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Hottentot (racial term)

Hottentot (British and South African English /ˈhɒtənˌtɒt/ HOT-ən-TOT) is a term that was historically used to refer to the Khoekhoe, indigenous nomadic pastoralists, San people, indigenous people of the Cape and other Bantu group (such as the Xhosa people and Tswana people) of the cape of South Africa.

"Korah Hottentots preparing to remove" (Samuel Daniell, 1805)
Early 19th-century caricature showing settlers being attacked by cannibal "Hottentots"[1]
Hottentot head of Shark Island prisoner used for medical experimentation

Use of the term Hottentot is now deprecated and considered offensive, the preferred name for the non-Bantu & Bantu speaking indigenous people of the Western Cape area being Khoekhoe (formerly Khoikhoi), San People and Xhosa people of which share the same ancestral DNA Haplogroup L0 & Haplogroup A.[2]

Etymology edit

Hottentot originated among the "old Dutch" settlers of the Dutch Cape Colony run by United East India Company (VOC), who arrived in the region in the 1650s,[3] and it entered English usage from Dutch in the seventeenth century.[4] However, no definitive Dutch etymology for the term is known. A widely claimed etymology is from a supposed Dutch expression equivalent to "stammerer, stutterer", applied to the Khoikhoi on account of the distinctive click consonants in their languages. There is, however, no earlier attestation of a word hottentot to support this theory. An alternative possibility is that the name derived from an overheard term in chants accompanying Khoikhoi or San dances, but seventeenth-century transcriptions of such chants offer no conclusive evidence for this.[4]

An early Anglicisation of the term is recorded as hodmandod in the years around 1700.[5] The reduced Afrikaans/Dutch form hotnot has also been borrowed into South African English as a derogatory term for black people, including Cape Coloureds.[6]

Usage as an ethnic term edit

In seventeenth-century Dutch, Hottentot was at times used to denote all black people (synonymously with Kaffir, which was at times likewise used for Cape Coloureds and Khoisans), but at least some speakers were careful to use the term Hottentot to denote what they thought of as a race distinct from the supposedly darker-skinned people referred to as Kaffirs. This distinction between the non-Bantu "Cape Blacks" or "Cape Coloureds" and the Bantu was noted as early as 1684 by the French anthropologist François Bernier.[7] The idea that Hottentot referred strictly to the non-Bantu peoples of southern Africa was well embedded in colonial scholarly thought by the end of the eighteenth century.[8]

The main meaning of Hottentot as an ethnic term in the 19th and the 20th centuries has therefore been to denote the Khoikhoi people specifically.[9] However, Hottentot also continued to be used through the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries in a wider sense, to include all of the people now usually referred to with the modern term Khoisan (not only the Khoikhoi, but also the San people, hunter-gatherer populations from the interior of southern Africa who had not been known to the seventeenth-century settlers, once often referred to as Bosjesmans in Dutch and Bushmen in English).[10][11]

In George Murdock's Atlas of World Cultures (1981), the author refers to "Hottentots" as a "subfamily of the Khoisan linguistic family" who "became detribalized in contact with Dutch settlers in 1652, mixing with the latter and with slaves brought by them from Indonesia to form the hybrid population known today as the Cape Coloured."[12] The term Hottentot remained in use as a technical ethnic term in anthropological and historiographical literature into the late 1980s.[13] The 1996 edition of the Dictionary of South African English merely says that "the word 'Hottentot' is seen by some as offensive and Khoikhoi is sometimes substituted as a name for the people, particularly in scholarly contexts".[14] Yet, by the 1980s, because of the racist connotations discussed below, it was increasingly seen as too derogatory and offensive to be used in an ethnic sense.[15]

Usage as a term of abuse and racist connotations edit

From the eighteenth century onwards, the term hottentot was also a term of abuse without a specific ethnic sense, comparable to barbarian or cannibal.[16] According to James Boswell's The Life of Johnson, Samuel Johnson was parodied in Lord Chesterfield's Letters of 1737 as "a respectable Hottentot".[citation needed]

