Experiencing Negative Racial Stereotyping: The Case of Coloured People in Johannesburg, South Africa †
Abstract
:1. Introduction
‘certain generalisations reached by individuals. They derive in large measure from, or are an instance of, the general cognitive process of categorising. The main function of the process is to simplify and systematise, for purposes of cognitive and behavioural adaptation, the abundance and complexity of the information received from its environment by a human organism.’
2. Coloured People in South Africa
‘a ‘phenotypically diverse group of people’ descended largely from Cape slaves, the indigenous Khoisan population and a range of other people of African and Asian origin who had been assimilated into Cape colonial society by the late nineteenth century formed the Coloured category. Also partly descended from European settlers, Coloured people have popularly been regarded as being of ‘mixed race’ and have held an intermediate status in the South African racial hierarchy perceived as distinct from the historically dominant white minority and the numerically preponderant African population’. (Adhikari 2006, pp. 143–44)
3. Literature Review
3.1. Racial Stereotyping in the Global Context
3.2. Racial Stereotyping in South Africa
The attribute of racial hybridity is virtually inherent to the concept of Colouredness in the popular mind and is the most prominent in the array of negative qualities associated with it. Coloured people are generally thought of as being of ‘mixed race’, or less flatteringly, as ‘half-caste’ or even a ‘bastard’ people. Indeed, before the exclusive meaning of the term Coloured became current in the mid-1880s, words such as ‘bastard’ and ‘half-caste’ were the most common epithets used to refer to this social group or to individual members. In other words, Colouredness is seen as the product of miscegenation, and racial mixture to be its defining characteristic. The idea of racial hybridity has been so intrinsic to the concept of Colouredness… (p. 151)
‘indeed, many of the racial traits attributed to Coloured people have often been explained in terms of the deleterious effects of racial mixture. Allegedly inherent characteristics of Coloured people, such as their being physically stunted, lacking in endurance and being naturally prone to dishonesty, licentiousness and drink, have often been explained or justified in terms of the effects of racial mixture or of ‘gebastenheid’ (bastardisation) resulting in physical and moral weakness (p. 155)… From my experience of the way in which the term has been used by outgroups to describe Coloured people, moral and intellectual inferiority should be added to this list’. (p. 159)
‘in popular discourse, the Khoisan origins of Coloured people are often used to explain racial traits ascribed to them. Negative characteristics attributed to the Khoisan have thus been projected onto the Coloured grouping as a whole, invoking images of inveterate laziness, irresponsibility, dirtiness and a penchant for thievery that are often assumed to have been inherited by Coloured people from their Khoisan ancestors’. (pp. 159–60)
the stereotype of Coloureds appears to be highly consensual and stable across time. The most common representation of Coloureds as alcoholics is linked with the idea that Coloureds are violent, criminal, gangsters, on the one hand, and gay, happy and friendly, on the other. (p. 484)
3.3. Theorising Racial Stereotyping
3.4. Theorising Stereotype Reproduction
4. Method
5. Results
5.1. Experiencing Negative Racial Stereotyping
‘A Coloured person gets screened based on you know “Are you a criminal?”, “Are you on drugs?” “Are you competent?”… the only time you are represented on those platforms is either if you are portrayed as criminal, a gangster, drug dealer, or in that same like… so representation is a very big part of a lot of the issues when it comes to marginalisation.’
‘Once you mentioned that you came from Westbury, you were already blacklisted or so-called you were put in a box whereby you come from a very poor area, your education is very bad, and you are classified as people who are just workers or unemployed people.’
‘There are politicians that said these things. That is why people the Black people can walk around calling us barbarians and can call us these names that we are products of rape because of what their leaders said about us… They don’t know us. They never sat with us and really see who we are. You get what I am saying? You can call me a barbarian you can call me this you can call me that but you don’t know me because of what your leaders have said.’
‘The first thing is in their minds all of us are the same. So in their minds, Coloured like to fight… Coloured they like violence, and obviously there are so many good stories there are so many people that do the right thing. But these stories people don’t want to hear. If something goes wrong they are quick to come in and see and report it. But when you do good things that is not reported. You don’t see those things in… it is like it is almost like bad story is more important than the good ones. So violence, aggression, short-tempered, lazy, they classify us with drinkers, we like drugs, all those things. Those are the things they see us as, they don’t wanna see us as educated people intelligent people you know. People that have integrity and those things and loyalty, those things are not part of us when they see us they just see violence because that is the only thing they see in TV when it comes to us.’
