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Alcohol Cape Town Evan Blake MSocSc Candidate African Centre for Cities University of Cape Town. “That’s my locie !” Narratives of place in Salt River through the lens of drinking establishments. Outline. 1. Geographies of alcohol literature focusing on place
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Alcohol Cape Town Evan Blake MSocSc Candidate African Centre for Cities University of Cape Town “That’s my locie!”Narratives of place in Salt River through the lens of drinking establishments
Outline 1. Geographies of alcohol literature focusing on place 2. Salt River as a place: context, The Local and The Immigrant 3. South African ‘Cityness’ literature 4. Reading the locie: Familiar place into foreign space and The locie place 5. Reflections: Bastion of memory
1. Space and place in geographis of drinking • Literature exploring place and meaning making in geographies of alcohol – very situated literature • Jayne, Valentine and Holloway’s call to geographers – writing the place of drinking geographies across the world – what may very localised drinking in different places look like? What does this speak to at broader scales? • Using other literatures to contextualise place making and drinking to South African contexts?
The ‘Local’ and the ‘Locie’ Salt River: water colour by Tony Grogan
The immigrant • Unique cultures emerging from SR spaces from these groups • Drinking places with a sense of community, spaces are varied in nature • Form ‘the other’ as seen by ‘the locals’
3. Reflecting back on alc geog lit • Narrative and imagination as important place making processes in the context of Salt River’s drinking estb. • Very contextual drinking places emerging: e.g. The Locie • ‘Placeness’ is present in literature geographies of alcohol and place however contexts are very different • Need for a theoretical underpinning to contextualise places like those in Salt River
A theory of ‘Cityness’ “ ‘Citiness’ we understood as made up of excess, simultaneity, speed, appearance, rapid alternations, relentless change, and indeed ceaseless mutability and discontinuous eventfulness: transience. An analysis based on political economy alone can hardly account for the changing inventory and the rich textuality of Johannesburg’s citiness, its unsettled appearances, and its restlessness: the simultaneity of order, disruption, and abrupt interruptions; the incessant labor of framing, reframing, and unframing; of destroying, renovating, and reconstructing; of juxtaposing and segregating; of reiterating and deleting; of triviality, vulgarity, and refinement; of shock, ephemerality, and enchantment.” Mbembeand Nuttall: Writing the World From An African Metropolis, 2004
4. Reading the locieFamiliar place into foreign ‘other’ space • Familiar places of family, friends and the past – now places for immigrants • Not understood as places by ‘the locals’: foreign space, space of the unfamiliar and dangerous
The ‘locie’ place • Place of past and present • Place of collected memory • Community as a central component to the place • Claims to this sense of community and place • Community for who?