Managing sullied pleasure: dining out while black and middle class in South Africa

IF 2.3 4区 管理学 Q3 BUSINESS Consumption Markets & Culture Pub Date : 2021-10-13 DOI:10.1080/10253866.2021.1987227
T. Ndlovu
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Dining out is generally associated with, and taken as part of everyday consumption choices of the middle classes. However, eating at top-end restaurants is a problematic experience for some members of South Africa’s black middle class, proving that it is a loaded consumption practice. This appears anomalous given the much-touted “rise” of the African middle class in the country. This article uses essays by Ndumiso Ngcobo and Fred Khumalo, as well as interviews with both authors to explore why a potentially pleasurable experience such as eating out results in sullied gratification. Using the concept of public identities in which the restaurant is a theatre, the article argues that blackness complicates middle-classness, suggesting that affording pleasure is not the only condition to enjoy it; there might be need to manage leisure. The questioning of blacks’ legitimacy as diners in these spaces raises questions about race, class, citizenship and one’s humanity.
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管理被玷污的快乐:南非黑人和中产阶级外出就餐
外出就餐通常是中产阶级日常消费选择的一部分。然而,对于南非黑人中产阶级的一些成员来说,在高端餐厅用餐是一种有问题的体验,证明这是一种奢侈的消费行为。考虑到非洲中产阶级在该国的“崛起”,这似乎有些反常。这篇文章使用了Ndumiso Ngcobo和Fred Khumalo的文章,以及对两位作者的采访,来探讨为什么像外出就餐这样潜在的愉快体验会导致被污染的满足感。文章使用公共身份的概念,即餐厅是一个剧院,认为黑人使中产阶级复杂化,表明提供快乐并不是享受它的唯一条件;可能需要管理休闲。对黑人在这些空间用餐合法性的质疑引发了关于种族、阶级、公民身份和人性的问题。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
16.70%
发文量
32
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