Tourism Geographies, Vol.1, No.4, pp. 443-459 (return to Table of Contents for Vol.1)
Restaurants trends in Durban, South Africa
Robert Preston-Whyte
School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Natal, South Africa
Abstract
As part of the cultural life of the city restaurants provide sacred spaces in
which the pleasures of eating and communicating can be experienced and valued.
They also chronicle trends and shifts in cultural tastes, social behavior and
community fears as urban residents respond to the influence of globalization,
the experience of cultural interaction, and perceptions of threats to personal
safety. The purpose of this paper is to examine these trends in the colonial'
core region of Durban, South Africa. Restaurants were shown to cluster in four
districts: the central business district, the beachfront, and two districts
in a suburban environment where the residents are predominantly white South
Africans. Once the domain of white privilege, the central business district
and beachfront is shown to have undergone a transformation towards multiculturalism
in recent years. Impelled by images of urban disorder and increasing crime levels
associated with this trend, white consumers increasingly have shifted towards
locations in the white dominated suburbs that are perceived to be safe, up-market
and culturally homogeneous. Over a recent 15-month period the central business
district and beachfront district showed negative restaurant growth, largely
for these same reasons. In contrast restaurants in the suburban districts showed
positive growth due to a synergy between capital investment and the cultural
identity and perceptions of urban whites. While restaurant variety is linked
to the globalization of food, the range of restaurant types is shown to vary
between districts in response to social and economic factors.
Keywords: Food globalization, public space images, restaurant districts, growth trends, restaurant types,