Browsing by Author "Hurst Ellen"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- ItemOpen AccessExploring Community Creation: Conversations of Young Black Women(University of Cape Town, 2024) Ngandi, Asemahle; Bennett, Jane; Hurst EllenIn order to showcase the significance of the often-trivialised act of women talking to each other, the purpose of this research project was to explore how young black women use talking to create community with each other. The purpose of this research is to explore how young black South African women talking to each other, having conversations with each other, work to create bonds and ultimately community with each other – or, in bell hooks' (2000) terms, a Sisterhood. This act of women talking – black women, no less – to each other goes against the grain, it is a revolutionary act that they have been conditioned against precisely because of its revolutionary nature and because of the power that lies in the unpredictability of it. Along with staying silent, women are conditioned into not having bonds or relationships with each other because they are natural enemies, because all that would come from such relations would be unimportant, because they would tear each other down – as such, women cannot and should not bond with each other (hooks; 2000:43). This is reflected in the literature, particularly literature on Africa. The literature available on the socio-linguistic study of language and language varieties is expansive on the embodiment of these varieties by young African men. This solidifies the notion that [young African] women are not talking – not to young men, not to each other, not to anyone. Due to the COVID-19 induced travel restrictions, the research used virtual ethnography principles applied to past synchronous one-one-one WhatsApp chats to collect data. Using a Speech Act Analysis on the emojis used in the chats, it was discovered that these play various roles in these conversations, including mitigating serious conversations, to contextualise seemingly negative messages and to convey emotions between the interlocutors. Additionally, focussing on and analysing the code switches that occurred in the conversations revealed that switches were also used to provide comedic relief in heavy conversations and/or to make the other person laugh and code switches did friendship maintenance work. From the WhatsApp conversations, one can therefore deduce that these young black women's use of language and linguistic matter – albeit in a virtual space – play an important role in creating community in that both emojis and code switches insist on the fragility of the people in conversation and create a community that not only accommodates this fragility, but one that allows and accepts it.
- ItemOpen AccessPlaying with power & possibility: Exploring the ways in which gameplaying can be used as a decolonial feminist tool in the African Feminist Studies (AFS) classroom(2025) Alexander, Andrea; Seedat, Fatima; Hurst EllenWithin the academic realm, a hierarchical structure prevails, giving rise to discernible power differentials between students and academic staff. These hierarchical power dynamics permeate the interactions between students and academic staff within the context of teaching and learning. Concurrently, language and racial identity emerge as formidable gatekeepers, significantly influencing students' sense of belonging and their capacity to engage in knowledge production within the academic domain. This research endeavours to unpack the role of gameplaying as a decolonial pedagogical approach in the African Feminist Studies (AFS) department. Moreover, the purpose of this study thus aims to explore the ways in which playing games functions as a decolonial pedagogic method for teaching and to include students as co-producers of knowledge together with academic staff. This examination takes the form of a qualitative study, underpinned by the theoretical framework of decolonial feminism. The data for this study originates from gameplaying sessions facilitated during lectures, tutorials, and postgraduate seminars. Specifically, the boardgame "Clue & A" was used it was created to foster discussions pertaining to diversity, transformation, and decolonization within the academia. Participants in this research include students and academic staff affiliated with courses offered by the African Feminist Studies (AFS) department at the University of Cape Town (UCT). Additionally, two students and two academic staff members from the University of the Western Cape who participated in the UCT postgraduate seminar series are included. For the purpose of analysis, thematic analysis has been used