‘Government has this stereotypical view on us. And most people do have the stereotypical view on us. And they are not to be blamed this is the life they have shown us, shown him. So ya we have seen negativity… whenever you think about Westbury, the first thing that comes to mind would be bullets, drugs, unemployment, that type of thing … I would definitely say race is a major issue because most people have the stereotypical view that Coloureds are these rough people, uneducated, into drugs, and all of that type of negativity is the stigma attached to them.’
‘The reason being is because I think a lot people have this concept of Coloured.And what they always socialise us with is we never come to work on a Monday, because either we have been drinking the weekend so we are too tired to come to work and on a Friday Coloureds never come to work because either they are starting their weekend off… so we have been classified under that umbrella that you know Coloureds are not consistent. They cannot keep a job because they are just in it for the money and once they get the money they are missing and you know you cannot find them they don’t do a good job.’
5.2. Resisting Negative Racial Stereotyping
‘I believe my Coloured brothers and sisters got a talent… Our talents are not being recognised… these people are talented; our youngsters are talented actors, dancers, singers, writers, artists they are talented.’
‘Positive stories and attributes about Coloured people do not get reported or talked about,and obviously there are so many good stories there are so many people that do the right thing. But these stories people don’t want to hear. If something goes wrong they are quick to come in and see and report it. But when you do good things that is not reported. You don’t see those things in. It is like it is almost like bad story is more important than the good ones. So violence, aggression, short-tempered, lazy, they classify us with drinkers, we like drugs, all those things. Those are the things they see us as they don’t wanna see us as educated people intelligent people you know. People that have integrity and those things and loyalty, those things are not part of us when they see us they just see violence because that is the only thing they see in TV when it comes to us.’
‘We got our own Coloured runners within parliament. We have got Jessie Duarte that is there as a Coloured you understand? We have got our Coloured people that is serving within the government like Jessie Duarte is from ANC and she sits every day in parliament.’
‘You can actually name a few growing up that made it out of here that came back and made a difference in our community like Steven Pinnar is a very good role model… he is a soccer player. Steven Pinnar he is a famous soccer player. He came out of Westbury… He is from Westbury and made it out of here. A big professional soccer player, he came back and he gave to our community and today Westbury community even has a soccer tournament made of Steven Pinnar… There is another guy Keagan Dolly he is also a famous soccer player… ya he is also a famous soccer player he also made it out of our community. So that is two people out of our community that made it out of here.’
To me it is like they only care once they see the negativity on the media. We are not represented fairly I would say. Because there are a lot of great minds and good people in Westbury so it is not just the bad but people just focus on the bad and the good is overshadowed by that… So ya we have seen negativity… whenever you think about Westbury, the first thing that comes to mind would be bullets, drugs, unemployment, that type of thing but like I said before they don’t look at the good aspects of Westbury. Take the Youth Centre for example it is the place of hope where youth and young people can get uplifted and be pushed for more successful background. But these will not be displayed in the media.
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The four racial categories are here understood as socio-political or socio-historical constructions rather than objective biological or genetic classifications. Many scholars of race and racial classification place racial categories within inverted commas to signify their social constructions and within this paper, they should be understood as baseless and fictitious categories. |
2 | Throughout colonial times until the onset of Apartheid, the category Coloured as it is used currently was established with the emergence of Apartheid rule in 1948 and is associated with ideologies of racial mixedness. The category encompasses people who are culturally, linguistically, socially, historically, phenotypically and ancestrally heterogeneous. |
3 | The negative stereotyping of Coloured people in Westbury was not limited to themselves only but also to the residential area they inhabit. In Some cases, the participants noted that negative racial stereotypes used by society were also directed at Coloured people in South Africa more generally. |
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Tewolde, A.I. Experiencing Negative Racial Stereotyping: The Case of Coloured People in Johannesburg, South Africa. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 277. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060277
Tewolde AI. Experiencing Negative Racial Stereotyping: The Case of Coloured People in Johannesburg, South Africa. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(6):277. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060277
Chicago/Turabian StyleTewolde, Amanuel Isak. 2024. "Experiencing Negative Racial Stereotyping: The Case of Coloured People in Johannesburg, South Africa" Social Sciences 13, no. 6: 277. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060277
APA StyleTewolde, A. I. (2024). Experiencing Negative Racial Stereotyping: The Case of Coloured People in Johannesburg, South Africa. Social Sciences, 13(6), 277. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13060277