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Journal article

Mapping the Unrapeability of White and Black Womxn

English
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2018
Taylor & Francis
Oxon
Africa | Southern Africa

Redi Thlabi's book Khwezi: The Remarkable Story of Fezekile Ntsukela Kuzwayo, published in September 2017, recalled national attention to the 2006 Jacob Zuma rape trial, a deep scar on the body of our democracy. Thlabi's book demonstrates the cost incurred by a womxn who accused a powerful man of rape. During the trail Zuma's lawyer, Advocate Kemp, repeatedly implied that Kuzwayo was sexually promiscuous and therefore 'unrapeable'. This idea - that the rapes of certain womxn do not count as harm - shapes the way in which South African society responds (or fails to respond) to contemporary instances of sexual violence in significant ways. This article aims to interrogate the notion of 'un/rapeability' and, in particular, to situate it in relation to the colonisation of land, as well as the intersecting racialised and gendered formations of coloniality. A central process of colonising the land of South Africa was the establishment of racialised and gendered dynamics of control: the...

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