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Communitas

On-line version ISSN 2415-0525
Print version ISSN 1023-0556

Abstract

MBOTI, Nyasha. South African silences, Japanese erasures, apartheid studies: Blackman Ngoro and the persistence of Apartheid. Communitas (Bloemfontein. Online) [online]. 2023, vol.28, pp.177-191. ISSN 2415-0525.  http://dx.doi.org/10.38140/com.v28i.7614.

This article is a "forensic inductive" reflection on the silences and erasures, in South Africa and Japan, that mark the last years of Zimbabwean journalist Roderick Blackman Ngoro. Ngoro was ostracised in South Africa after he penned a controversial blog article about "Coloureds". After the affair, Ngoro relocated to Japan, continuing his journalistic research on racism. He returned quietly to South Africa a few years later to pursue doctoral studies at Wits University in Johannesburg. In late January 2010, Ngoro was found dead in his room at the University. Police did not suspect any foul play. This article deploys a purposive set of snapshots as part of a reflection on how Ngoro's last few years in South Africa and Japan illustrate the persistence of apartheid. The problem of undetectable crime scenes is considered by means of specific inductive forensics of snapshots that allow a demonstration of how, at the crime scenes of apartheid, no foul play is detectable. Forensic induction is a methodology drawn from the author's emerging work in apartheid studies, seeking to explain how the worlds of the oppressed are crime scenes in which people live with harm and live in harm's way. The article concludes that the complex ironies that attend Ngoro's last few years cannot make sense if not looked at through the lens of apartheid as a paradigm and theoretical framework (by which to detect persistent crime scenes). Such a paradigm has utility in detecting the persistence of harm, from South Africa to Japan.

Keywords : journalism; media studies; media representation; apartheid; apartheid studies; Roderick Blackman Ngoro.

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