'National Culture in Post-Apartheid Namibia' addresses the challenges of
creating a 'national' culture in the context of a historical legacy that
has emphasised ethnic diversity. The state-sponsored Annual National
Culture Festival (ANCF) focuses on the Kavango region in north-eastern
Namibia. Akuupa critically examines the notion of Kavango-ness as a
colonial construct and its subsequent reconstitution and appropriation.
He analyses the way in which cultural representations are produced by
local people in the postcolonial African context of nation building and
national reconciliation by bringing visions of cosmopolitanism and
modernity into critical dialogue with the colonial past. Competing
cultural festivals are used as celebratory social spaces in which
performers and local people participate whilst negotiating a sense of
national belonging in an ongoing tension between the need to celebrate
diversity, yet strive for unity. This is the first study to discuss the
comprehensive role played by those cultural festivals, which were
organised in the ethnic homelands during the time Namibia fell under
South African control.