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Racism reduction in South Africa : a framework for understanding and designing an intervention programRogatschnig, Marc Johann 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA) -- University of Stellenbosch, 2003. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: This review explores the availability of programs aimed at reducing racism in South Africa. A
summary of legislation and policy directives is included to provide clarity and inject impetus into
the need for such programs. There were difficulties in receiving information and reviewing such
programs and therefore a conceptualisation of racism is provided along with an examination of
current manifestations thereof. To assist in the future design of racism reduction programs a
detailed exposition of principles shown to be crucial to racism reduction is also provided. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Hierdie literatuur oorsig ondersoek die beskikbaarheid van programme wat daarop gemik is om
rassisme in Suid-Afrika te verminder. 'n Opsomming van wetgewing en staatsbeleid word as
verklaring en motivering vir die behoefte aan sodanige programme ingesluit. Aangesien daar sekere
probleme ondervind is tydens die insameling van inligting, asook by die ontleding van sodanige
programme, word daar gefokus op die konsep van rassisme, asook op die huidige voorkoms
daarvan. In 'n poging om die ontwikkeling van toekomstige programme wat daarop gerig is
om rassisme te verminder, te vergemaklik, word daar 'n gedetailleerde uiteensetting van sekere
beginsels wat onteenseglik verwant is aan die vermindering van rassissme, ook weergegee.
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The Nguri and the colonizer : a study of the dehumanization of the race, 1870-1880.Lunga, Sylvester Haniva Waye. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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An existential-phenomenological exploration of interracial love relationships in South AfricaRoss, Christopher James January 1988 (has links)
The aim of the study was to explicate the experience of interracial love relationships between Blacks and Whites in South Africa. As a point of departure, a basic question was established which would elicit the actual experience of this phenomenon. The researcher conducted twelve interviews and chose the six psychologically richest accounts. The researcher then analysed in detail (using the phenomenological method) the resulting protocols comprising the interviews. The researcher then explicated the experience and discovered that interracial love was a historical process of going through a relationship over time. The subjects experienced a particular historical background in the face of which they felt unfulfilled which brought about the potential to search for authenticity in a particular way. The subjects were placed in a situation where interracial love became a possibility. The subjects saw the other as human and fell in love. A new horizon emerged and a learning experience, about themselves and the world, occurred. The element of conflict was always present which was exacerbated by the South African Apartheid system. Subjects experienced fulfillment and disappointment depending on whether or not their historical demand was met. This structure of the experience was dialogued with the writings of existential-phenomenological philosophers and psychologists and also with that of previous research in the context of discussing particular areas of psychological significance such as historical background and Apartheid, racism, alienation, motives for interracial love, love and the universality of human nature and interracial love as a learning experience.
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The experiences of being black in the South African workplaceMagubane, Nokulunga N. January 2019 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Social and Psychological Research.
July 2019 / The psychosocial condition and socioeconomic position of black employees in the South African workplace remain unchanged in spite of the advent of democracy in 1994. The black employee’s racial experience in the workplace is indicative of the normative experience of blackness in contemporary South African society that is in agreement with the everyday familiarity of socioeconomic disadvantage and psychosocial subjugation that affects the overall existential experience of blackness. As such, hostile racial interactions in the workplace reflect that the socioeconomic and psychosocial changes expected post-apartheid are materialising at seemingly substandard rates. The current investigation utilised a phenomenological approach to the broader critical psychology of race the interpretive research paradigm and semi-structured interviews to direct thematic data analysis techniques that informed the study conclusions. The participant group consisted of eight tertiary educated black employees, one male and seven females, with an age range of 21 to 27 years, with workplace experience ranging from two weeks to four years. The results of this investigation significantly shows the inefficiency of the democratic redress policy in the facilitation of workplace diversification, and its ineptitude in expediting psychosocial and socioeconomic inclusion, integration and participation such that the existential black employee’s experience of racial identity in the post-apartheid South African workplace is not adversarial. The findings of this investigation suggest that the instances of on-going racism in the workplace are the result of an institutional socioeconomic investment in racial inequality that facilitates hostile racial interactions in the workplace. / NG (2020)
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The Nguri and the colonizer : a study of the dehumanization of the race, 1870-1880.Lunga, Sylvester Haniva Waye. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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Transformation from racism to appreciation of racial diversity : an autoethnographic research projectVan Schalkwyk, Theunis 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MBA)--Stellenbosch University, 2014. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The author is an Afrikaans-speaking, white male person, who was previously an extreme, selfdeclared
racist. The author was also a member of an elite unit in one of the right-wing political
organisations, which resulted in being author arrested during the 1994 National South African
elections. The author transformed from being an extreme self-declared racist to become a person
who respects and appreciate racial diversity.
The author conducted a reflective autoethnographic study from his personal life experiences, which
is complemented with critical feedback from people whom the author holds in high esteem.
Feedback was gathered in order to identify the transformation process, which the author
experienced in the quest of becoming an authentic leader. The aspects identified in the
transformation process enabled the author to understand what is required in the future to become
a truly authentic, value-based leader.
This research study could assist white Afrikaans-speaking people and the broader community of
South African people to transform towards acceptance and appreciation of racial diversity.
