Abstract
This study of the production, representation, and reception of post-colonial advertising in India reveals a politics of consumer respectability. The post-colonial politics of consumer respectability is located at the intersection of center–periphery relations, class divisions, and colorism in a way that it frames neocolonial consumption. Advertisers depict middle-class consumer respectability by asserting Indian nationalism and by degrading the West as a symbol of colonialism. Such depictions are class- and color-based and show under-class and dark-skinned consumers in subordinate positions. Furthering such neocolonial frames of consumption, Indian advertising advances the middle-class desire for Eurocentric modernity by reinforcing the colonial trope of India as temporally lagging behind the West. Finally, middle-class consumer respectability involves a neocolonial whitening of self with epidermalized shaping of inter-corporeality and agency. In uncovering the theoretical implications of advertising as a site of avenging degradation, desiring modernity, and whitening of self, this study contributes by offering insights into how the politics of post-colonial consumer respectability furthers neocolonial frames of consumption.
Original language | English |
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Article number | ucad063 |
Pages (from-to) | 362–382 |
Journal | Journal of Consumer Research |
Volume | 51 |
Issue number | 2 |
Early online date | 23 Sept 2023 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Aug 2024 |
Keywords
- respectability
- neocolonial consumption
- post-colonial
- framing
- colorism
- whiteness