Difference between revisions of "Hottentot"

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'''See also [[Coloured]] and [[Griqua]].'''
 
'''See also [[Coloured]] and [[Griqua]].'''
  
Today the word is seen as politically incorrect and features among the many proscribed [[racial terms]] formerly found in South Africa.  
+
Though the term is of course found in numerous books, novels, poems and plays from the 18th to the 20th century, it is today seen as politically incorrect and features among the many proscribed [[racial terms]] formerly found in South Africa.  
  
  

Revision as of 07:16, 18 July 2018

Hottentot was the name given to hunter-gatherer people of Khoikhoi descent by the Dutch settlers in the mid 17th century, in immitation of the sounds they heard in the Khoekhoe languages, spoken by the Khoi.

This name was soon contracted to "Hotnot" in the spoken language by Dutch-, and later Afrikaans-speaking people in the Cape. In the 19th and 20th centuries, as the numbers of "pure" "Hottentots" dwindled, the term was expanded to refer to all people of mixed race heritage and gradually was also used denigratingly (particularly in the contracted form) to imply inferiority and lack of

The term Hottentot was used by a number of earlier writers to refer to an uncivilized, even

By the 1980’s the term was seen as highly derogatory and replaced by the more "correct" Khoi or /Xhoi (the / indicating a click sound). However by 2000 this had been challenged in its turn, with the etymology of "Hottentot" being reappraised by descendants of the origial descendents of the Khoikhoi.. *? CHECK!

See also Coloured and Griqua.

Though the term is of course found in numerous books, novels, poems and plays from the 18th to the 20th century, it is today seen as politically incorrect and features among the many proscribed racial terms formerly found in South Africa.


Sources

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khoikhoi