https://vital.seals.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Index ${session.getAttribute("locale")} 5 Uphononongo ngokwesithako sobunzululwazi-sakhono kwiinoveli ezimbini zesiXhosa : (Ukhozi olunamaphiko noLwadilik' udonga) https://vital.seals.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:8483 Wed 12 May 2021 20:17:13 SAST ]]> Uphononongo lokubunjwa kobume bengqondo yabalinganiswa kwiincwadi ezikhethiweyo zesiXhosa https://vital.seals.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:8474 Wed 12 May 2021 17:42:41 SAST ]]> The life and literary works of Peter Tshobiso Mtuze: a critical analysis https://vital.seals.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:20658 Wed 12 May 2021 15:48:05 SAST ]]> Satire in J.J. R. Jolobe's literary works : a critique in relation to contemporary South Africa https://vital.seals.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:40667 Wed 12 May 2021 14:26:00 SAST ]]> Transcribing tales, creating cultural identities an analysis of selected written english texts of Xhosa folktales https://vital.seals.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:2187 new nationalist discourse=, is examined. The optimistic belief of scholars and authors, that folktales are a means of bridging cultural gaps, is questioned. Finally, it is shown that authors of folktale texts can synthesise diverse literary traditions in a hybrid artform. This synthesis, to some extent, embodies the >new nationalist= aim of a unified national cultural identity in South Africa. The central value of recognising the role of folktale texts in colonialist and nationalist discourses lies in the awareness that this type of literary activity in South Africa is a cross-cultural practice. The confluence of voices which constitutes these folktale texts, reveals that our stories are intertwined. In the past, the discourses of colonialism and apartheid controlled the formation of the diverse and hierarchised cultural identities of South Africa. But this is not to say that alternative stories of self-fashioning and cultural self-determination did not exist. In the folktale texts of writers such as Mhlope, Jordan, and even in Theal's colonial collection, different mediums, literary heritages and styles converge to create narratives which speak of cross-cultural interaction and the empowerment of the black voice. In post-apartheid South Africa, there is even greater opportunity to reshape stories, to recreate selves, and to redefine intercultural relations. This thesis has outlined how some of those stories, which use folktale texts as their central trope, are constructed and commodified. Not only do these reinvented folktale texts embody the heterogeneous cultural influences of South Africa, they also have the potential to promote, first, the understanding of cultural differences, and second, the acceptance of the notion of cultural hybridity in our society.]]> Thu 13 May 2021 06:57:59 SAST ]]> Normative value systems as portrayed by V.N.M. Swaartbooi and V. Magadla https://vital.seals.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:8441 Thu 13 May 2021 03:24:08 SAST ]]> Uhlalutyo ngokwesithako sobunzululwazi nkcubeko-ntlalo yaseAfrika kwinoveli yesiXhosa: Inkululeko isentabeni https://vital.seals.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:26462 Thu 13 May 2021 00:12:49 SAST ]]> A historical sociolinguistic study on the conceptualisation and application of justice and law kwisizwe samaXhosa as documented in and extracted From SEK Mqhayi And W.W. Gqoba’s selected writings https://vital.seals.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:34115 Thu 13 May 2021 00:08:55 SAST ]]> Uphando ngokuphononongwa kwabalinganiswa ngokobume bengqondo kwiincwadi ezikhethiweyo zikaSaule u'Vuleka mhlaba no Umthetho kamthetho' https://vital.seals.ac.za/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:26409 Thu 13 May 2021 00:01:47 SAST ]]>