南非黑人中产阶级与社交媒体和数字化饮食文化的关系

Q3 Arts and Humanities Matatu Pub Date : 2023-11-29 DOI:10.1163/18757421-05401005
Pamella Gysman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

南非黑人中产阶级的品味和消费模式长期以来一直受到媒体和研究人员的关注。这种兴趣大多不成比例地集中在黑人中产阶级的低端,很少有研究人员探讨黑人中产阶级作为文化资本的真正持有者,或他们如何使自己的文化资本和社会地位合法化。人们普遍认为黑人中产阶级是一个同质化的、不负责任的、空虚的、肤浅的和物质主义的、沉迷于地位的群体。本论文基于对黑人中产阶级协商 "自我 "和身份认同的现象学探索研究,分析了当代南非黑人中产阶级成员如何利用社交媒体、美食叙事以及关于品味、烹饪技巧和美食知识的信息来塑造有力量的自我形象。我将重点放在两种引人入胜的表演上--"不吃饭 "和 "有文化的味觉"(我的术语)--我提请人们注意这一群体驾驭阶级和种族世界的复杂方式。分析表明,黑人中产阶级成员通过发展与进食、准备和展示食物有关的看似不起眼的表演行为,精心制作群体身份并创造 "自我",这些 "自我 "展现了他们的聪明才智以及对食物、口味、全球文化及其阶级和种族化社会地位的深思熟虑。
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Black South African Middle-Class Engagements with Social Media and Digitised Food Cultures
The tastes and consumption patterns of the black middle class of South Africa have long been of interest to both media and researchers. The majority of this interest has been disproportionately focused on the lower end of the black middle class, with few researchers exploring the black middle class as bona fide bearers of cultural capital or how they legitimise their cultural capital and social status. Prevailing perceptions portray a homogenous, irresponsible, vapid, shallow and materialistic group obsessed with status. Based on a study which took a phenomenological exploration of the black middle class’s negotiation of ‘self’ and identity, this paper presents an analysis of how members of the contemporary black middle class of South Africa use social media; food narratives; and messages about taste, culinary skill, and food knowledge to craft empowering self-images. Focusing on two compelling performances—‘eating without food’ and ‘the cultured palate’ (my terms)—I draw attention to the complex ways in which this group navigate classed and racialised worlds. The analysis reveals that by developing what may seem to be unremarkable performative acts related to eating, preparing, and displaying food, members of the black middle class craft group identity and create ‘selves’ that reveal ingenuity and thoughtful knowledge about food, taste, global culture and their classed and racialised social positions.
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来源期刊
Matatu
Matatu Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
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