2021
DOI: 10.1017/s0001972020000844
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Providing to belong: masculinities, hustling and economic uncertainty in Nairobi ‘ghettos’

Abstract: Hustling as a concept has travelled through the global soundscapes of impoverished, neglected, racialized and otherwise marginalized urban settings. The widespread rearticulation of the term ‘hustling’ in a broad range of urban languages reveals that its use in particular forms of Black Atlantic music cultures speaks to shared experiences worldwide. Simultaneously, it shows the flexibility of this term to acquire new and unfolding meanings. This article focuses on the modes in which poor young men in Nairobi (… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…: 4). This is in contrast to Nairobi’s ‘slums’ (Thieme 2021; Van Stapele 2021) and peri-urban margins (Lockwood 2020), where many people self-identify as hustlers. Hustling has also been co-opted among politicians 28 or in the inverse snobbery of Nairobi’s wealthier classes seeking streetwise acumen.…”
Section: Hustling But Not Hustlingmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…: 4). This is in contrast to Nairobi’s ‘slums’ (Thieme 2021; Van Stapele 2021) and peri-urban margins (Lockwood 2020), where many people self-identify as hustlers. Hustling has also been co-opted among politicians 28 or in the inverse snobbery of Nairobi’s wealthier classes seeking streetwise acumen.…”
Section: Hustling But Not Hustlingmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Scholarship on masculinities in informal settlements demonstrates how new masculine identities are constituted around such experiences of marginalisation and poverty, redefining but essentially maintaining the idealised masculine identity of the provider (Izugbara, 2015;Silberschmidt, 2004;Van Stapele, 2015;Van Stapele, 2016). Contemporary understandings of the male provider are partly shaped by colonial economic structures, such as the colonial British hut tax (Van Stapele, 2021). Our interview data show that the ideal-typical 'imaginary of the provider' (Van Stapele, 2016: 306), despite largely fictional, was reproduced by both men and women.…”
Section: Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is interesting, because “respect” has become a focus of a number of studies of men in violent and precarious circumstances, in Africa and beyond. Many of these argue that men, in the absence of opportunities for stable livelihoods, engage in violent or illicit activities in order to gain “respect” from their social surroundings (Bourgois, 1996; Enria, 2016; Iwilade, 2014; van Stapele, 2021; Vigh, 2017), thus theorizing respect as a gendered moral disposition and aspiration achieved through violence and illegality (cf. Masquelier, 2019; Thornton, 2016).…”
Section: Youthhood Masculinity and Searching For Respectmentioning
confidence: 99%