ENG2603
Assignment 03
Due date: 08 September 2025
Compulsory: Yes
2025
According to Homi Bhabha,
Using insights from the above quotation, critically analysise the extent to
which concepts of “colonial discourse,” “construction of otherness” and
“stereotype” are challenged and/or reproduced in
Welcome to Our Hillbrow
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, ENG2603 Assignment 03
Due date: 08 September 2025
Compulsory: Yes
According to Homi Bhabha,
Using insights from the above quotation, critically analysise the extent to
which concepts of “colonial discourse,” “construction of otherness” and
“stereotype” are challenged and/or reproduced in
Welcome to Our Hillbrow
Phaswane Mpe’s Welcome to Our Hillbrow is a powerful post-apartheid novel
that explores the lingering effects of colonialism and apartheid in South Africa.
Using Homi Bhabha’s theory of colonial discourse—particularly his ideas on
“fixity,” “otherness,” and “stereotype”—this essay critically examines how
Mpe’s text both challenges and reproduces these concepts. Bhabha (1983)
argues that colonial discourse depends on “fixity,” a paradoxical
representation of the colonized as both stable and threatening. Stereotypes,
he explains, are repeated forms of knowledge that reinforce this fixity, shaping
how the colonized are seen and treated. In Welcome to Our Hillbrow, Mpe
exposes how these colonial patterns persist in post-apartheid South Africa,
especially through xenophobia, internalized racism, and cultural prejudice.
At the heart of Bhabha’s theory is the idea that colonial discourse constructs
the colonized subject as “other”—a figure defined by difference and
inferiority. This construction is not static but constantly repeated through
stereotypes that claim to represent truth. According to Bhabha, the stereotype
is “a form of knowledge and identification that vacillates between what is
always ‘in place’, already known, and something that must be anxiously
repeated” (Bhabha, 1983, p. 18). In Welcome to Our Hillbrow, this repetition is
evident in the way characters from Tiragalong speak about Hillbrow and its
residents. The rural villagers view the city as corrupt, immoral, and
dangerous—a place where people lose their values and contract diseases.