How Eritrean refugees in Pretoria give meaning to their refugee identity in conversation : an interpretive study of salient interpretative repertoires

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dc.contributor.advisor Du Plessis, Irma
dc.contributor.postgraduate Tewolde, Amanuel Isak
dc.date.accessioned 2014-08-20T09:10:08Z
dc.date.available 2014-08-20T09:10:08Z
dc.date.created 2014-04-23
dc.date.issued 2014 en_US
dc.description Dissertation (MSocSci)--University of Pretoria, 2014. en_US
dc.description.abstract This research study explores how ten Eritrean refugees living in Pretoria, South Africa, make sense of their refugee identity in individual interviews. Discursive analysis was employed as a methodology to capture the different ways of talking (interpretative repertoires) about their institutionally-ascribed refugee identity, their experiences as refugees and alternative identities which the refugees discursively constructed in their interaction with the researcher. The study was motivated to provide the refugees, as a marginalized social group, a platform for expressing their agency. Six men and four women were recruited for the study using a convenience sampling technique. Analysis resulted in the identification of five dominant and two less dominant interpretative repertoires. The dominant interpretative repertoires were as follows: ‘we have rights’ repertoire; ‘accept who you are’ repertoire; ‘they target you’ repertoire; ‘I am secure: they can’t deport me’ repertoire and ‘we are misunderstood as criminals’ repertoire. The two less dominant repertoires were: ‘our refugee identity is transient’ repertoire and ‘I am lost; I don’t have a country any more’ repertoire. The findings of such varied, contradictory and inconsistent ways of talking by the participants about their refugee identity demonstrate a challenge to previous empirical studies conducted on the experiences and identities of Eritrean refugees in different settings which treated participant accounts as consistent and coherent. Furthermore, the results of the study defy dominant discourses about refugees which describe them as voiceless and without agency. en_US
dc.description.availability unrestricted en_US
dc.description.department Sociology en_US
dc.description.librarian am2014 en_US
dc.identifier.citation Tewolde, AI 2014, How Eritrean refugees in Pretoria give meaning to their refugee identity in conversation : an interpretive study of salient interpretative repertoires, MSocSci dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/41449> en_US
dc.identifier.other F/14/4/486 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/41449
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Pretoria en_ZA
dc.rights © 2014 University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the University of Pretoria. en_US
dc.subject Eritrean refugees en_US
dc.subject South Africa en_US
dc.subject Pretoria en_US
dc.subject Refugee identity en_US
dc.subject Interpretative repertoires en_US
dc.subject Subject positions en_US
dc.subject Potter & Whetherell en_US
dc.subject Discourse analysis en_US
dc.subject Migration studies en_US
dc.subject UCTD en_US
dc.title How Eritrean refugees in Pretoria give meaning to their refugee identity in conversation : an interpretive study of salient interpretative repertoires en_US
dc.type Mini Dissertation en_US


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