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A city within a city : vestiges of the socio-spatial imprint of colonial and apartheid Durban, from the 1870s to 1980s.Rosenberg, Leonard Glenn. January 2012 (has links)
Parts of it have been referred to as the “Imperial Ghetto” (Badsha: 2001) or the “Duchene” and
“Casbah” (Hassim: 2009) or simply “town” by the many who have frequented its markets,
mosques, bus ranks, cinemas, schools, shops, cathedral and temples. The area is known for its
“bunny-chows”, tearooms, saris, American Clothing stores, spices, jewellers, tailors, fah-fee and
the feared Duchene gang. Central to the life of this “town” was Currie’s Fountain sports ground,
popularly known as “Currie’s”, which served as a sports, cultural and political protest venue for
seven decades.
This urban experience of blacks, who were referred to as “non-Europeans”, during the apartheid
era, and the institutions and places that are of cultural, educational, religious, sports and political
importance, and thus part of the city’s heritage, is largely absent in publications on Durban’s
history. This dissertation addresses this issue and focuses on an old part of Durban, referred to as
the Warwick Junction Precinct (WJP), that was shaped by colonial and apartheid policies and
planning, from the 1870s to the 1980s, identifying the “non-European” presence and what the
nature of this presence was. It focuses on the micro level of the spatial development of a
precinct, spawned in the aftermath of indenture and identifies the tapestry of facilities,
institutions, places and spaces that collectively comprise and symbolise “non-European” Durban.
It traces the establishment and growth of this other “invisible” precinct, since the settlement of
Indians in Durban in the 1870s and the urbanization of Africans, until the 1980s when the
apartheid ideology and its structures started to implode.
Spatial information in the form of maps, diagrams and photographs, combined with the social
history, laws and planning responses over a hundred and ten year period, identifies and maps out
a substantial area that traces residential, religious, educational, commercial, sports and struggle
sites that are of historical significance and thus part of the heritage of a multi-cultural city.
Although restricted to a fairly small area, it has all the elements that comprise a city, such as
commercial and residential areas, worship sites, a burial site, educational institutions and
libraries, numerous markets, bus, train and taxi transport nodes, recreational and struggle sites
that are of cultural and socio-political significance to Blacks in the city of Durban, for more than
a century. This study documents the evolution of the Warwick Junction Precinct which has
become a city in its own right with a rich heritage spanning both the colonial and apartheid eras. / Thesis (M.A.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, 2012
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