Towards an itinerary of ideas : intertextual mapping in the rhetoric of Nelson Mandela
Title | Towards an itinerary of ideas : intertextual mapping in the rhetoric of Nelson Mandela |
Publication Type | Other |
Year of Publication | 2016 |
Authors | C. Cawood |
Series title | ASC working paper |
Issue | 134 |
Pagination | - 54 |
Date Published | 2016/// |
Publisher | African Studies Centre Leiden (ASCL) |
Place Published | Leiden |
Publication Language | eng |
Keywords | Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela (1918-2013), oratory |
Abstract | This paper explores explicit and implicit forms of intertextuality in the rhetoric of Nelson Mandela. Intertextuality is viewed as a mechanism of thought and part of the process of dianoia in Classical rhetoric as conceptualised by Aristotle and is also considered crucial in the ethos of a rhetor. The research is founded on the idea that all rhetors have a particular rhetorical imprint, that is a deep-seated impression derived from a cognitive core structure ordering experience and communication and present in all the rhetoric of that individual. Intertextual cues were sought in Mandela's corpus of speeches, biographies, autobiography, anthologies of personal documents, the historical context and discourse communities he engaged with. When read against the historical context of the time, these texts provide insight into the dynamics of message production, personal relationships, personal beliefs and the contexts surrounding the production of certain texts and the discourse communities he engaged with. Biographical cues were sought in his upbringing in Xhosa culture, his mission school education, his political awakening in Johannesburg, his life in the struggle, his long prison term, the years after release and presidency. Thus far, explicit mappings include Afrikaans literary voices, Shakespeare and the 'classics', colleagues and friends from the struggle period, instances of self-referential intertextuality as well as intercontextuality of signs and symbols. The implicit mapping includes Churchill, the Gandhi-Nehru web of intertextuality, a Marxist-Socialist web including voices such as Castro and biblical allusion. To date, the most significant intertextuality found in Mandela's rhetoric is the Gandhi-Nehru web with Nehru playing a particularly influential role in Mandela's conception of struggle and his own life in that struggle. |
IR handle/ Full text URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1887/40442 |
Citation Key | 8182 |