In its ethnic sense, Hottentot had developed its connotations of savagery and primitivism by the seventeenth century; colonial depictions of the Hottentots (Khoikhoi) in the seventeenth to eighteenth century were characterized by savagery, often suggestive of cannibalism or the consumption of raw flesh, physiological features such as steatopygia and elongated labia perceived as primitive or "simian" and a perception of the click sounds in the Khoikhoi languages as "bestial".[17] Thus, it can be said that the European, colonial image of "the Hottentot" from the seventeenth century onwards bore little relation to any realities of the Khoisan in Africa, and that this image fed into the usage of hottentot as a generalised derogatory term.[18] Correspondingly, the word is "sometimes used as ugly slang for a black person".[19]

Use of the derived term hotnot was explicitly proscribed in South Africa by 2008.[20] Accordingly, much recent scholarship on the history of colonial attitudes to the Khoisan or on the European trope of "the Hottentot" puts the term Hottentot in scare quotes.[21]

Other usages edit

In its original role of ethnic designator, the term Hottentot was included into a variety of derived terms, such as the Hottentot Corps,[22] the first Coloured unit to be formed in the South African army, originally called the Corps Bastaard Hottentoten (Dutch: "Corps of Bastard Hottentots"), organised in 1781 by the Dutch colonial administration of the time.[23]: 51 

The word is also used in the common names of a wide variety of plants and animals,[24] such as the Africanis dogs sometimes called "Hottentot hunting dogs", the fish Pachymetopon blochii, frequently simply called hottentots, Carpobrotus edulis, commonly known as a "hottentot-fig", and Trachyandra, commonly known as "hottentot cabbage". It has also given rise to the scientific name for one genus of scorpion, Hottentotta, and may be the origin of the epithet tottum in the botanical name Leucospermum tottum.[25]

The word is still used as part of a tongue-twister in modern Dutch, "Hottentottententententoonstelling", meaning a "Hottentot tent exhibition".[26]

In the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz, the Cowardly Lion, blustering about his lack of courage, says: "What makes the Hottentot so hot? What puts the 'ape' in apricot? What have they got that I ain't got?" Other cast members reply: "Courage."[citation needed]

In the 1964 film Mary Poppins, Admiral Boom mistakes the rooftop-dancing chimney sweeps for an attack by 'Hottentots'.[citation needed]

Tom Lehrer's song "We Will All Go Together When We Go" refers to both "Hottentots and Eskimos" going at the same time.[citation needed]

The name of Reiner Knizia's game "Schotten-Totten" is a portmanteau of the German words "Schotten" (Scottish people) and "Hottentotten" (Hottentots).

