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Fake-talk and the Spaza Shop A Fake Food Furore and the Spectre of Public Health Emergencies in South Africa

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dc.rights.license Open Access
dc.contributor.author Hornberger, Julia
dc.contributor.author Hodges, Sarah
dc.contributor.author Chitukutuku, Edmore
dc.date.accessioned 2025-09-05T13:12:18Z
dc.date.available 2025-09-05T13:12:18Z
dc.date.issued 2023-09-27
dc.identifier.citation Hornberger, J., Hodges, S. and Chitukutuku, E., 2023. Fake-talk and the spaza shop: a fake food furore and the spectre of public health emergencies in South Africa. Medicine Anthropology Theory, 10(3), pp.1-21. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 2405-691X (Online)
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12821/626
dc.description.abstract At the end of August 2018, a controversy erupted in South Africa. Accusations of potentially poisonous ‘fake food’ had been circulating on social media for a month or so, and by early September reports were common on South African news programmes. Accusations fell at the door of foreign-run spaza shops (convenience stores), some of which were looted and their shopkeepers harmed. Many commentators read these events as another outbreak of the xenophobic violence that has flared up across South African townships for more than a decade. Our reading is different. In this Research Article, rather than dismissing accusations of fake-ness as merely a pretext for popular protest and violence, we tackle the question of what work ‘fake-talk’ does. We show that in this instance, accusations of fake-ness brought a distinctive urgency to events, framing what might otherwise have been seen as concerns about inequality in the language of a public health crisis. In response, a state normally hesitant to act on citizens’ long-standing complaints about ‘the duplicity of foreigners’ intervened with a new speed and decisiveness. ‘Fake-talk’, we conclude, is an important site of inquiry because of how it may enable certain actions, regardless of whether suspicions are founded. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Edinburgh University Library en_US
dc.subject Fake food en_US
dc.subject Protest en_US
dc.subject Health emergency en_US
dc.subject South Africa en_US
dc.subject Xenophobia en_US
dc.title Fake-talk and the Spaza Shop A Fake Food Furore and the Spectre of Public Health Emergencies in South Africa en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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