African Luxury Branding: From Soft Power to Queer Futures

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Bringing together critical race, queer and decolonial analytical approaches, visual analysis, and multimodal discourse analysis, this book explores the discursive strategies deployed by African luxury brands in an age of cross-platform, intertextual branding.

Building on literature examining the aesthetics and politics of African luxury, this book demonstrates how leading African luxury brands create visual material speaking to complex sensibilities of culture, nature, and future. Iqani shows how powerful brand narratives and strategies reveal ethical and ideological messages that function to re-position Africa in an increasingly congested global marketplace of ideas. In acknowledging that there is a strong political validity to recognizing the importance of African brands staking their claim in luxury, this book also problematizes the role these brands play in the promotion of luxury discourses, advancing the project of capitalism and their contribution to broader patterns of inequality.

Shedding new light not only on luxury branding strategies but also on the idea of a luxurious global “Africanicity” and on the complex cultural politics of South Africa, African Luxury Branding will be of interest to advanced students and researchers in disciplines, including Critical Advertising Studies, African Studies, Media and Communications.

Author(s): Mehita Iqani
Series: Routledge Critical Advertising Studies
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 132
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Figures
Acknowledgements
1. African Luxury Brands in Global and Local Context
Critical Perspectives on African Luxury
The Spirit of Luxury: Administrative and Critical Approaches
Luxury is African: Contesting Western-centric Views
Researching African Luxury Branding: Notes on Methods
Decolonial Visual Analysis of Black-owned South African Luxury Brands
Being with and in Luxury: Ethnographic Approaches
Structure of the Book
2. From Africa to the World: Cultural Inheritance as Soft Power
Authenticity in Luxury Design
Remixing Cultural Heritage into Luxury Objects
From Rites to Runways: Thebe Magugu and the Basotho Blanket
The Love Language of Beads: The Herd
Luxury Design across Time and Space
Luxury as Modality for African Soft Power
Consuming Africa? Afropolitanism and Commodification
3. Back to Nature: Beauty and African Luxury Minimalism
Against Excess: African Designer Views on Minimalism
Self-Care and Luxury: With Nude and Nature
Skin Tone Politics and Consumer Equality in Gugu Intimates
Essential Botanicals and Natural Grooming in Suki Suki
Beauty Minimalism and Black Feminist Subjectivities
Mother Nature: Gender and Botanical Messaging
Power Dialectics in the Branding of Self-Love
4. Shiny Futures and Afro-Fabulous Queer Luxury
Existing in Style: "People want to shine"
Consuming Queerness in (South) Africa
Big Dyke Energy in the Big City: Karabo Poppy
Leather and the Luxury Object in Rich Mnisi
Surfacism and Luxe Performativity
"A beautiful queer narrative": Pride and Luxury Shine
Selling Queer Creativity? Capitalism with/against Queer Emancipation
5. From Soft Power to Queer Futures: New Directions for African Luxury
Culture, Nature, Future
Between Global and Local
Creative Industries and Economic Growth
Constraints on African Economic Freedom
New Directions?
Appendix 1. Details on Interviews
Bibliography
Index