Social identities and racial integration in historically white universities : a literature review of the experiences of black students
Abstract
South African government has been promulgating pieces of legislation aimed at ensuring
racial integration, especially in higher education, and indirectly enforcing acculturation in
historically white universities. Studies have proven that institutional cultures in historically
white universities alienate and exclude black students’ identities. These students’ sense of
social identity, which includes culture, heritage, language and traditions, and consequently
self-esteem and self-concept, is altered in these institutions. Research has been scant
regarding the shape and form that black students’ identity assumes when they get to these
spaces. Using Tajfel and Turner’s (1979) social identity theory and Berry’s (2005) theory of
acculturation, this article explores the experiences of black students in negotiating their
social identities in historically white universities. Evoking Steve Biko’s analysis of ‘artificial
integration’ (1986), we hope to illustrate how the ‘integration’ narrative sought to discard
the identity of black students and psychologically enforce a simulation of black students
into white-established identities. The study has implications for policy development as we
hope to sensitise theoretically the historically white universities to, apart from mere opening
of spaces of learning, understand the social identity challenges of black students in these
institutions.