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Perception and Politics: Chinese South Africans in 1980 and 2008

In 2008, Chinese South Africans achieved inclusion in the efforts of the government's Black Economic Empowerment policy, following their inclusion was criticism accusing the Chinese of being adjacent to whiteness and therefore undeserving of their victory. This work examines past perceptions of Chin...

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Main Author: Suitt, William
Other Authors: Mendelsohn, Adam
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Historical Studies 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Suitt, William
author2 Mendelsohn, Adam
author_browse Mendelsohn, Adam
Suitt, William
author_facet Mendelsohn, Adam
Suitt, William
author_sort Suitt, William
collection Thesis
description In 2008, Chinese South Africans achieved inclusion in the efforts of the government's Black Economic Empowerment policy, following their inclusion was criticism accusing the Chinese of being adjacent to whiteness and therefore undeserving of their victory. This work examines past perceptions of Chinese South Africans to track the shape of the discourse and the later perceptions of Chinese South Africans by their critics in the late 2000s. In engaging with newspapers of 1980 and 1981, non-Chinese can be seen to place Chinese South Africans in an invidious space between apartheid era categorizations of “white” and “non-white.” The conversation on Chinese South African classification intersects in 1980 with an increase in economic ties between the Republic of South Africa and the Republic of China. Association with Japanese through visual similitude in the eyes of non-Chinese, and several special privileges held by the Chinese during apartheid are seen to influence the perceptions held of Chinese South Africans, the boundaries to their perceived status, and the alterations in their status by the 21st century. The Chinese South African community has been featured numerous times over the last half century in articles debating their place in South African society. In the years during and after apartheid, the Chinese South African community was subject to much discussion by nonChinese as to the nature of their identity and that identity's place in a post-apartheid nation. This minor dissertation engages with the language of the discourse on Chinese South African status as it appeared in popular print media in the early 1980s and the late 2000s. Examined in detail was the relationship between perceptions towards Chinese South Africans in 1980 to those in 2008. Language used in 1980 and 2008 tracks the shifting Chinese status in relation to “white” and “non-white” categorizations and displays the role of past perceptions in defining later ones as Chinese space transformed over time. Chinese in South Africa occupied a space neither clearly white or non-white during apartheid and continued to occupy this space in the post-apartheid years. Their amorphous space and visual similarity to other peoples of East Asian descent allowed for Chinese South Africans to be depicted as having been oppressed and having benefitted from apartheid. Chinese South African space, regardless of questions on the nature of their legal classifications over the decades, has been utilized as a tool to depict them in different and opposite ways, all depending on the perspective of the wielder. This minor dissertation displays important elements of the print discourse around Chinese South Africans and their existence between two racial categorizations at points during and after apartheid and details the way that perceived status had been utilized by those featured in print.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
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publisherStr Department of Historical Studies
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37378 Perception and Politics: Chinese South Africans in 1980 and 2008 Suitt, William Mendelsohn, Adam Historical Studies In 2008, Chinese South Africans achieved inclusion in the efforts of the government's Black Economic Empowerment policy, following their inclusion was criticism accusing the Chinese of being adjacent to whiteness and therefore undeserving of their victory. This work examines past perceptions of Chinese South Africans to track the shape of the discourse and the later perceptions of Chinese South Africans by their critics in the late 2000s. In engaging with newspapers of 1980 and 1981, non-Chinese can be seen to place Chinese South Africans in an invidious space between apartheid era categorizations of “white” and “non-white.” The conversation on Chinese South African classification intersects in 1980 with an increase in economic ties between the Republic of South Africa and the Republic of China. Association with Japanese through visual similitude in the eyes of non-Chinese, and several special privileges held by the Chinese during apartheid are seen to influence the perceptions held of Chinese South Africans, the boundaries to their perceived status, and the alterations in their status by the 21st century. The Chinese South African community has been featured numerous times over the last half century in articles debating their place in South African society. In the years during and after apartheid, the Chinese South African community was subject to much discussion by nonChinese as to the nature of their identity and that identity's place in a post-apartheid nation. This minor dissertation engages with the language of the discourse on Chinese South African status as it appeared in popular print media in the early 1980s and the late 2000s. Examined in detail was the relationship between perceptions towards Chinese South Africans in 1980 to those in 2008. Language used in 1980 and 2008 tracks the shifting Chinese status in relation to “white” and “non-white” categorizations and displays the role of past perceptions in defining later ones as Chinese space transformed over time. Chinese in South Africa occupied a space neither clearly white or non-white during apartheid and continued to occupy this space in the post-apartheid years. Their amorphous space and visual similarity to other peoples of East Asian descent allowed for Chinese South Africans to be depicted as having been oppressed and having benefitted from apartheid. Chinese South African space, regardless of questions on the nature of their legal classifications over the decades, has been utilized as a tool to depict them in different and opposite ways, all depending on the perspective of the wielder. This minor dissertation displays important elements of the print discourse around Chinese South Africans and their existence between two racial categorizations at points during and after apartheid and details the way that perceived status had been utilized by those featured in print. 2023-03-13T10:56:02Z 2023-03-13T10:56:02Z 2022 2023-02-21T07:21:18Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37378 eng application/pdf Department of Historical Studies Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Historical Studies
Suitt, William
Perception and Politics: Chinese South Africans in 1980 and 2008
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Perception and Politics: Chinese South Africans in 1980 and 2008
title_full Perception and Politics: Chinese South Africans in 1980 and 2008
title_fullStr Perception and Politics: Chinese South Africans in 1980 and 2008
title_full_unstemmed Perception and Politics: Chinese South Africans in 1980 and 2008
title_short Perception and Politics: Chinese South Africans in 1980 and 2008
title_sort perception and politics chinese south africans in 1980 and 2008
topic Historical Studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37378
work_keys_str_mv AT suittwilliam perceptionandpoliticschinesesouthafricansin1980and2008