Uncertain Curature is a volume of bold and original explorations of
the archive--the past, our material inheritance--and the ways it is
displayed, interpreted, and given meaning in the postcolonial world of
South Africa. This operation on the past, what the authors have called
"curature," can be seen as the postcolony's way of rescripting its own
history, which is both a trauma to be dealt with and a resource for the
future. The idea of curation is beautifully explored in a series of
chapters, whose subjects include a controversial Bushman diorama, a
cache of negatives found in a disused mining hostel, fieldwork
photographs of the exhumation of children's bodies from an
archaeological dig, artefacts and images of "the Zulu" in Oxford's Pitt
Rivers Museum, artists' depictions of Steve Biko's corpse, the colonial
inheritance of Victoriana and the queen herself, and anti-apartheid
black-centered films.