Democracy's children?: masculinities of coloured adolescents awaiting trial in post-apartheid Cape Town, South Africa

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Titel: Democracy's children?: masculinities of coloured adolescents awaiting trial in post-apartheid Cape Town, South Africa
Autoren: Human Sciences Research Council
Verlagsinformationen: HSRC, 2025.
Publikationsjahr: 2025
Schlagwörter: Democracy's children?: masculinities of coloured adolescents awaiting trial in post-apartheid Cape Town, South Africa
Beschreibung: This study explored the young, marginalised masculinities of 25 boys awaiting trial for various offences in Cape Town, South Africa. The boys came from impoverished areas created by Apartheid legislation and most of the boys were involved in gangs. Through their language and descriptions of practices the boys construct three intersecting discourses of masculinity, as they strive to be the toughest gangster, the sweet 'mommy¿s boy' and a 'gentleman' who provides and protects for his family. Although the boys end up in the criminal justice system awaiting trial, they still have a certain amount of agency, as they slide between discourses and temporarily become gangster superheroes. These boys¿ masculinities are bound up with their context: they live in a place with a violent past and a tumultuous post-apartheid present, precipitating substantially ambivalent subjectivities.
Publikationsart: Article
Sprache: English
DOI: 10.14749/30281584
Dokumentencode: edsair.doi...........d18ddf4262914e4ed35ad1c3fb4196b7
Datenbank: OpenAIRE
Beschreibung
Abstract:This study explored the young, marginalised masculinities of 25 boys awaiting trial for various offences in Cape Town, South Africa. The boys came from impoverished areas created by Apartheid legislation and most of the boys were involved in gangs. Through their language and descriptions of practices the boys construct three intersecting discourses of masculinity, as they strive to be the toughest gangster, the sweet 'mommy¿s boy' and a 'gentleman' who provides and protects for his family. Although the boys end up in the criminal justice system awaiting trial, they still have a certain amount of agency, as they slide between discourses and temporarily become gangster superheroes. These boys¿ masculinities are bound up with their context: they live in a place with a violent past and a tumultuous post-apartheid present, precipitating substantially ambivalent subjectivities.
DOI:10.14749/30281584