- Page 1 and 2: Annika Björnsdotter Teppo THE MAKI
- Page 3: ”Dit is dr. Anton Rupert wat ges
- Page 7: love and understand their country a
- Page 10 and 11: CONTENTS 4. The White Body and Its
- Page 12 and 13: CONTENTS Changing Space Ruyterwacht
- Page 14 and 15: BACKGROUND TO POOR WHITES In South
- Page 16 and 17: whites. In this process any ethnic
- Page 18 and 19: ies, as Mellor and Shilling have na
- Page 20 and 21: expressive through the process of e
- Page 22 and 23: would take place (Dubow 1995:171).
- Page 24 and 25: Map 1: South Africa 24
- Page 26 and 27: They drifted into Africa, and becam
- Page 28 and 29: the backbone of the Afrikaners, and
- Page 30 and 31: At that time it was believed possib
- Page 32 and 33: South African society in which most
- Page 34 and 35: dium of the human body. It was a us
- Page 36 and 37: Being a poor white was considered a
- Page 38 and 39: the white poor was regarded as poss
- Page 40 and 41: orities and class character had to
- Page 42 and 43: a mengelmoes 42 of whites and Other
- Page 44 and 45: to feel inadequate for it was felt
- Page 46 and 47: ”The trouble”, said one member
- Page 48 and 49: enough, and when she left, Mrs. Mul
- Page 50 and 51: tenant, who behaved and managed his
- Page 52 and 53: Mrs. Mulder’s offspring were not
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Consequently, a high degree of depe
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present home, and had already made
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with her on the garden gate where P
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United States shows (Killian 1985:
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It is difficult to estimate how muc
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Map 2: Cape Town area 64
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ing from one to five hours) intervi
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My first challenge was to find the
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very familiar with the subject, and
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ole’ was combined with the code
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to study them, but it also makes it
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4. THE WHITE BODY AND ITS BOUNDARIE
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ody as socially produced. An extrem
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and low morality are obvious. Durin
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In Bourdieu’s theory of practice,
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dynamics in one field, cannot expla
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(cultural) capital would make them
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Throughout colonial history the con
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ity and racial mixing to the impure
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credibility was to be maintained. V
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Passing for White Racial segregatio
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“So my grandmother wanted my moth
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5. HOUSING SCHEMES - A PERFECT SOLU
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Anne McClintock rightly points out
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was never rebuilt, leaving a huge e
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HOUSING POOR WHITES IN CAPE TOWN
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Although, in the 1930s, there were
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ment. He grew up to become a fierce
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the time Verwoerd was vastly influe
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Picture 1: The original plans of EG
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Lands, gave the first 50 morgen 102
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union between the urban areas and t
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ally, bathrooms and toilets were to
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Myth of Origin The schools are geog
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supervision of the residents was ex
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money, and the CHL was still design
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PARENTS 1942 CHILDREN 1942 PARENTS
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In Cape Town the nomination of a Br
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formative leisure activities such a
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the Afrikaners, began to rise durin
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fectively; in 1941 for instance, a
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not find any other job, the Railway
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The archival findings show that dur
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In 1942 the residents were allowed
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“The psychiatrist’s opinion is
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The Correct Ways of Presenting Self
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Domestic space was seen as a part o
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social competition. The other side
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“ Mrs. V. has deserted her husban
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the whole family was easily labelle
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no space for the anomalies in a sub
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only one of these families had to l
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“In reply to a question the Commi
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who lived near enough to be able to
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passive and institutionalised inste
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sionals’ eyes a lot. Once again,
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compulsory. There were a multitude
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further fuelled by the fact that th
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pendent residents. 146 The CHL fear
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In 1978, the area received 735 pens
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hood had a reputation for being rac
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Work and Gender 153 During the 1960
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In these cases gender roles worked
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“I did not drink, so I would not
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Company’s European villages were
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Despite all the efforts, the suburb
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survey was no longer easy to conduc
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ally dehumanised automatons the tex
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oomed dwelling in another part of t
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control. Sport was seen as a good o
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the one haven where the men could c
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up in Epping Garden Village, they w
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also give up their claim to whitene
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manifested itself in Epping Garden
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8. THE ERA OF RENEGOTIATION: RUYTER
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dents, a rapid process of gentrific
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The Era of Desegregation The first
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The coloured people in Ruyterwacht
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“We had to fi nd out for the stat
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assing and common, thus sharing the
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have jobs in the suburb as maids or
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accepting this role and understandi
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B: ISOLATED High grid (Traditional)
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these houses are also impeccable. T
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they do not see technology as evil.
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ined with inherited vintage furnitu
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more to it. The protest also contai
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ival of the African children, or th
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views, a more distressing aspect of
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CONTESTED IDENTITIES AND POWER In t
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shops that they suspected of such e
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of South African society is still w
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On the other hand, since nobody con
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the welfare cheeses in that, and pu
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themselves in the stories told and
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9. CONCLUSION: A CATEGORY AND ITS B
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class South Africans are still emba
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APPENDIX 1: TERMINOLOGY Afrikanerdo
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PROVERBS AND SAYINGS Arm is niks, m
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RUYTERWACHT IN 1997-2001 Picture 6:
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CODES/PRIMARY DOCUMENTS* 1 2 3 4 5
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APPENDIX 4: REFERENCES Adam, Heribe
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Bruner, Edward M. 1986. Experience
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Elias, Norbert 1978. The Civilising
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Grobbelaar, J., Bekker, S. and Evan
- Page 264 and 265:
Kinghorn, J. 1997. Modernization an
- Page 266 and 267:
Parnell, Susan 1988a. Public housin
- Page 268 and 269:
Teppo, Annika 1996. Kuin kärpäset
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Zerilda Steyn Cape Times 14.3.1930
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Coloured people, brown Afrikaners 1
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South Africa, map of 24 South Afric
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