Claiming Cape Town: towards a symbolic interpretation of Khoisan activism and land claims

Current political negotiations in South Africa which explore the possibility of pre-1913 land claims and the recognition of Khoisan traditional authorities have spurred the growth of the “Khoisan revival”: the phenomenon of people identifying as Khoisan and asserting indigenous rights. Based on fieldwork conducted in Cape Town in 2014 and 2015, this paper discusses the motivations and strategies of several Khoisan activists. After outlining the political context of the Khoisan revival, I show how activists make claims and demands through the use of popular imagery and a global indigenous rights discourse. While producing valuable insights, this “strategic essentialist” approach inadequately addresses motivations for claiming land. Based on a discussion of several case studies, I argue that claiming land functions not so much as a means of procuring physical or economic spaces, but as a way for activists to express grievances regarding coloured identity, history and healing. This symbolic interpretation prompts the reconceptualisation of land claims within the restitution paradigm and policy negotiations.

About this Article

Title
Claiming Cape Town: towards a symbolic interpretation of Khoisan activism and land claims
author
Verbuyst, Rafael
Is Part Of
Anthropology Southern Africa,39 (2): 83-96
isbn
2332-3256
citation
Verbuyst, Rafael. (2016). Claiming Cape Town: towards a symbolic interpretation of Khoisan activism and land claims. Anthropology Southern Africa. 39. 83-96. 10.1080/23323256.2016.1171159.
Identifier
LIT226
Description
Current political negotiations in South Africa which explore the possibility of pre-1913 land claims and the recognition of Khoisan traditional authorities have spurred the growth of the “Khoisan revival”: the phenomenon of people identifying as Khoisan and asserting indigenous rights. Based on fieldwork conducted in Cape Town in 2014 and 2015, this paper discusses the motivations and strategies of several Khoisan activists. After outlining the political context of the Khoisan revival, I show how activists make claims and demands through the use of popular imagery and a global indigenous rights discourse. While producing valuable insights, this “strategic essentialist” approach inadequately addresses motivations for claiming land. Based on a discussion of several case studies, I argue that claiming land functions not so much as a means of procuring physical or economic spaces, but as a way for activists to express grievances regarding coloured identity, history and healing. This symbolic interpretation prompts the reconceptualisation of land claims within the restitution paradigm and policy negotiations.
Date Issued
2016
Subject
Group identity-Khoisan (African people)
Cultural property-Protection-Khoisan (African people)
Land claims
Identity politics-South Africa
Indigenous people-Civil rights
Indigenous people-Land tenure-South Africa
Type
Article
Language
English
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
topic
Social Integrity

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