Becker, HeikeMakhale, Lerato Michelle2015-02-122024-03-202015-02-122024-03-202013https://hdl.handle.net/10566/9443Magister Artium - MAThis study focuses on young people and how they etch a sense of belonging in the cosmopolitan city of Cape Town, in multicultural, post-apartheid South Africa. The study mainly focuses on a group of performers known as Black Ink Arts Movement (Black Ink), who are based in Du Noon township, near Cape Town, South Africa. The study looks at how young people who are involved in community performance projects; it also engages with their varied audiences. Lastly, the thesis shows the performers? day to day lives when they are not on stage to see what it means to be young and black in Du Noon as a member of Black InkenPerformanceBelongingYoung people?Identity?SpaceAuthenticityCape TownDunoon townshipBlack Ink Arts MovementTheatreDunoon, iKasi lami (my township): young people and the performance of belonging in a South African townshipThesisUniversity of the Western Cape