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Belonging in the city of Cape Town is a contested and ambivalent terrain. The past spatial injustices of colonial and apartheid rule have left deep scars and practices embedded in the city. Much has been researched and written about the role of women in land and housing struggles in the Cape. Howeve...
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| Format: | Thesis |
| Language: | English |
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Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
2024
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| _version_ | 1867613205032861696 |
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| access_status_str | Open Access |
| author | Prins-Solani, Deirdre |
| author2 | Sitas, Friderike |
| author_browse | Prins-Solani, Deirdre Sitas, Friderike |
| author_facet | Sitas, Friderike Prins-Solani, Deirdre |
| author_sort | Prins-Solani, Deirdre |
| collection | Thesis |
| description | Belonging in the city of Cape Town is a contested and ambivalent terrain. The past spatial injustices of colonial and apartheid rule have left deep scars and practices embedded in the city. Much has been researched and written about the role of women in land and housing struggles in the Cape. However, there is a gap in the understanding of the interior worlds of black women and they access the resources within for navigating and negotiating belonging in their everyday lives. According to de Certeau's belonging refers to an “everyday ritualized use of space, an appropriation and territorialisation” (and) a “process of transformation of a place, which becomes a space of accumulated attachment and sentiments by means of everyday practices” (de Certeau, 1984: p96). Picking up on this notion of belonging, my research aims to recognize, identify and understand meaning and sense making, humour and emotional lives of women. In doing so I was curious as to what these could say about the resources women draw on to navigate their everyday belonging in the city. The thesis focuses on the lives of three women from one family: each representing a different generation (grandmother, daughter, granddaughter). Through engaging the lives of these three women, the thesis explores memoryscapes as that intersection between memory, its tangible aspects such as place, objects and architecture, and that of story. Using narrative enquiry and creative methods of analysis as qualitative research method, the research asks questions about how belonging is negotiated by black women in a postcolonial city. The thesis starts by introducing four strands of literature that inform the research: 1) I engaged with urban studies theory, challenging developmentalist approaches to postcolonial city formation; Rodaway,2002, Middleton, 2017, Lefebvre, 1996, Jeannotte, 2007, ed. Schindel and Colombo, 2014. 2) I argue that was is missing are the everyday, ordinary, and interior lives of women and therefore engage with feminist scholars such as Hartman, 2019, Butler, 2016, Carby, 2019); 3) I introduce how interiority can enrich literature on belonging Hartman, 2019, Carby, 2019; and 4) I introduce why memory work is crucial to this kind of inquiry; (ed) Field, Meyer, Swanson,2007, Said, 2000, Stoler, 2013, Ricouer, 2004, McKittrick, 2007. The thesis then introduces the qualitative approach to the research, paying particular attention to how narrative forms of inquiry Bochner and Riggs, 2014, Gergen, 2009, Rosenwald and Ochberg, 1992 and visual modes of analysis Elliott, 2017, Ingold, 2011, Robertson, 2002, Davis, 2008, Poldma, retrieved 2022, Butler-Kisber, 2010 can enrich urban enquiry. The thesis turns to unpacking the findings through a series of three vignettes entitled ‘I am cheeky you know', ‘umnqusho, amagwinya and tea' and ‘these acts of belonging'. The thesis ends with sharing four key aspects which come to light through the research. The first is that a rich interior life provides a resource for not only coping with life in the city in the everyday, but also strengthens resilience, identity and hence the ability to navigate belonging. The second finding was a set of key strategies deployed by the three women in their navigation of belonging. The third finding is that a process of intersecting story, archival and digital images into a series of collages presented a visual language through which to decode belonging and to make visible the invisible worlds which inform affective relationships, choices and decisions about the city. Finally, it is therefore critical for urban studies to engage more deeply and consistently with the ways in which interiority inform navigation and experiences of belonging in postcolonial cities. |
| format | Thesis |
| id | oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39834 |
| institution | University of Cape Town (South Africa) |
| language | eng |
| last_indexed | 2026-06-10T12:32:26.116Z |
| license_str | Not specified — see source repository |
| provenance_str_mv | Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository |
| publishDate | 2024 |
| publishDateRange | 2024 |
| publishDateSort | 2024 |
| publisher | Department of Environmental and Geographical Science |
| publisherStr | Department of Environmental and Geographical Science |
| record_format | dspace |
| source_str | UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository |
