“…They are rarely expanded on or considered as fully fleshed-out people with lives, families, and dreams of their own. The fafi man, or, as an ethnic caricature, the "China man," is considered another outsider in the unhinged landscape of the city, and xenophobic sentiments are interwoven with gamblers' reliance on the fafi man and the predictability of his arrival every day (Katsaura 2015;Katsaura and Abe 2016). Not black, or white, or coloured, and without a visible historical connection to the antiapartheid movement like Indian South Africans, Chinese South Africans occupy a peculiar space in the South African imaginary, and this has only intensified with the new era of Chinese investment in and migration to South Africa (Park 2010;Harrison, Moyo, and Yang 2012;Louw 2019).…”