Hoskins, JonathanFumba, Nheo2022-03-072024-05-032022-03-072024-05-032021https://hdl.handle.net/10566/12791Magister Philosophiae - MPhilPost-apartheid South Africa has strived for change through the implementation of preferential procurement policy legislations such as the Black Economic Empowerment Act, Employment Equality Act, as well as the right to education for all has opened opportunities for many who were previously disadvantage. Being black in apartheid South Africa meant being middle class came with many constant difficulties of negotiating boundaries with community members that were not middle class and spaces that were middle class but white, thus raising several racial dynamics not experienced at ‘home.’ Being black in post-apartheid South Africa has also come with difficulties of constantly evolving social identity changes and categorisation.enClassIdentity formationCoconutBlack communityPost-apartheidSouth AfricaIntra-race identity formation in democratic South Africa: An investigation of the “coconutUniversity of Western Cape