Abstract

Recent discussions on colonialism and coloniality in academic and community contexts have not been fully informed, only understanding the past from a present-day context. This article provides a deeper, more experiential understanding of this culturally complex phenomenon by combining three research methodologies: structured regional research, ethnography informed research and multidisciplinary wellbeing research. The article examines traces of colonialism in the Far West Rand area of South Africa, at a time of expanding mining operations when it was rare for people to think of themselves as ‘colonists’ with a colonial vision. Yet, structured regional research points to a history of immense urbanisation, linked to immigration and strong, almost dominant, features of colonialism. Two other, totally different, research methods have also observed the same phenomenon, adopting a more experiential angle to communities in the Far West Rand. These community experiences relate more closely to a coloniality imagery manifested primarily in ideas and opinions about contemporary service delivery, poverty and land use issues.

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