Appropriating Me. A New Emerging Aesthetic in the Indian Diaspora of South Africa

This article aims to examine the production, consumption and interpretation of visual texts that were generated from within the Indian diaspora of South Africa. These images are located in and engaged with through social and popular media that democratise access to these visual texts. Within this di...

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Main Author: Nalini Moodley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The International Academic Forum 2025-07-01
Series:IAFOR Journal of Cultural Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-cultural-studies/volume-10-issue-1/article-6/
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author Nalini Moodley
author_facet Nalini Moodley
author_sort Nalini Moodley
collection DOAJ
description This article aims to examine the production, consumption and interpretation of visual texts that were generated from within the Indian diaspora of South Africa. These images are located in and engaged with through social and popular media that democratise access to these visual texts. Within this diasporic community, the desire for the imaginary of home is foregrounded and explicated through the types, styles and discourse emerging within this community. This paper presents a critical analysis of three case studies: a suit of garments, a film franchise, and a body of artificially generated visual art. Using an insider’s reflexivity and a postcolonial framework, this ethnographic inquiry explores the critical interweaving of identity construction, appropriation, and the development of a new aesthetic. This research, located within the body of Cultural Studies, frames, and deepens an understanding of cultural appropriation as a socio-political phenomenon. The study offers a new form of appropriation submitted as mypropriation, where the creator appropriates from inside their own community, religion, tradition or culture as they exist “inside”: thus, an intra-community appropriation. This form of appropriation leads to a new Paavam aesthetic that creates space for creative works that celebrate history, culture and traditions of diasporic communities through an internalised view of the authentic. While diasporas are considered deterritorialised, this aesthetic reinscribes an identity of ownership in navigating the complexities in moving from the periphery to the centre. This study finds that as a conceptual framework, paavam practices are complex and contradictory and could frame how diasporic communities envision their narratives.
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spelling doaj-art-6a6baa0a75ec48f1bd44c4ee5ee1ae212025-08-20T03:12:20ZengThe International Academic ForumIAFOR Journal of Cultural Studies2187-49052025-07-0110112915610.22492/ijcs.10.1.06Appropriating Me. A New Emerging Aesthetic in the Indian Diaspora of South AfricaNalini Moodley0Tshwane University of Technology, South AfricaThis article aims to examine the production, consumption and interpretation of visual texts that were generated from within the Indian diaspora of South Africa. These images are located in and engaged with through social and popular media that democratise access to these visual texts. Within this diasporic community, the desire for the imaginary of home is foregrounded and explicated through the types, styles and discourse emerging within this community. This paper presents a critical analysis of three case studies: a suit of garments, a film franchise, and a body of artificially generated visual art. Using an insider’s reflexivity and a postcolonial framework, this ethnographic inquiry explores the critical interweaving of identity construction, appropriation, and the development of a new aesthetic. This research, located within the body of Cultural Studies, frames, and deepens an understanding of cultural appropriation as a socio-political phenomenon. The study offers a new form of appropriation submitted as mypropriation, where the creator appropriates from inside their own community, religion, tradition or culture as they exist “inside”: thus, an intra-community appropriation. This form of appropriation leads to a new Paavam aesthetic that creates space for creative works that celebrate history, culture and traditions of diasporic communities through an internalised view of the authentic. While diasporas are considered deterritorialised, this aesthetic reinscribes an identity of ownership in navigating the complexities in moving from the periphery to the centre. This study finds that as a conceptual framework, paavam practices are complex and contradictory and could frame how diasporic communities envision their narratives.https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-cultural-studies/volume-10-issue-1/article-6/indian diasporamisappropriationmypropriationpaavam practicesouth africavisual texts
spellingShingle Nalini Moodley
Appropriating Me. A New Emerging Aesthetic in the Indian Diaspora of South Africa
IAFOR Journal of Cultural Studies
indian diaspora
misappropriation
mypropriation
paavam practice
south africa
visual texts
title Appropriating Me. A New Emerging Aesthetic in the Indian Diaspora of South Africa
title_full Appropriating Me. A New Emerging Aesthetic in the Indian Diaspora of South Africa
title_fullStr Appropriating Me. A New Emerging Aesthetic in the Indian Diaspora of South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Appropriating Me. A New Emerging Aesthetic in the Indian Diaspora of South Africa
title_short Appropriating Me. A New Emerging Aesthetic in the Indian Diaspora of South Africa
title_sort appropriating me a new emerging aesthetic in the indian diaspora of south africa
topic indian diaspora
misappropriation
mypropriation
paavam practice
south africa
visual texts
url https://iafor.org/journal/iafor-journal-of-cultural-studies/volume-10-issue-1/article-6/
work_keys_str_mv AT nalinimoodley appropriatingmeanewemergingaestheticintheindiandiasporaofsouthafrica