Abstract

The objective of this study was to explore how adolescent boys talk about absent fathers in Alexandra Township, a historically working-class and black community in Gauteng, South Africa. Individual and group interviews were conducted with 30 adolescent boys between the age of 14 and 18 years in two high schools in Alexandra Township. The results reveal that many of the adolescent boys in the study did not know their fathers or their fathers had separated with their mothers. Despite this, some of the boys were able to construct positive male identities that were not risk-taking. This process involved certain psychical and defensive manoeuvres such as fantasy and an idealized self representation of wanting to become ‘different’ fathers as compared to their own biological fathers. Young adolescent boys' positive voices about future fathering and fatherhood could be supported.

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