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Theoretical reflections on the epistemic production of colonial differenceLushaba, Lwazi Siyabonga 29 February 2016 (has links)
University of the Witwatersrand
Department of Political Studies
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On being black & being Muslim in South Africa: explorations into blackness and spiritualismNkuna, Thabang January 2016 (has links)
Thesis is submitted in partial fulfilment for the degree of Masters of Arts in Political Studies to the Faculty Humanities, School of Arts at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2016 / Blackness has become a right to death that sees in death its almost essential property. The essence of blackness, its origin or its possibility, would be this right to death; but a death denuded of that ...sovereignty that gains from death its own sacrificial mastery ... and maintains itself in it. This is life as the work of death, a work born of fidelity to death, but death without transcendence (Marriot cited in Sexton 2015: 132).
The advent of colonial modernity in South Africa marks the rupture of identity and being of Africans. That is, after the emergence of colonial modernity Africans cease to be Africans only but however they become black. Blackness becomes an object exclusion in the encounter with modernity. Blacks and by extension Africa is seen as being outside modern temporality inhabiting a zone of non-being and fungability. The encounter with modernity, without any doubt causes doubts in the Africans modes of existence or being and it is here that liberation and emancipatory movements/projects that have been initiated by blacks have sought to steer their lenses to try and liberate as well as understand how blacks can best live in modern conditions of racism or should there be any alternative to modern empty time. This study seeks
to make an intervention, especially in South African Political studies, with concern to alternative political strategies that have not been take into consideration.
[No abstract provided. Information taken from introduction]. / MT2017
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Discourses of destiny: a multimodal analysis of 2014 issues of Destiny Man magazineLeopeng, Bertrand January 2016 (has links)
This thesis is submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Community-based Counselling Psychology in the Faculty of Humanities at the University of the Witwatersrand / This thesis took an interpretive approach to analysing content as presented in the print media. The focus of this study was Destiny Man magazine, a six year old lifestyle publication aimed at middle-class men in South Africa. This thesis explored how black middle-class men are presented by looking at the latent content from an interpretive stance. Therefore, a psychosocial approach was adopted to understand how political, socio-economic, and gender interact with one another at the psycho-social level.
A total number of 35 articles were analysed using interpretative psychoanalytic methods and relevant critique. In addition to these 54 images were chosen to be analysed and included in an overall contextual framework relating to topics such as race, masculinity, economics, alcohol, and sport. This content was chosen from the eight 2014 issues of Destiny Man magazine.
In analysis, the history of colonialism, apartheid, and the development of neoliberal capitalism was taken into account regarding how black middle class men negotiate their masculine identities in the new South Africa. The development of neoliberal capitalism and a multimodal discourse on the male psyche is explored in-depth, with the resultant social analysis.
Overall, the basis of this research was to critically analyse African middle class masculinity in post-apartheid South Africa taken many factors into account. The key themes identified in the analysis include narcissism, domination, and denial of feminity, fatherhood, alcohol consumption, and performances of gender. The interactions of all of these factors have been shown to have an impact on our understanding of contemporary African middle class masculinity, affecting the construction and definition of this concept in a complex and dynamic way. Destiny Man magazine is a poignant example of how these interactions are presented in the media. / MT2017
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A tale of two temples: an exploration of caste in Cape TownGajjar, Neerali 28 October 2016 (has links)
A Dissertation submitted to the School of Social Sciences, Faculty of Humanities,
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in the fulfilment of the requirements
for the degree of Masters of Arts in Political Science by research.
Johannesburg, January 2016 / A Tale of Two Temples: An Exploration of Caste addresses the notion of caste in South Africa,
specifically among the Gujarati community in Cape Town. Caste within this community has been
discussed with regard to the Indian diaspora in general and Natal in South Africa, but there is not a
vast amount of literature regarding this phenomenon among Indians in Cape Town. Through the
description of a dispute between a caste-based organisation of mochis –those of a leatherworking
and cobbler caste- and a non-caste-based organisation predominantly of agricultural patidars over
control of the space of worship, the recreation, dynamics and interplay of the caste system are
discussed. Louis Dumont’s influential synoptic theory of caste serves as the frame of reference when
addressing the system. Dumont focuses on the idea of purity and hierarchy. The system includes four
varnas or classes, which are positioned along a pure-to-impure hierarchy. In Cape Town, this
hierarchy is not entirely recreated; all four varnas are not represented. Instead patidars or
agriculturalists have claimed to be of high status, which is normally attributed to a Brahmin or clerical
caste, and have asserted themselves as the reference group for other castes. They perceive the
mochis to be of low caste. The mochis have not accepted this and through the influence of the Arya
Samaj, they have recreated a new historical narrative classifying themselves as high caste. This new
narrative and the empowerment of the mochis created a conflict that escalated as a result of
apartheid’s Group Areas Act, which legally enforced racially segregated residential areas. This conflict
provides insight into the recreation of caste in Cape Town.
Keywords and Terms
Cape Town, Caste, Diaspora, Dumont, Durban, Fiji, Gujarati, Indenture, Indian Diaspora,
Johannesburg, Migration, South Africa, Trinidad / MT2016
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