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ENG2603 Assignment 3 2024 - DUE 13 September 2024 R47,08   Add to cart

Exam (elaborations)

ENG2603 Assignment 3 2024 - DUE 13 September 2024

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ENG2603 Assignment 3 2024 - DUE 13 September 2024 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

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  • August 26, 2024
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ENG2603
Assignment 3
2024 - DUE 13
September 2024
QUESTIOS WITH DETAILED ANSWERS

, ENG2603 Assignment 3 2024 - DUE 13 September 2024




In Welcome to Our Hilbrow, Refentše is depicted as a creative writer who notes a

problem with the suppression of writing literature in African languages. In one of the

passages in the novel Refentše is addressing Refilwe about the difficulties of writing in a

language NOT of one’s own. Refentše says: She did not know that writing in an Afri-can

language in South Africa could be such a curse. She had not anticipated that the

publishers’ reviewers would brand her novel vulgar. Calling shit and genitalia by their

cor-rect names in Sepedi was apparently regarded as vulgar by these reviewers, who

had for a long time been reviewing works of fiction for educational publishers, and who

were deter-mined to ensure that such works did not of-fend the systems that they

served. These systems were very inconsistent in their attitudes to education. They

considered it fine, for instance, to call genitalia by their cor-rect names in English and

Afrikaans biology books—even gave these names graphic pic-tures as escorts—yet in

all other languages, they criminalised such linguistic honesty. . . . In 1995, despite the

so-called new dispensa-tion, nothing had really changed. The leg-acy of Apartheid

censors still shackled those who dreamed of writing freely in an African The leg-acy of

Apartheid censors still shackled those who dreamed of writing freely in an African

language. Publishers, scared of being found to be on the financially dangerous side of

the censorship border, still rejected manuscripts that too realistically called things by

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