Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

"The host of vagabonds" : origins and destinations of the vagrant in Cape history and ideas

Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-231).

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anderson, P R
Other Authors: Schalkwyk, David
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of English Language and Literature 2014
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613265380507648
access_status_str Open Access
author Anderson, P R
author2 Schalkwyk, David
author_browse Anderson, P R
Schalkwyk, David
author_facet Schalkwyk, David
Anderson, P R
author_sort Anderson, P R
collection Thesis
description Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-231).
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/8907
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:23.204Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
publishDateRange 2014
publishDateSort 2014
publisher Department of English Language and Literature
publisherStr Department of English Language and Literature
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/8907 "The host of vagabonds" : origins and destinations of the vagrant in Cape history and ideas Anderson, P R Schalkwyk, David Penn, Nigel English Language and Literature Includes bibliographical references (p. 224-231). South African history in the crisis of the early 19th century, and South African literature ever since then, have been preoccupied with the vagrant in much the same manner and degree as was the European Renaissance. The subject of this thesis is the history and culture of vagrancy, and specifically the trajectory by which the Renaissance idea of the vagrant becomes transposed to the indigenous population of the colonial Cape and works itself out in literary and historical texts of that society and its successors. It has as its central thesis the claim that a history of the vagrant is not properly to be sought in social and economic realities, but first in the cultural (and here especially textual and literary) forms of the idea by which the vagrant is brought into being. In advancing an apprehension of vagrancy as the ideological accusation of hegemonic order, this thesis argues that the vagrant figures in ideology as the inordinate, and in so doing becomes metonymic for inordinate historical passages - especially revolution and the frontier, moments of rupture and narrative loss, or moments where history’s character of mutability reaches its extreme. Above all, the vagrant represents the inordinate event of history itself~ and exemplifies the necessity of a scholarship in which historicist literary criticism and textual analyses of history are conjoined Renaissance representations of the vagrant are forged in the nexus of feudal dissolution and capitalist emergence, and themselves belong to a rapidly developing culture and economy of textual commodification. There exists a marked correspondence between these representations and the development of colonial representations of the indigenous 'other', a correspondence by which the colonised is anticipated as a vagrant and thus cast as an extension of the disorderly lumpenproletariat from which imperial capitalism most profitably, and with state sanction, recruits its labour. The first half of this thesis traces exemplary instances of the transfer of vagrant attributes to the colonial subject, and then looks to the manner in which, especially between 1828 and 1834, the idea of vagrancy comes to dominate cultural and political delineation in the Cape. From the Renaissance schedules of Hannan, Awdeley and others, through the canonical accomplishments of King Lear, to texts of the historical record in the Cape, and the doggerel squib of A G. Bain's 'Kaatje Kekkelbek', the vagrant is pursued into the more explicitly literary occasions of the thesis's latter half. Here we find the vagrant at the centre of Fugard and Coetzee, major authors preoccupied with history and indebted to it. A consideration of the vagrant's persistence at the core of 20th century South African literature offers insights into the 'destination' of the vagrant idea, which is to say, just what the depth of the practice of that idea may be, and why - and the thesis concludes by discovering the particular correspondence between vagrancy and history itself. 2014-10-29T10:03:23Z 2014-10-29T10:03:23Z 2007 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8907 eng application/pdf Department of English Language and Literature Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle English Language and Literature
Anderson, P R
"The host of vagabonds" : origins and destinations of the vagrant in Cape history and ideas
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title "The host of vagabonds" : origins and destinations of the vagrant in Cape history and ideas
title_full "The host of vagabonds" : origins and destinations of the vagrant in Cape history and ideas
title_fullStr "The host of vagabonds" : origins and destinations of the vagrant in Cape history and ideas
title_full_unstemmed "The host of vagabonds" : origins and destinations of the vagrant in Cape history and ideas
title_short "The host of vagabonds" : origins and destinations of the vagrant in Cape history and ideas
title_sort the host of vagabonds origins and destinations of the vagrant in cape history and ideas
topic English Language and Literature
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/8907
work_keys_str_mv AT andersonpr thehostofvagabondsoriginsanddestinationsofthevagrantincapehistoryandideas