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "All among the Hottentots Capering ashore, a satirical view of the 1820 settlers, to remind emigrants of the dangers awaiting them", caption: "All among the Hottentots Capring ashore"!! or the Blessings of Emigration to the Cape of Forlorn[Good] Hope, source unknown, identified only as "Cruikshank, presumably George Cruikshank (1792–1878)", reproduction from Anthony Preston, Suid-Afrikaanse Geskiedenis in Beeld (1989)
  2. ^ "Khoisan" is an artificial compound term that was introduced into 20th-century ethnology, but since the late 1990s it has been adopted as a self designation (since 2017 its use has been official due to the passage of a "Traditional & Khoisan Leadership Bill" by the South African National Assembly. Khoisan march to Parliament to demand land rights, ENCA , 3 December 2015. Pelane Phakgadi, Ramaphosa meets aggrieved Khoisan activists at Union Buildings, Eyewitness News, 24 December 2017. Illegitimate Khoisan leaders are trying to exploit new bill, IOL, 17 April 2018.
  3. ^ "The old Dutch also did not know that their so-called Hottentots formed only one branch of a wide-spread ethnicity, of which the other branch divided into ever so many tribes, differing from each other totally in language [...] While the so-called Hottentots called themselves Khoikhoi (men of men, i.e. men par excellence), they called those other tribes , the Sonqua of the Cape Records [...] We should apply the term Hottentot to the whole race, and call the two families, each by the native name, that is the one, the Khoikhoi, the so-called Hottentot proper; the other the Sān () or Bushmen." Theophilus Hahn, Tsuni-||Goam: The Supreme Being to the Khoi-Khoi (1881), p. 3.
  4. ^ a b "A very large number of different etymologies for the name have been suggested ... The most frequently repeated suggestion ... is that the word was a spec. use of a formally identical Dutch word meaning ‘stammerer, stutterer’, which came to be applied to the Khoekhoe and San people on account of the clicks characteristic of their languages. However, evidence for the earlier general use appears to be lacking. Another frequent suggestion is that the people were so named after one or more words which early European visitors to southern Africa heard in chants accompanying dances of the Khoekhoe or San ... but the alleged chant is rendered in different ways in different 17th-cent. sources, and some of the accounts may be based on hearsay rather than first-hand knowledge. "Hottentot, n. and adj." OED Online, Oxford University Press, March 2018, www.oed.com/view/Entry/88829. Accessed 13 May 2018. Citing G. S. Nienaber, 'The origin of the name “Hottentot” ', African Studies, 22:2 (1963), 65-90, doi:10.1080/00020186308707174. See also Rev. Prof Johannes Du Plessis, B.A., B.D. (1917). "Report of the South African Association for the Advancement of Science". pp. 189–193. Retrieved 5 July 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link).
  5. ^ "hodmandod, n. and adj." OED Online, Oxford University Press, March 2018, www.oed.com/view/Entry/88816. Accessed 13 May 2018.
  6. ^ "hotnot, n." OED Online, Oxford University Press, March 2018, www.oed.com/view/Entry/88816. Accessed 13 May 2018.
  7. ^ Anonymous [F. Bernier], "Nouvelle division de la terre par les différentes espèces ou races qui l'habitent", Journal des Sçavants, 24 April 1684, p. 133–140. les Noirs du Cap de bonne Esperance semblent estre d'une autre espece que ceux du reste de l'Afrique. (p. 136). See also Charles Frankel, La science face au racisme (1986), 41f.
  8. ^ Jochen S. Arndt, 'What’s in a Word? Historicising the Term ‘Caffre’ in European Discourses about Southern Africa between 1500 and 1800', Journal of Southern African Studies (2017), 1-17. doi:10.1080/03057070.2018.1403212.
  9. ^ "Hottentot, n. and adj." OED Online, Oxford University Press, March 2018, www.oed.com/view/Entry/88829. Accessed 13 May 2018.
  10. ^ "Hottentot, n. and adj." OED Online, Oxford University Press, March 2018, www.oed.com/view/Entry/88829. Accessed 13 May 2018.
  11. ^ Alan Barnard, Anthropology and the Bushman (Oxford: Berg, 2007), pp. 11-21.
  12. ^ Murdock, George Peter (1981). Atlas of World Cultures. University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 10. ISBN 9780822984856.
  13. ^ E.g. Hilton Basil Fine, Crime, punishment, and the administration of justice at the Cape of Good Hope 1806-1828 (1988); Michael Lewis Wilson Notes on the Nomenclature of the Khoisan (1986); Harry A. Gailey, R.E. Krieger, History of Africa: From 1800 to 1945 (1989), 67ff.
