical life story. It accomplishes this by citing examples from two of our late grandfather A.S. Vil-Nkomo's short stories that we... view more

This article highlights the importance of viewing an author's body of work through an emotive lens as a sociological source of archives from which we can extract a biographical life story. It accomplishes this by citing examples from two of our late grandfather A.S. Vil-Nkomo's short stories that were published in the 1930s and by utilising biographical and historical analyses. Both stories used melancholy as a literary method to underscore the sombre circumstances of black suffering, errantry, and death. By highlighting the ungrievable social, psychical, and material consequences of racial tyranny and injustice, they are rendered visible. We can see how the loss of selves, including selves rooted in ancestral histories, selves anchored in their families and communities, and ideal selves capable of realizing their full potential to be, surfaced a type of affective community with shared grief and marked a social landscape where it is difficult for someone who is black to find a place. The stories also convey the urgency of changing this status quo. A.S. Vil-Nkomo used a form of self-writing in a country where the oppressed black majority was denied a voice in order to inspire an active black citizenry driven by the desire to create new selves and societies free of racial segregation.... view less

Keywords
colonialism; racism; discrimination; biography; identity

Classification
Social History, Historical Social Research

Free Keywords
extended family; ukuzilanda; biographical research

Document language
English

Publication Year
2023

Page/Pages
p. 283-303

Journal
Historical Social Research, 48 (2023) 4

Issue topic
Doing Global Sociology: Qualitative Methods and Biographical Becoming after the Postcolonial Critique

ISSN
0172-6404

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.