| spelling | oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39834 Memoryscapes of belonging: tracing black women's bodies and interior lives in postcolonial city making Prins-Solani, Deirdre Sitas, Friderike Environmental and Geographical Science Belonging in the city of Cape Town is a contested and ambivalent terrain. The past spatial injustices of colonial and apartheid rule have left deep scars and practices embedded in the city. Much has been researched and written about the role of women in land and housing struggles in the Cape. However, there is a gap in the understanding of the interior worlds of black women and they access the resources within for navigating and negotiating belonging in their everyday lives. According to de Certeau's belonging refers to an “everyday ritualized use of space, an appropriation and territorialisation” (and) a “process of transformation of a place, which becomes a space of accumulated attachment and sentiments by means of everyday practices” (de Certeau, 1984: p96). Picking up on this notion of belonging, my research aims to recognize, identify and understand meaning and sense making, humour and emotional lives of women. In doing so I was curious as to what these could say about the resources women draw on to navigate their everyday belonging in the city. The thesis focuses on the lives of three women from one family: each representing a different generation (grandmother, daughter, granddaughter). Through engaging the lives of these three women, the thesis explores memoryscapes as that intersection between memory, its tangible aspects such as place, objects and architecture, and that of story. Using narrative enquiry and creative methods of analysis as qualitative research method, the research asks questions about how belonging is negotiated by black women in a postcolonial city. The thesis starts by introducing four strands of literature that inform the research: 1) I engaged with urban studies theory, challenging developmentalist approaches to postcolonial city formation; Rodaway,2002, Middleton, 2017, Lefebvre, 1996, Jeannotte, 2007, ed. Schindel and Colombo, 2014. 2) I argue that was is missing are the everyday, ordinary, and interior lives of women and therefore engage with feminist scholars such as Hartman, 2019, Butler, 2016, Carby, 2019); 3) I introduce how interiority can enrich literature on belonging Hartman, 2019, Carby, 2019; and 4) I introduce why memory work is crucial to this kind of inquiry; (ed) Field, Meyer, Swanson,2007, Said, 2000, Stoler, 2013, Ricouer, 2004, McKittrick, 2007. The thesis then introduces the qualitative approach to the research, paying particular attention to how narrative forms of inquiry Bochner and Riggs, 2014, Gergen, 2009, Rosenwald and Ochberg, 1992 and visual modes of analysis Elliott, 2017, Ingold, 2011, Robertson, 2002, Davis, 2008, Poldma, retrieved 2022, Butler-Kisber, 2010 can enrich urban enquiry. The thesis turns to unpacking the findings through a series of three vignettes entitled ‘I am cheeky you know', ‘umnqusho, amagwinya and tea' and ‘these acts of belonging'. The thesis ends with sharing four key aspects which come to light through the research. The first is that a rich interior life provides a resource for not only coping with life in the city in the everyday, but also strengthens resilience, identity and hence the ability to navigate belonging. The second finding was a set of key strategies deployed by the three women in their navigation of belonging. The third finding is that a process of intersecting story, archival and digital images into a series of collages presented a visual language through which to decode belonging and to make visible the invisible worlds which inform affective relationships, choices and decisions about the city. Finally, it is therefore critical for urban studies to engage more deeply and consistently with the ways in which interiority inform navigation and experiences of belonging in postcolonial cities. 2024-06-03T07:55:04Z 2024-06-03T07:55:04Z 2023 2024-06-03T07:22:41Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39834 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science |
| spellingShingle | Environmental and Geographical Science Prins-Solani, Deirdre Memoryscapes of belonging: tracing black women's bodies and interior lives in postcolonial city making |
| thesis_degree_str | Master's |
| title | Memoryscapes of belonging: tracing black women's bodies and interior lives in postcolonial city making |
| title_full | Memoryscapes of belonging: tracing black women's bodies and interior lives in postcolonial city making |
| title_fullStr | Memoryscapes of belonging: tracing black women's bodies and interior lives in postcolonial city making |
| title_full_unstemmed | Memoryscapes of belonging: tracing black women's bodies and interior lives in postcolonial city making |
| title_short | Memoryscapes of belonging: tracing black women's bodies and interior lives in postcolonial city making |
| title_sort | memoryscapes of belonging tracing black women s bodies and interior lives in postcolonial city making |
| topic | Environmental and Geographical Science |
| url | http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39834 |
| work_keys_str_mv | AT prinssolanideirdre memoryscapesofbelongingtracingblackwomensbodiesandinteriorlivesinpostcolonialcitymaking |