  14. ^ Geoffrey Hughes, 'Hottentot', in An Encyclopedia of Swearing: The Social History of Oaths, Profanity, Foul Language, and Ethnic Slurs in the English-Speaking World (Armonk, New York: Sharpe, 2006), p. 243.
  15. ^ Richard Elphick, Khoikhoi and the Founding of White South Africa (Cape of Good Hope: Ravan Press, 1985), p. xv: 'The word Hottentot is occasionally heard even in the 1980s, but few outside South Africa know its precise meaning'. "Bring Back the 'Hottentot Venus'". Web.mit.edu. 15 June 1995. Retrieved 13 August 2012.; "'Hottentot Venus' goes home". BBC News. 29 April 2002. Retrieved 13 August 2017.: "the Khoisan tribe of hunter-gatherers who lived in the southernmost tip of Africa and were also known as Hottentots, which is now considered a derogatory and offensive term." Strobel, Christoph (2008). "A Note on Terminology". The Testing Grounds of Modern Empire: The Making of Colonial Racial Order in the American Ohio Country and the South African Eastern Cape, 1770s–1850s. Peter Lang. ISBN 9781433101236. p. x.
  16. ^ Geoffrey Hughes, 'Hottentot', in An Encyclopedia of Swearing: The Social History of Oaths, Profanity, Foul Language, and Ethnic Slurs in the English-Speaking World (Armonk, New York: Sharpe, 2006), pp. 241-43. "Hottentot, n. and adj." OED Online, Oxford University Press, March 2018, www.oed.com/view/Entry/88829. Accessed 13 May 2018.
  17. ^ S. Qureshi, Displaying Sara Baartman, the 'Hottentot Venus' (2004), p.234. James Kicherer (1799): "Bushmen were ' total strangers to domestic happiness …(and) will kill their children without remorse as when they are ill-shaped, when they are in want of food, when the father of a child has forsaken its mother, or when obliged to flee from the Farmers or others… There are instances of parents throwing their tender off-spring to the hungry Lion … Many of these wild Hottentots live by plunder and murder, and are guilty of the most horrid and atrocious actions.' "[1]
  18. ^ François-Xavier Fauvelle-Aymar, L'invention du Hottentot: histoire du regard occidental sur les Khoisan (XVe-XIXe siècle) (Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 2002): 'Somme toutes, les destins de ces topoi qui forment le Hottentot d'Europe restent largement indifférents à leur degré d'adéquation avec les Khoisan d'Afrique' (p. 10). Linda Evi Merians, Envisioning the Worst: Representations of "Hottentots" in Early-modern England (Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2001).
  19. ^ Robert Hendrickson, The Dictionary of Eponyms: Names that Became Words (New York: Stein and Day, 1985 [repr. from Philadelphia: Chilton, 1972]), p. 149.
  20. ^ "Statement on Cabinet Meeting of 5 March 2008". South African Department of Foreign Affairs. 2008-03-05. Retrieved 2008-10-26.: "We should take care not to use derogatory words that were used to demean black persons in this country. Words such as Kaffir, coolie, Boesman, hotnot and many others have negative connotations and remain offensive as they were used to degrade, undermine and strip South Africans of their humanity and dignity."
  21. ^ Linda Evi Merians, Envisioning the Worst: Representations of "Hottentots" in Early-modern England (Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2001); Nicholas Hudson, ' "Hottentots" and the evolution of European racism", Journal of European Studies, 34.4 (December 2004), 308-32, doi:10.1177/0047244104048701; David Johnson, 'Representing the Cape "Hottentots", from the French Enlightenment to Post-Apartheid South Africa', Eighteenth-Century Studies, 40.4 (Summer 2007), 525-52. https://www.jstor.org/stable/30053727.
  22. ^ "Hottentot, n. and adj." OED Online, Oxford University Press, March 2018, www.oed.com/view/Entry/88829. Accessed 13 May 2018.
  23. ^ Pretorius, Fransjohan (2014). A History of South Africa: From the Distant Past to the Present Day. Hatsfield, Pretoria: Protea Book House. ISBN 978-1-86919-908-1.
  24. ^ "Hottentot, n. and adj." OED Online, Oxford University Press, March 2018, www.oed.com/view/Entry/88829. Accessed 13 May 2018.
  25. ^ Rourke, John Patrick (1970). Taxonomic Studies on Leucospermum R.Br. (PDF). pp. 103–107.
  26. ^ Ben Coates, 'Introduction' in Why the Dutch are Different: A Journey into the Hidden Heart of the Netherlands (London: Brealey, 2015), ISBN 9781857889628.
  • François-Xavier Fauvelle-Aymar, L'invention du Hottentot: histoire du regard occidental sur les Khoisan (XVe-XIXe siècle) (Paris: Publications de la Sorbonne, 2002)
  • Linda Evi Merians, Envisioning the Worst: Representations of "Hottentots" in Early-modern England (Newark: University of Delaware Press, 2001)

