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Reclaiming the spatial imaginary: a photovoice study of resistance to displacement in Woodstock, Cape Town

Present-day South Africa is still characterised by colonial- and apartheid-era patterns of urban displacement that are exacerbated by gentrification. Low-income tenants’ and evictees’ experiences of displacement and its resistance have social, spatial, psychological, and political components. Examin...

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Main Author: Urson, Ruth
Other Authors: Kessi, Shose
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Psychology 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Urson, Ruth
author2 Kessi, Shose
author_browse Kessi, Shose
Urson, Ruth
author_facet Kessi, Shose
Urson, Ruth
author_sort Urson, Ruth
collection Thesis
description Present-day South Africa is still characterised by colonial- and apartheid-era patterns of urban displacement that are exacerbated by gentrification. Low-income tenants’ and evictees’ experiences of displacement and its resistance have social, spatial, psychological, and political components. Examining these components can contribute to understanding the processes and impacts of gentrification. Reclaim the City (RTC) is a young grassroots campaign that resists evictions and demands well-located affordable housing in Cape Town through protest, education, and occupation. This study investigated how RTC activists experience and resist their displacement from the gentrifying suburb of Woodstock in Cape Town. Using a critical psychological framework, data from photovoice, participant observation, and key informant interviews were collected in 2018, triangulated, and analysed using thematic analysis. This study found that participants’ experiences of displacement were characterised by being “thingified” as black low-income tenants through mistreatment by landlords, displacement from centres to peripheries, becoming invisible residents, and internalisation. This was compounded for those with intersectional vulnerabilities, such as women and African migrants. Such experiences uphold rather than contradict an apartheid spatial imaginary, encompassing the continuation of apartheid-era norms relating to psychological, spatial, and social elements of displacement into the present. While sometimes delegitimised for their illegal activities, this study illustrates how RTC activists combined strategies of building new identities, organising legal and illegal resistance to displacement, and making meaning of their occupation of a vacant building in Woodstock, to pave the way for new spatial imaginaries. Implications of these findings are discussed.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:56.154Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Department of Psychology
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30836 Reclaiming the spatial imaginary: a photovoice study of resistance to displacement in Woodstock, Cape Town Urson, Ruth Kessi, Shose Daya, Shari Psychological Research Present-day South Africa is still characterised by colonial- and apartheid-era patterns of urban displacement that are exacerbated by gentrification. Low-income tenants’ and evictees’ experiences of displacement and its resistance have social, spatial, psychological, and political components. Examining these components can contribute to understanding the processes and impacts of gentrification. Reclaim the City (RTC) is a young grassroots campaign that resists evictions and demands well-located affordable housing in Cape Town through protest, education, and occupation. This study investigated how RTC activists experience and resist their displacement from the gentrifying suburb of Woodstock in Cape Town. Using a critical psychological framework, data from photovoice, participant observation, and key informant interviews were collected in 2018, triangulated, and analysed using thematic analysis. This study found that participants’ experiences of displacement were characterised by being “thingified” as black low-income tenants through mistreatment by landlords, displacement from centres to peripheries, becoming invisible residents, and internalisation. This was compounded for those with intersectional vulnerabilities, such as women and African migrants. Such experiences uphold rather than contradict an apartheid spatial imaginary, encompassing the continuation of apartheid-era norms relating to psychological, spatial, and social elements of displacement into the present. While sometimes delegitimised for their illegal activities, this study illustrates how RTC activists combined strategies of building new identities, organising legal and illegal resistance to displacement, and making meaning of their occupation of a vacant building in Woodstock, to pave the way for new spatial imaginaries. Implications of these findings are discussed. 2020-01-29T14:35:28Z 2020-01-29T14:35:28Z 2019 2020-01-29T08:27:46Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30836 eng application/pdf Department of Psychology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Psychological Research
Urson, Ruth
Reclaiming the spatial imaginary: a photovoice study of resistance to displacement in Woodstock, Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Reclaiming the spatial imaginary: a photovoice study of resistance to displacement in Woodstock, Cape Town
title_full Reclaiming the spatial imaginary: a photovoice study of resistance to displacement in Woodstock, Cape Town
title_fullStr Reclaiming the spatial imaginary: a photovoice study of resistance to displacement in Woodstock, Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Reclaiming the spatial imaginary: a photovoice study of resistance to displacement in Woodstock, Cape Town
title_short Reclaiming the spatial imaginary: a photovoice study of resistance to displacement in Woodstock, Cape Town
title_sort reclaiming the spatial imaginary a photovoice study of resistance to displacement in woodstock cape town
topic Psychological Research
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30836
work_keys_str_mv AT ursonruth reclaimingthespatialimaginaryaphotovoicestudyofresistancetodisplacementinwoodstockcapetown