Institutional Repository

Grave rites and grave rights: anthropological study of the removal of farm graves in northern peri-urban Johannesburg

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.advisor De Jongh, M. (Michael), 1943-
dc.contributor.advisor Van Vuuren, C. J.
dc.contributor.author Hill, Cherry Ann
dc.date.accessioned 2016-06-23T10:48:07Z
dc.date.available 2016-06-23T10:48:07Z
dc.date.issued 2016-02
dc.identifier.citation Hill, Cherry Ann (2016) Grave rites and grave rights: anthropological study of the removal of farm graves in northern peri-urban Johannesburg, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/20681> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/20681
dc.description Text in English en
dc.description.abstract In a diachronic and multi-sited study that extended from 2004 through 2012/2013 I deconstructed the sociocultural dynamics of relocating farm graves from the farm Zevenfontein in northern peri-urban Johannesburg. The graves at the focus of the study were some seventy-six graves removed from a northern portion of the farm in 2004 for a huge development project that commenced construction in 2010, and other graves removed in the 1980s from portions of the farm developed for residential estates in the 1990s. The study explored the people who dwelt on the farm and created the graveyards, the religious processes entailed in relocating the mortal remains of ancestors, the mortuary processes of exhuming and reburying ancestors, the disputations between and negotiating processes of landowners and grave owners, and the demands and demonstrations by farm workers and dwellers seeking redress for past human and cultural rights infringements. Although the topic of farm graves is well-referenced in land claims and sense of place discourses and is not in itself a new topic, this study provides original and in-depth information and insight on the broader picture of ancestral graves and their relocation, including the structuring of a community and its leaders and followers, it suggests answers to the question as to whether ancestral graves/graveyards can successfully and functionally be relocated. Not only are religious aspects examined in the study, but also the sociopolitical and economic dimensions of relocating graves are fully scrutinised in the context of farm workers and dwellers’ political awareness of and astuteness to the social and economic potential of farm graves and their relocation. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xxiv, 371 pages) : colour illustrations, maps
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Ancestors en
dc.subject Anthropology en
dc.subject Burial en
dc.subject Cultural en
dc.subject Dainfern en
dc.subject Demonstration en
dc.subject Disjunction en
dc.subject Dispute en
dc.subject Economic en
dc.subject Exhumation en
dc.subject Farm dwellers en
dc.subject Farm workers en
dc.subject Followers en
dc.subject Graves en
dc.subject Johannesburg en
dc.subject Leaders en
dc.subject Mass graves en
dc.subject Peri-urban en
dc.subject Political en
dc.subject Power relations en
dc.subject Reburial en
dc.subject Ritual en
dc.subject Social en
dc.subject Toyi-toyi en
dc.subject Zandspruit en
dc.subject Zevenfontein en
dc.subject.ddc 393.10968221
dc.subject.lcsh Funeral rites and ceremonies -- South Africa -- Johannesburg
dc.subject.lcsh Burial -- South Africa -- Johannesburg
dc.subject.lcsh Johannesburg (South Africa) -- Religious life and customs
dc.subject.lcsh Agricultural laborers -- South Africa -- Johannesburg -- Social life and customs
dc.subject.lcsh Cemeteries -- Social aspects -- South Africa -- Johannesburg
dc.subject.lcsh Ethnopsychology -- Social aspects
dc.subject.lcsh Bantu-speaking peoples -- South Africa -- Johannesburg -- Rites and ceremonies
dc.subject.lcsh Ancestor worship -- South Africa -- Johannesburg
dc.title Grave rites and grave rights: anthropological study of the removal of farm graves in northern peri-urban Johannesburg en
dc.type Dissertation en
dc.description.department Anthropology and Archaeology en
dc.description.degree M.A. (Anthropology)


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search UnisaIR


Browse

My Account

Statistics