hottentot, racial, term, other, uses, hottentot, disambiguation, hottentot, british, south, african, english, term, that, historically, used, refer, khoekhoe, indigenous, nomadic, pastoralists, people, indigenous, people, cape, other, bantu, group, such, xhosa. For other uses see Hottentot disambiguation Hottentot British and South African English ˈ h ɒ t en ˌ t ɒ t HOT en TOT is a term that was historically used to refer to the Khoekhoe indigenous nomadic pastoralists San people indigenous people of the Cape and other Bantu group such as the Xhosa people and Tswana people of the cape of South Africa Korah Hottentots preparing to remove Samuel Daniell 1805 Early 19th century caricature showing settlers being attacked by cannibal Hottentots 1 Hottentot head of Shark Island prisoner used for medical experimentationUse of the term Hottentot is now deprecated and considered offensive the preferred name for the non Bantu amp Bantu speaking indigenous people of the Western Cape area being Khoekhoe formerly Khoikhoi San People and Xhosa people of which share the same ancestral DNA Haplogroup L0 amp Haplogroup A 2 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Usage as an ethnic term 3 Usage as a term of abuse and racist connotations 4 Other usages 5 See also 6 ReferencesEtymology editHottentot originated among the old Dutch settlers of the Dutch Cape Colony run by United East India Company VOC who arrived in the region in the 1650s 3 and it entered English usage from Dutch in the seventeenth century 4 However no definitive Dutch etymology for the term is known A widely claimed etymology is from a supposed Dutch expression equivalent to stammerer stutterer applied to the Khoikhoi on account of the distinctive click consonants in their languages There is however no earlier attestation of a word hottentot to support this theory An alternative possibility is that the name derived from an overheard term in chants accompanying Khoikhoi or San dances but seventeenth century transcriptions of such chants offer no conclusive evidence for this 4 An early Anglicisation of the term is recorded as hodmandod in the years around 1700 5 The reduced Afrikaans Dutch form hotnot has also been borrowed into South African English as a derogatory term for black people including Cape Coloureds 6 Usage as an ethnic term editIn seventeenth century Dutch Hottentot was at times used to denote all black people synonymously with Kaffir which was at times likewise used for Cape Coloureds and Khoisans but at least some speakers were careful to use the term Hottentot to denote what they thought of as a race distinct from the supposedly darker skinned people referred to as Kaffirs This distinction between the non Bantu Cape Blacks or Cape Coloureds and the Bantu was noted as early as 1684 by the French anthropologist Francois Bernier 7 The idea that Hottentot referred strictly to the non Bantu peoples of southern Africa was well embedded in colonial scholarly thought by the end of the eighteenth century 8 The main meaning of Hottentot as an ethnic term in the 19th and the 20th centuries has therefore been to denote the Khoikhoi people specifically 9 However Hottentot also continued to be used through the eighteenth nineteenth and twentieth centuries in a wider sense to include all of the people now usually referred to with the modern term Khoisan not only the Khoikhoi but also the San people hunter gatherer populations from the interior of southern Africa who had not been known to the seventeenth century settlers once often referred to as Bosjesmans in Dutch and Bushmen in English 10 11 In George Murdock s Atlas of World Cultures 1981 the author refers to Hottentots as a subfamily of the Khoisan linguistic family who became detribalized in contact with Dutch settlers in 1652 mixing with the latter and with slaves brought by them from Indonesia to form the hybrid population known today as the Cape Coloured 12 The term Hottentot remained in use as a technical ethnic term in anthropological and historiographical literature into the