The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Books details Coca-Cola’s journey in Africa

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A new book called “Bottled: How Coca-Cola Became African”, tells the story of how the world’s most famous carbonated drink conquered the continent.

It’s a tale of marketing gumption and high politics and is the product of years of research by critical writing lecturer Sara Byala, who researches histories of heritage, sustainabi­lity and the ways in which capitalist systems intersect with social and cultural forces in Africa. We asked her some questions about the book.

What do you hope readers will take away?

There are three main takeaways. The first is that while Africa is largely absent from books on Coca-Cola, the company’s imprint on the continent is enormous. It is present in every nation.

Most estimates put Coke as one of the largest private employers in Africa, if not the largest. Beyond official jobs, the company has been shown to have a multiplier effect that means that for each official job, upwards of 10 other people are supported.

The second takeaway is that Coke’s story in Africa is an old one. It starts with its use of the west African kola nut, from which it takes its name (if no longer its source of caffeine). Arriving in Africa in the early 1900s, it’s a story that is deeply and, often surprising­ly, entangled with key moments in African history.

This includes the end of apartheid in South Africa and the advent of postcoloni­al African nations.

Third, I want readers to see that while we may assume that a multinatio­nal company selling carbonated, sugary water is inherently a force for ill, both the history of Coke in Africa and my fieldwork suggest a far more complicate­d story. Coca-Cola is what it is today in Africa, I argue, because it became local. It bent to the will of Africans in everything from sport to music to healthcare. Its ubiquity thus tells us something about African engagement with a consumer product as well as the many ways in which ordinary people wield power.

How did Coca-Cola first arrive in Africa?

Coca-Cola doesn’t export a finished product from its corporate headquarte­rs in the US. It sells a concentrat­e, which comes from a handful of locations around the globe, including Egypt and Eswatini. This concentrat­e is sold to licensed bottlers who then mix it with local forms of sugar and water before carbonatin­g and bottling or canning it.

Coca-Cola lore says that the company first secured local bottlers for its concentrat­e in South Africa in 1928, its first stop on the African continent. By combing through old newspapers, archival documents, and pharmaceut­ical publicatio­ns, however, I found evidence to suggest that Coke may in fact have been sold in 1909 in Cape Town as a short-lived soda fountain endeavour. This is just 23 years after the product was invented in Atlanta, Georgia.

It was neither easy nor assured that CocaCola would take off anywhere in the world upon its arrival.

The early chapters of my book detail the often ingenious lengths that bottlers had to go to get Coke off the ground. This included cre- ating a new line of sodas to support the fledg- ling product called Sparletta. This includes green Creme Soda and Stoney ginger beer, both still available for purchase. Later chapters explore the routes by which the product spread across the continent, by detailing everything from the co-branding of petrol stations with Coca-Cola, to the rise of Coke beauty pageants, the birth of local forms of Coke adver- tising, the proliferat­ion of Coca-Cola signage, and much more.

What role did it play in apartheid South Africa?

Coca-Cola was entrenched in South Africa before the advent of the racist, white minority apartheid state in 1948. While the company largely attempted to stay out of politics in South Africa, much as it did elsewhere in the world, it resisted certain “petty apartheid” rules. For example, the washrooms and lunchrooms in its plants were open to all ethnic groups, unlike the “whites only” facilities establishe­d under apartheid.

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