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Skin Lighteners, Black Consumers and Jewish Entrepreneurs in South Africa
This article considers the rise and decline of South Africa's lucrative and controversial skin-lighteners market through examination of the business history of the largest manufacturers, Abraham and Solomon Krok, and their evolving personas as millionaires and philanthropists. Such examination...
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Published in: | History workshop journal 2012-04, Vol.73 (73), p.259-283 |
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description | This article considers the rise and decline of South Africa's lucrative and controversial skin-lighteners market through examination of the business history of the largest manufacturers, Abraham and Solomon Krok, and their evolving personas as millionaires and philanthropists. Such examination reveals how the country's skin-lighteners trade emerged as part of the broader growth of a black consumer market after the Second World War and how elements of that market became the target of anti-apartheid protests in subsequent decades. It also demonstrates how the Kroks' experiences as second-generation Jewish immigrants shaped their involvement in the trade and how, later, their self-identification as Jewish philanthropists informed their efforts to rehabilitate their reputations following South Africa's 1990 ban on all skin lighteners. Such efforts include the building of Johannesburg's highly acclaimed Apartheid Museum, modelled after the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. This article explores the profound ironies that some South Africans see in the fact that a museum dedicated to commemorating those who suffered under and, ultimately, triumphed against state racism was financed by a family fortune generated through the sale of skin lighteners to black consumers. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1093/hwj/dbr017 |
format | article |
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subjects | African Americans Apartheid Business Businesspeople Cosmetic Techniques - history Cosmetics - history Cream Economics - history Entrepreneurs FEATURE: RACE, BODIES AND BEAUTY History of medicine History, 20th Century Humans Hydroquinones Jewish peoples Population Groups - education Population Groups - ethnology Population Groups - history Population Groups - legislation & jurisprudence Population Groups - psychology Race Relations - history Race Relations - legislation & jurisprudence Race Relations - psychology Skin Skin Pigmentation South Africa - ethnology White people |
title | Skin Lighteners, Black Consumers and Jewish Entrepreneurs in South Africa |
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