Elite (re-)constructions of coloured identities in a post -apartheid South Africa: Assimilations and bounded transgressions | Posted on:2007-07-02 | Degree:Ph.D | Type:Thesis | University:Rutgers The State University of New Jersey - New Brunswick | Candidate:Ruiters, Michele Rene | Full Text:PDF | GTID:2455390005988278 | Subject:Political science | Abstract/Summary: | PDF Full Text Request | This thesis engages with issues of identity, diversity and democracy through a study of the reconstruction of colouredness, a marginal identity, in post-apartheid South Africa. I argue that coloured elites reconstruct their apartheid-designated racialized identities in order to create new identities that reflect their own and their communities' experiences and needs. This reconstruction process often results in a reification of past expressions of each identity, which needs to be negotiated in a contemporary era. Ultimately, self-definition creates agency and therefore a stronger citizen who participates more effectively within their polity and thus strengthens democratic practices. I argue that diversity enhances democracy only if a politics of recognition is practiced.;The thesis also examines the possibility of releasing identities from historical baggage in the sense that a new identity could be constructed. I show that 'new' identities are constrained by the past and often struggle to free themselves from existing constructions. I argue that this is possible only if elites are willing to let go of past constructions and to be more inclusive in their visions for the future. The state, however, should continue to recognize marginal groups in order to combat the emergence of isolationist and reactionary politics from those groups.;My project examines one community's search for recognition from a state that has, since 1994, rejoined a larger African community, which is largely unknown to ordinary South Africans. I argue that this process of reconstructing a coloured identity, which certain coloured elites have undertaken, is not a social movement but is a spiritual search for belonging, which provides a social network of similar minded people who wish to redefine their identities. I also contend that the reconstruction of coloured identities has to occur within a new framework in which an African identity is more inclusive and within which attempts have been made to move away from past constructions of identities. | Keywords/Search Tags: | Identities, Coloured, Identity, Constructions, South, Past | PDF Full Text Request | Related items |
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