abstract
This focus reads the multiple selves of Dolly Rathebe as represented in popular cultural discourse, particularly in Drum magazine during the 1950s. Black translucent femininity is a conceptual tool, I argue, with opacity and obscurity; afforded is the opportunity to engage Dolly Rathebe and her various representations with complexity, elasticity and multiplicity. This conception of translucent Black femininities allows room for reckoning with selves that would ordinarily not be considered complex and contradictory. I analyse the representations of Rathebe as situated within the popular cultural discourse structured by a white capitalist and heteropatriarchal prism contoured by Black masculinity. I explore pseudonymity as a tool of (re)creating a self and the layered selves of Dolly Rathebe. The self-fashioning of Rathebe displayed in various representations opens the possibility of depicting layered selves, and I intend to show the elasticity of the figure of Rathebe by reading these representations alongside each other.
In this way I illustrate the layered and multiple selves that stretch from the primary self of Rathebe – particularly the self-fashioning of the figure of the romantic advice column ‘Dear Dolly’ which appeared in Drum. It is also in the navigation of the various traces of the name Dolly, derivative of the name Dorothy, that I expand on the multiplicity and translucence of urban Black femininity represented by Dolly Rathebe. This informs expansion from singular and flat stereotypical representations to multiple and translucent representations, thus illustrating the elasticity of urban Black femininity as depicted in popular cultural discourse.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
![](/cms/asset/054d169a-46b6-4fb7-aafa-9b5d38fc7de4/ragn_a_2185949_ilg0001.gif)
Thobile Ndimande
THOBILE NDIMANDE (she/her) is a researcher whose interests lie in print and popular culture of the twentieth century in South(ern) Africa. She has graduated with her Master’s in African Literature with distinction from the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits). Her research report focused on Miriam Makeba and Dolly Rathebe in Drum magazine. Thobile has spoken at the Library of things we forgot to remember and co-facilitated Lephephe Print Gatherings III Wonke Wonke at Keleketla! Library. Email: [email protected]