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Pondoks, houses, and hostels : a history of Nyanga 1946-1970, with a special focus on housing

Bibliography: pages 344-361.

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Main Author: Fast, Hildegarde Helene
Other Authors: Bradford, Helen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Historical Studies 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Fast, Hildegarde Helene
author2 Bradford, Helen
author_browse Bradford, Helen
Fast, Hildegarde Helene
author_facet Bradford, Helen
Fast, Hildegarde Helene
author_sort Fast, Hildegarde Helene
collection Thesis
description Bibliography: pages 344-361.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:45.941Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Department of Historical Studies
publisherStr Department of Historical Studies
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/16123 Pondoks, houses, and hostels : a history of Nyanga 1946-1970, with a special focus on housing Fast, Hildegarde Helene Bradford, Helen Blacks - Cape Town Apartheid - Cape Town Housing - Nyanga Women, Black - South Africa Blacks - Housing - South Africa Influx control - South Africa Bibliography: pages 344-361. In this thesis I outline the history of Nyanga up to 1970. Diverse aspects are covered, including location politics, women's protests, rent arrears and boycotts, and gangsterism. There is a special focus on housing issues, for they were related to most facets of location life and demonstrated the contradictions within apartheid policy. Four themes are followed throughout the thesis. First, the extent to which the state achieved control of the African urban population is assessed, particularly in terms of its housing and influx control policies. I argue that the formulation and implementation of policies were influenced minimally by pressures "from below", and that central and local authorities achieved extensive control over the lives of urban Africans. Nevertheless, government officials did not succeed in curbing African urbanisation or controlling the residential movement of urban Africans, as witnessed by the high number of "illegal" Africans and consistently high tenancy turnover. A second topic that threads its way through the thesis is the role of African constables and clerks in Nyanga. I show that residents working with the location administration were attracted particularly to the material benefits of collaboration. Utilising their linguistic skills and knowledge of location inhabitants, they extracted money and sexual favours from Nyanga residents and were given first priority in the allocation of Old Location houses. They did not, however, form an identifiable social group as they came from diverse occupational and educational backgrounds and did not associate closely with one another. A third theme is the differential impact of apartheid laws on African women. I outline the laws that applied to urban African women and describe the actual process by which they were expelled from the Cape Peninsula. Arising from this, the changing nature and scope of women's demonstrations in Nyanga is described. My research shows that the protests of the early 1950s, which were small, infrequent, and centred on local issues, broadened in the late 1950s to include the application of pass laws to African women. The reasons for the change are shown to be both political and material in nature, with their origin in the forced removals from Peninsula shack settlements. Fourthly, I have concentrated on spatial dynamics at various points. There were significant differences in physical space between Mau-Mau and the Old Location, which contributed to the social distance between the two neighbourhoods. During the massive "black spot" clearance campaign of the 1950s, the authorities succeeded in gaining spatial control over Africans by forcing them into segregated, fenced locations where entry and exit was monitored. To counteract this, residents asserted their control over the transit camp by constructing shacks in such a way as to impede raiding pass officials and make administrative surveillance of their lives difficult. The contradictory effects of placing contract workers in accommodation next to families are also examined: on the one hand, there was considerable socialising and cooperation between the two groups; on the other, much friction developed over the relationships between women in the married quarters and men in the hostels. 2016-01-02T04:43:44Z 2016-01-02T04:43:44Z 1996 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16123 eng application/pdf Department of Historical Studies Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Blacks - Cape Town
Apartheid - Cape Town
Housing - Nyanga
Women, Black - South Africa
Blacks - Housing - South Africa
Influx control - South Africa
Fast, Hildegarde Helene
Pondoks, houses, and hostels : a history of Nyanga 1946-1970, with a special focus on housing
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Pondoks, houses, and hostels : a history of Nyanga 1946-1970, with a special focus on housing
title_full Pondoks, houses, and hostels : a history of Nyanga 1946-1970, with a special focus on housing
title_fullStr Pondoks, houses, and hostels : a history of Nyanga 1946-1970, with a special focus on housing
title_full_unstemmed Pondoks, houses, and hostels : a history of Nyanga 1946-1970, with a special focus on housing
title_short Pondoks, houses, and hostels : a history of Nyanga 1946-1970, with a special focus on housing
title_sort pondoks houses and hostels a history of nyanga 1946 1970 with a special focus on housing
topic Blacks - Cape Town
Apartheid - Cape Town
Housing - Nyanga
Women, Black - South Africa
Blacks - Housing - South Africa
Influx control - South Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16123
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