2003
DOI: 10.1525/ahu.2003.28.1.61
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Being and Belonging: Space and Identity in Cape Town

Abstract: The postapartheid transition has led to changes in the shape and meaning of urban space in South Africa. Cape Town is being described as a postmodern city where planning strategies and new development have begun to fragment and privatize space to the point of de-territorializing it. This has contributed to the effort by a local group, referred to as "Coloureds," to reterritorialize Cape Town, to reinscribe history and meaning back into the urban landscape. In the process of reterritorializing the city, Coloure… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The more rigid and impersonal the structure within which they are forced to live, the more likely it is that they will exercise this choice in ways which challenge the structure’ (Allen & Turton, , p. 12). Social productions of meaning of space are rendered dynamic in time (Jackson, ) and subjective in nature.…”
Section: ‘Dwog Ce Paco’ – Coming Homementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The more rigid and impersonal the structure within which they are forced to live, the more likely it is that they will exercise this choice in ways which challenge the structure’ (Allen & Turton, , p. 12). Social productions of meaning of space are rendered dynamic in time (Jackson, ) and subjective in nature.…”
Section: ‘Dwog Ce Paco’ – Coming Homementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Space is defined and shaped in relation to social actors in the community, rendering the process of reintegration subject to negotiation. Individual space or postconflict identities are fluid over time (Jackson, ) as FAY actively engage in the reintegration process. Coping mechanisms are constructed when FAY are excluded or confronted with negative meanings of space.…”
Section: The Need To Belong: the Triangle Of Well‐beingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…50 In discussions on South Africa, observers have argued that the malls constitute new, globally 'imagineered,' 'regulated and repackaged' public spaces. 51 Local academics have also drawn from the discourses of desire and nostalgia when discussing the malls. 52 In addition, they have pointed out that the malls function as exclusionary, class-identity-building places.…”
Section: A Mall Order?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Once categorised as coloured, apartheid economic policy further institutionalised the divide between the ‘races’ by granting greater economic opportunity to coloured workers than black African workers, but still limiting these opportunities when compared to white workers (O'Toole 1973). As several coloured writers have pointed out, this positioning ‘between’ black African and white groups has helped foster continued feelings of insecurity as to their own place in colonial, apartheid and post‐apartheid South Africa (Giliomee 1995; Jackson 2003; Sonn 1996).…”
Section: Conceptualising Some Contemporary Queer Exclusions In Cape Tmentioning
confidence: 99%