Lived experiences and local spaces: Bangladeshi migrants in post-apartheid South Africa.
Abstract
Migration literature tends to speak of temporary migration as economic
migration and therefore the experience of migration is centred on the economy.
In South Africa, this economic experience includes violence and crime
especially after the 2008 xenophobic attacks. Yet migrants have established and
forged relations in South Africa that transcend pure economic relationships. In
this paper, I argue that the lived experience of Bangladeshi migrants produce
a far more complex picture of migration. While the economy may have been
the primary reason these men migrated, they are neither poor nor destitute.
Further, this paper looks at how the spaces of the home, work and the social
are negotiated in the daily lived experience of Bangladeshi migrants in South
Africa. It looks at spaces like Fordsburg Johannesburg where the men socialise
and find a sense of community among their countrymen, as well how marriage
and social mobility.