Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/4548
Title: Design for racial reconciliation dialogue : a South African case study
Authors: Robbertze, Victoria Louise 
Keywords: Graphic design for good;Racial reconciliation;Relational dialectics;Social media campaign
Issue Date: Sep-2022
Abstract: 
The issue of racism and cross-cultural hostility is still prevalent in post-apartheid
South Africa, including in church-based contexts. ‘One New Humanity’ (ONH) is an
initiative that seeks to promote racial reconciliation dialogue through church
congregant meetings in Durban. This research serves the ONH initiative through a
practice-related case study that culminates in the design of a social media campaign.
The aim of both the research and the campaign design is to stimulate increased
racial reconciliation dialogue amongst ONH congregants, and in so doing spread
racial reconciliation to wider communities.
Research interviews with ONH congregants and pastors were framed using the
theory of relational dialectics. This theory concerns conflict in interpersonal and
social relations that are dialectical and contradictory. Relational dialectics is also
closely linked to Bakhtin’s dialogical theory. The relational dialectics framework is
established in the literature review and is then used as a methodological tool of
inquiry leading to its final application in the graphic design of illustrated posts for a
social media campaign.
The graphic design of the social media campaign is a response to, and application
of, the research inquiry into ONH congregants’ views on current racial tensions in
South Africa. It is also guided by ONH pastors’ goals for their initiative.
The praxis of the study then encompasses the guiding strategy for the ONH
campaign, the creative brief for graphic design and the resulting social media content. This enables the ONH leadership to review the campaign for real time
implementation.
The visual language of the social media campaign draws upon screen print and
linocut effects that are reminiscent of anti-apartheid posters of the liberation
struggle. From the research data analysis through to the formulation of the creative
brief and the design production, the campaign follows responsible design values
regarding the impact of graphic design on the viewer’s thinking about racial
reconciliation.
The ONH Campaign takes the position that both sides of any racial conflict issue
need to be understood for racial reconciliation to proceed. This even-handed
understanding may be best communicated through provocatively juxtaposed visual
image pairs that are digitally disseminated. As such, the research knowledge artefact
lies within the ambit of ‘graphic design for good’ endeavours. The research
conclusion reflects on the citizen design approach taken in this study, and it may
support further ‘graphic design for good’ praxis research.
Description: 
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Master of Applied Arts in Graphic Design, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2022.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/4548
DOI: https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4548
Appears in Collections:Theses and dissertations (Arts and Design)

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