late 1980s 13 The 1996 edition of the Dictionary of South African English merely says that the word Hottentot is seen by some as offensive and Khoikhoi is sometimes substituted as a name for the people particularly in scholarly contexts 14 Yet by the 1980s because of the racist connotations discussed below it was increasingly seen as too derogatory and offensive to be used in an ethnic sense 15 Usage as a term of abuse and racist connotations editFrom the eighteenth century onwards the term hottentot was also a term of abuse without a specific ethnic sense comparable to barbarian or cannibal 16 According to James Boswell s The Life of Johnson Samuel Johnson was parodied in Lord Chesterfield s Letters of 1737 as a respectable Hottentot citation needed In its ethnic sense Hottentot had developed its connotations of savagery and primitivism by the seventeenth century colonial depictions of the Hottentots Khoikhoi in the seventeenth to eighteenth century were characterized by savagery often suggestive of cannibalism or the consumption of raw flesh physiological features such as steatopygia and elongated labia perceived as primitive or simian and a perception of the click sounds in the Khoikhoi languages as bestial 17 Thus it can be said that the European colonial image of the Hottentot from the seventeenth century onwards bore little relation to any realities of the Khoisan in Africa and that this image fed into the usage of hottentot as a generalised derogatory term 18 Correspondingly the word is sometimes used as ugly slang for a black person 19 Use of the derived term hotnot was explicitly proscribed in South Africa by 2008 20 Accordingly much recent scholarship on the history of colonial attitudes to the Khoisan or on the European trope of the Hottentot puts the term Hottentot in scare quotes 21 Other usages editIn its original role of ethnic designator the term Hottentot was included into a variety of derived terms such as the Hottentot Corps 22 the first Coloured unit to be formed in the South African army originally called the Corps Bastaard Hottentoten Dutch Corps of Bastard Hottentots organised in 1781 by the Dutch colonial administration of the time 23 51 The word is also used in the common names of a wide variety of plants and animals 24 such as the Africanis dogs sometimes called Hottentot hunting dogs the fish Pachymetopon blochii frequently simply called hottentots Carpobrotus edulis commonly known as a hottentot fig and Trachyandra commonly known as hottentot cabbage It has also given rise to the scientific name for one genus of scorpion Hottentotta and may be the origin of the epithet tottum in the botanical name Leucospermum tottum 25 The word is still used as part of a tongue twister in modern Dutch Hottentottententententoonstelling meaning a Hottentot tent exhibition 26 In the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz the Cowardly Lion blustering about his lack of courage says What makes the Hottentot so hot What puts the ape in apricot What have they got that I ain t got Other cast members reply Courage citation needed In the 1964 film Mary Poppins Admiral Boom mistakes the rooftop dancing chimney sweeps for an attack by Hottentots citation needed Tom Lehrer s song We Will All Go Together When We Go refers to both Hottentots and Eskimos going at the same time citation needed The name of Reiner Knizia s game Schotten Totten is a portmanteau of the German words Schotten Scottish people and Hottentotten Hottentots See also edit nbsp Look up Hottentot in Wiktionary the free dictionary Hottentot Venus The Hottentot 1922 film Terre Haute HottentotsReferences edit All among the Hottentots Capering ashore a satirical view of the 1820 settlers to remind emigrants of the dangers awaiting them caption All among the Hottentots Capring ashore or the Blessings of Emigration to the Cape of Forlorn Good Hope source unknown identified only as Cruikshank presumably George Cruikshank 1792 1878 reproduction from Anthony Preston Suid Afrikaanse Geskiedenis in Beeld 1989 Khoisan is an