• Lauren Beukes’s post-apartheid dystopia: inhabiting Moxyland

    Author(s):
    Louise Bethlehem (see profile)
    Date:
    2013
    Group(s):
    CLCS Global Anglophone, CLCS Global South, GS Speculative Fiction, LLC African since 1990, TC Postcolonial Studies
    Subject(s):
    Africa, History, African literature, Culture--Study and teaching, Ethics
    Item Type:
    Article
    Tag(s):
    citizenship, contemporary fiction, global south, urbanism, African history, Cultural studies
    Permanent URL:
    http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/M6S01N
    Abstract:
    This article reads South African science-fiction writer Lauren Beukes’s first novel, Moxyland (2008) set in a futuristic Cape Town, from the perspective of Lindsay Bremner’s notion of “citiness”-- or how cities produce the modernity of the subjects who inhabit them. The novel is remarkable for its dependence on the social geography of the South African city. This article charts Beukes’s resolutely mobile focalizers as they negotiate the spatial itineraries and technologies of governance in which they are embedded. It explores how Beukes’s futuristic urban setting fuses punitive forms of digital technology with the biopolitical regulation of social relations in an unsettling reprise of the apartheid groundplan. My reading positions Moxyand in relation to discussions of African city textualities--a critical rubric introduced by Ranka Primorac in this journal--the better to explore how the novel makes history of dystopia.
    Notes:
    This article was featured in the tenth anniversary collection of _The Journal of Postcolonial Writing_ and is available for free download from the Taylor and Francis site until December 2015. http://explore.tandfonline.com/page/ah/jpw-10-years
    Metadata:
    Published as:
    Journal article    
    Status:
    Published
    License:
    All Rights Reserved
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