Culture as Cure: Civil Society and Moral Debates in KwaZulu-Natal after Apartheid
Preben Kaarsholm
Abstract
The
paper addresses the nature of 'really existing' civil society and
the workings of the public sphere in informal urban settlements on the
outskirts of Durban. It focuses on debates over morality and the health
of the community which have emerged locally in the context of the
HIV/AIDS epidemic, and highlights the positions taken by different
African Initiated Churches - Zionist, apostolic and evangelical
churches as well as the Shembe Church. Besides these are placed
varieties of virginity testing that have become prominent in the last
decade, and the significance of disagreement between the different
cultural programmes represented is examined. The paper argues that in
these situations of urban informality, poverty and unemployment, there
is a richness of debate, cultural invention and entrepreneurship, which
needs to be recorded and understood in order to appreciate on-going
dynamics of political development and struggles over notions of rights.
Finally, it is argued that the recording of discussion within and
between popular cultural institutions is significant as a resource for
future memorialisation and debate around the transition from apartheid
to democracy.
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