Under the apartheid regime, South Africa's Mitchell's Plain, situated close to Cape Town, was devised as a "model township." Lire la suite
A cutting-edge urban planning scheme would provide middle-class Coloured people—evacuated from their homes by racialised rehousing schemes—with exemplary living conditions. This flagship for the regime was inaugurated with fanfare in 1976, and heavily publicised not just within South Africa but also in the international press. Cohorts of political leaders and journalists were invited to admire first-hand how racial segregation could be paired with progressive social planning. A documentary film was commissioned for worldwide distribution: Mitchells Plain (1980). Like other well-laid plans, however, Mitchell's Plain would foil the designs of its architects. The vaunted utopian township was, for its inhabitants, deeply flawed: essential facilities such as schools and transport were thoroughly inadequate to the population's needs. These sources of frustration generated a groundswell of civic activism. While the government had banked on separating the Coloured population from the national liberation movement, in 1983, Mitchell’s plain acquired important symbolic status as the birthplace of the United Democratic Front, an umbrella organisation of anti-apartheid associations. This event marked a turning point in the history of South Africa’s struggle for freedom. This study chronicles the fortunes of Mitchell’s Plain: its conception and role as propaganda for the apartheid regime. It draws on official documentary sources, but also on interviews with the various social actors whose lifeexperience conveys a very different image of the process, to reconstitute from a critical and historical perspective, the ill-fated window-dressing efforts of the National Party government during its declining years.
Introduction
Chapter 1 – Mitchell's Plain and the Branding of Apartheid
The Birth of a New "Model" Housing Development for the Coloureds: Mitchell’s Plain
From the 1978 Information Scandal to the Birth of the Documentary Mitchells Plain (1980)
The Documentary film Mitchells Plain (1980): An Overview
Chapter 2 – Mitchell’s Plain as South Africa’s New Civilisation
Challenge
A Binary World View: Civilisation and Barbarism
Brazil, Zambia, India, and Malaysia: Convenient References?
Truth, Deception and Magic
Chapter 3 – The Miracle-like Engineering Adventure
In the “Heartland of South Africa’s Coloured Community”
From the Desert to the Metropolis with Mr Dudley
A Metropolis in the Promised Land
Chapter 4 – The Perfect Place: They Moved to Mitchell’s Plain and Lived Happily Ever After
Mrs Rinehart, the Caring Mother: Rewriting Education
Mr Claasens, the Self-Made Man: Rewriting Economy and Freedom
The Arendses: Home Sweet Home in a Civilised Group Areas Development
Appendix: Transcript
References