artificial compound term that was introduced into 20th century ethnology but since the late 1990s it has been adopted as a self designation since 2017 its use has been official due to the passage of a Traditional amp Khoisan Leadership Bill by the South African National Assembly Khoisan march to Parliament to demand land rights ENCA 3 December 2015 Pelane Phakgadi Ramaphosa meets aggrieved Khoisan activists at Union Buildings Eyewitness News 24 December 2017 Illegitimate Khoisan leaders are trying to exploit new bill IOL 17 April 2018 The old Dutch also did not know that their so called Hottentots formed only one branch of a wide spread ethnicity of which the other branch divided into ever so many tribes differing from each other totally in language While the so called Hottentots called themselves Khoikhoi men of men i e men par excellence they called those other tribes Sa the Sonqua of the Cape Records We should apply the term Hottentot to the whole race and call the two families each by the native name that is the one the Khoikhoi the so called Hottentot proper the other the San Sa or Bushmen Theophilus Hahn Tsuni Goam The Supreme Being to the Khoi Khoi 1881 p 3 a b A very large number of different etymologies for the name have been suggested The most frequently repeated suggestion is that the word was a spec use of a formally identical Dutch word meaning stammerer stutterer which came to be applied to the Khoekhoe and San people on account of the clicks characteristic of their languages However evidence for the earlier general use appears to be lacking Another frequent suggestion is that the people were so named after one or more words which early European visitors to southern Africa heard in chants accompanying dances of the Khoekhoe or San but the alleged chant is rendered in different ways in different 17th cent sources and some of the accounts may be based on hearsay rather than first hand knowledge Hottentot n and adj OED Online Oxford University Press March 2018 www oed com view Entry 88829 Accessed 13 May 2018 Citing G S Nienaber The origin of the name Hottentot African Studies 22 2 1963 65 90 doi 10 1080 00020186308707174 See also Rev Prof Johannes Du Plessis B A B D 1917 Report of the South African Association for the Advancement of Science pp 189 193 Retrieved 5 July 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link hodmandod n and adj OED Online Oxford University Press March 2018 www oed com view Entry 88816 Accessed 13 May 2018 hotnot n OED Online Oxford University Press March 2018 www oed com view Entry 88816 Accessed 13 May 2018 Anonymous F Bernier Nouvelle division de la terre par les differentes especes ou races qui l habitent Journal des Scavants 24 April 1684 p 133 140 les Noirs du Cap de bonne Esperance semblent estre d une autre espece que ceux du reste de l Afrique p 136 See also Charles Frankel La science face au racisme 1986 41f Jochen S Arndt What s in a Word Historicising the Term Caffre in European Discourses about Southern Africa between 1500 and 1800 Journal of Southern African Studies 2017 1 17 doi 10 1080 03057070 2018 1403212 Hottentot n and adj OED Online Oxford University Press March 2018 www oed com view Entry 88829 Accessed 13 May 2018 Hottentot n and adj OED Online Oxford University Press March 2018 www oed com view Entry 88829 Accessed 13 May 2018 Alan Barnard Anthropology and the Bushman Oxford Berg 2007 pp 11 21 Murdock George Peter 1981 Atlas of World Cultures University of Pittsburgh Press pp 10 ISBN 9780822984856 E g Hilton Basil Fine Crime punishment and the administration of justice at the Cape of Good Hope 1806 1828 1988 Michael Lewis Wilson Notes on the Nomenclature of the Khoisan 1986 Harry A Gailey R E Krieger History of Africa From 1800 to 1945 1989 67ff Geoffrey Hughes Hottentot in An Encyclopedia of Swearing The Social History of Oaths Profanity Foul Language and Ethnic Slurs in the English Speaking World Armonk New York Sharpe 2006 p 243 Richard Elphick Khoikhoi and the Founding of White South Africa Cape of Good Hope Ravan Press 1985 