'Do you own your freedom?' Reflecting on Cape Town youths' aspirations to be free

IF 0.9 Q3 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
M. Brown-Luthango, R. Van Rooyen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Young people make up half of the world’s population and constitute the majority of the population across the Global South (Cooper et al. 2019). In South Africa, the youth constitute one-third of the country’s population, many of whom belong to the so-called ‘born free’ generation. The ‘born free’ generation typically refers to those who were born after the end of Apartheid, or those who were coming of age after 1994. The youth, particularly in cities of the South, represent an excluded majority in terms of access to meaningful employment and quality living environments. This article reflects on a research project which used narrative photovoice as a method to engage a group of 13 young people from Mitchell’s Plain, Philippi and Gugulethu; poor marginalised areas in Cape Town. Narrative photovoice combines photography with writing to give participants an opportunity to convey particular stories or issues through their photography. Through a process of co-production and collaboration between academic researchers, a community-based organisation (CBO) called ‘Youth for Change’ and a creative enterprise called ‘noDREAD’productions, the youth were engaged in a creative process using photographs to tell stories about themselves, their communities and the broader city context in which they live. This article draws on Appadurai’s notion of the ‘capacity to aspire’ to make sense of the aspirations and dreams the participants talk about through their photographs; how they navigate structural, psychological and other factors which impede their aspirations and their freedom, and how they make sense of their everyday realities. The article advances two interlinked arguments: firstly, it makes visible the ‘navigational capacity’ of youth from marginalised neighbourhoods and their capacity to aspire amidst multiple constraints. It does so by illustrating how the youth grapple with the idea and experience of freedom in their everyday life. Secondly, it makes a case for the use of photovoice as a method that is well positioned to (a) capture the visual dimension of youth aspirations and (b) allow for co-production between the different stakeholders.
“你拥有你的自由吗?”反思开普敦青年对自由的渴望
年轻人占世界人口的一半,占全球南方人口的大多数(Cooper et al. 2019)。在南非,年轻人占全国人口的三分之一,其中许多人属于所谓的“天生自由”一代。“生来自由”的一代通常指那些在种族隔离结束后出生的人,或者那些在1994年之后成年的人。青年,特别是南方城市的青年,在获得有意义的就业和高质量的生活环境方面是被排斥的大多数。这篇文章反映了一个研究项目,该项目使用叙事的照片声音作为一种方法,吸引了来自米切尔平原,菲利比和Gugulethu的13名年轻人;开普敦的贫困边缘地区。叙事摄影之声将摄影与写作相结合,让参与者有机会通过他们的摄影传达特定的故事或问题。通过学术研究人员、名为“青年变革”的社区组织(CBO)和名为“noDREAD”的创意企业之间的共同制作和合作,青年们参与了一个创造性的过程,用照片讲述关于他们自己、他们的社区和他们生活的更广泛的城市背景的故事。本文借鉴了Appadurai的“渴望的能力”的概念,通过他们的照片来理解参与者谈论的愿望和梦想;他们如何应对阻碍其抱负和自由的结构、心理和其他因素,以及他们如何理解日常现实。这篇文章提出了两个相互关联的论点:首先,它使边缘化社区的年轻人的“导航能力”和他们在多重限制中渴望的能力变得可见。它通过说明年轻人如何在日常生活中与自由的想法和经验作斗争来做到这一点。其次,它为使用光声作为一种方法提供了一个案例,这种方法可以很好地(a)捕捉青年愿望的视觉维度,(b)允许不同利益相关者之间的合作生产。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
28.60%
发文量
5
审稿时长
34 weeks
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