Communication patterns of some Afrikaans speaking Coloureds and Whites in the Cape Peninsula

INTERGROUP relations are of the utmost importance in South Africa where these re- lationships have seriously deteriorated dur- ing the past decade. In this study the focus Is on the communication patterns of Afri- kaans speaking Coloureds and Whites In the Cape Peninsula. These two groups share imp...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elirea Bornman, H.J. Groenewald, Elsa Hall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Johannesburg 2022-11-01
Series:Communicare
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/2112
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832593863720566784
author Elirea Bornman
H.J. Groenewald
Elsa Hall
author_facet Elirea Bornman
H.J. Groenewald
Elsa Hall
author_sort Elirea Bornman
collection DOAJ
description INTERGROUP relations are of the utmost importance in South Africa where these re- lationships have seriously deteriorated dur- ing the past decade. In this study the focus Is on the communication patterns of Afri- kaans speaking Coloureds and Whites In the Cape Peninsula. These two groups share important facets of a common culture and this aspect should be a major impetus for positive communication between them. This approach proved to be rather simplis- tic and therefore attention is given to the social identity theory and the contact hypothesis to explain the data obtained in the pilot study. Although there are some similarities between the two population groups there are also some differences in the communication patterns. Communica- tion between the two groups takes place primarily in the context of the work situa- tion. Because of the relatively small number of respondants involved in the study no generalized conclusions could be made. It seems, however, that the relationships of different groups of people in a multicultural society will not improve as long as certain measures exist in the society to treat them as totally different entities with different needs and aspirations. This aspect was dis- cussed in depth in the theoretical founda- tion of the study.
format Article
id doaj-art-63181964e6cb40d18deeb2a8311a2b8d
institution Kabale University
issn 0259-0069
2957-7950
language English
publishDate 2022-11-01
publisher University of Johannesburg
record_format Article
series Communicare
spelling doaj-art-63181964e6cb40d18deeb2a8311a2b8d2025-01-20T08:42:39ZengUniversity of JohannesburgCommunicare0259-00692957-79502022-11-016110.36615/jcsa.v6i1.2112Communication patterns of some Afrikaans speaking Coloureds and Whites in the Cape PeninsulaElirea Bornman0H.J. GroenewaldElsa HallUniversity of South Africa INTERGROUP relations are of the utmost importance in South Africa where these re- lationships have seriously deteriorated dur- ing the past decade. In this study the focus Is on the communication patterns of Afri- kaans speaking Coloureds and Whites In the Cape Peninsula. These two groups share important facets of a common culture and this aspect should be a major impetus for positive communication between them. This approach proved to be rather simplis- tic and therefore attention is given to the social identity theory and the contact hypothesis to explain the data obtained in the pilot study. Although there are some similarities between the two population groups there are also some differences in the communication patterns. Communica- tion between the two groups takes place primarily in the context of the work situa- tion. Because of the relatively small number of respondants involved in the study no generalized conclusions could be made. It seems, however, that the relationships of different groups of people in a multicultural society will not improve as long as certain measures exist in the society to treat them as totally different entities with different needs and aspirations. This aspect was dis- cussed in depth in the theoretical founda- tion of the study. https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/2112INTERGROUP relationsCape Peninsulacommunication patternsColoureds and Whitescommon culturemulticultural society
spellingShingle Elirea Bornman
H.J. Groenewald
Elsa Hall
Communication patterns of some Afrikaans speaking Coloureds and Whites in the Cape Peninsula
Communicare
INTERGROUP relations
Cape Peninsula
communication patterns
Coloureds and Whites
common culture
multicultural society
title Communication patterns of some Afrikaans speaking Coloureds and Whites in the Cape Peninsula
title_full Communication patterns of some Afrikaans speaking Coloureds and Whites in the Cape Peninsula
title_fullStr Communication patterns of some Afrikaans speaking Coloureds and Whites in the Cape Peninsula
title_full_unstemmed Communication patterns of some Afrikaans speaking Coloureds and Whites in the Cape Peninsula
title_short Communication patterns of some Afrikaans speaking Coloureds and Whites in the Cape Peninsula
title_sort communication patterns of some afrikaans speaking coloureds and whites in the cape peninsula
topic INTERGROUP relations
Cape Peninsula
communication patterns
Coloureds and Whites
common culture
multicultural society
url https://journals.uj.ac.za/index.php/jcsa/article/view/2112
work_keys_str_mv AT elireabornman communicationpatternsofsomeafrikaansspeakingcolouredsandwhitesinthecapepeninsula
AT hjgroenewald communicationpatternsofsomeafrikaansspeakingcolouredsandwhitesinthecapepeninsula
AT elsahall communicationpatternsofsomeafrikaansspeakingcolouredsandwhitesinthecapepeninsula