p xv The word Hottentot is occasionally heard even in the 1980s but few outside South Africa know its precise meaning Bring Back the Hottentot Venus Web mit edu 15 June 1995 Retrieved 13 August 2012 Hottentot Venus goes home BBC News 29 April 2002 Retrieved 13 August 2017 the Khoisan tribe of hunter gatherers who lived in the southernmost tip of Africa and were also known as Hottentots which is now considered a derogatory and offensive term Strobel Christoph 2008 A Note on Terminology The Testing Grounds of Modern Empire The Making of Colonial Racial Order in the American Ohio Country and the South African Eastern Cape 1770s 1850s Peter Lang ISBN 9781433101236 p x Geoffrey Hughes Hottentot in An Encyclopedia of Swearing The Social History of Oaths Profanity Foul Language and Ethnic Slurs in the English Speaking World Armonk New York Sharpe 2006 pp 241 43 Hottentot n and adj OED Online Oxford University Press March 2018 www oed com view Entry 88829 Accessed 13 May 2018 S Qureshi Displaying Sara Baartman the Hottentot Venus 2004 p 234 James Kicherer 1799 Bushmen were total strangers to domestic happiness and will kill their children without remorse as when they are ill shaped when they are in want of food when the father of a child has forsaken its mother or when obliged to flee from the Farmers or others There are instances of parents throwing their tender off spring to the hungry Lion Many of these wild Hottentots live by plunder and murder and are guilty of the most horrid and atrocious actions 1 Francois Xavier Fauvelle Aymar L invention du Hottentot histoire du regard occidental sur les Khoisan XVe XIXe siecle Paris Publications de la Sorbonne 2002 Somme toutes les destins de ces topoi qui forment le Hottentot d Europe restent largement indifferents a leur degre d adequation avec les Khoisan d Afrique p 10 Linda Evi Merians Envisioning the Worst Representations of Hottentots in Early modern England Newark University of Delaware Press 2001 Robert Hendrickson The Dictionary of Eponyms Names that Became Words New York Stein and Day 1985 repr from Philadelphia Chilton 1972 p 149 Statement on Cabinet Meeting of 5 March 2008 South African Department of Foreign Affairs 2008 03 05 Retrieved 2008 10 26 We should take care not to use derogatory words that were used to demean black persons in this country Words such as Kaffir coolie Boesman hotnot and many others have negative connotations and remain offensive as they were used to degrade undermine and strip South Africans of their humanity and dignity Linda Evi Merians Envisioning the Worst Representations of Hottentots in Early modern England Newark University of Delaware Press 2001 Nicholas Hudson Hottentots and the evolution of European racism Journal of European Studies 34 4 December 2004 308 32 doi 10 1177 0047244104048701 David Johnson Representing the Cape Hottentots from the French Enlightenment to Post Apartheid South Africa Eighteenth Century Studies 40 4 Summer 2007 525 52 https www jstor org stable 30053727 Hottentot n and adj OED Online Oxford University Press March 2018 www oed com view Entry 88829 Accessed 13 May 2018 Pretorius Fransjohan 2014 A History of South Africa From the Distant Past to the Present Day Hatsfield Pretoria Protea Book House ISBN 978 1 86919 908 1 Hottentot n and adj OED Online Oxford University Press March 2018 www oed com view Entry 88829 Accessed 13 May 2018 Rourke John Patrick 1970 Taxonomic Studies on Leucospermum R Br PDF pp 103 107 Ben Coates Introduction in Why the Dutch are Different A Journey into the Hidden Heart of the Netherlands London Brealey 2015 ISBN 9781857889628 Francois Xavier Fauvelle Aymar L invention du Hottentot histoire du regard occidental sur les Khoisan XVe XIXe siecle Paris Publications de la Sorbonne 2002 Linda Evi Merians Envisioning the Worst Representations of Hottentots in Early modern England Newark University of Delaware Press 2001 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hottentot racial term amp oldid 1205219169, 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