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Journal ArticleDOI

Wealth in People as Wealth in Knowledge: Accumulation and Composition in Equatorial Africa

Jane I. Guyer, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1995 - 
- Vol. 36, Iss: 1, pp 91-120
TLDR
This paper argued that social mobilization was in part based on the mobilization of different bodies of knowledge, and leadership was the capacity to bring them together effectively, even if for a short time and specific purpose.
Abstract
The paper re-examines principles of social organization in pre-colonial Equatorial Africa, suggesting that the imagery of ‘accumulation’ of ‘wealth in people’ is not wrong, but not flexible enough to encompass the centrality of knowledge in these societies. People were singularized repositories of a differentiated and expanding repertoire of knowledge, as well as being structured kin (as in the kinship model) and generic dependents and followers (as in the wealth-in-people model). We argue that social mobilization was in part based on the mobilization of different bodies of knowledge, and leadership was the capacity to bring them together effectively, even if for a short time and specific purpose. We refer to this process as composition and distinguish it from accumulation.The paper has three parts. The first substitutes an oral epic from southern Cameroon for an ethnography of the principles by which people pursued agendas and mobilized followings in their own political worlds. Colonial rule may have institutionalized pre-colonial political hierarchies, but it completely altered the terms for political mobilization. Hence the historical record is very limited for making inferences about how ‘wealth-in-people’ operated in action, under pre-colonial conditions. The second critiques the evolutionary assumptions about simple societies that still color the models of Equatorial societies. The third revisits the ethnography to illuminate the principles of composition. The conclusion makes inferences and suggestions with respect to aspects of pre-colonial social history.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

On the Worlding of African Cities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine how African urban residents, who are conventionally assumed to operate within parochial, highly localized confines, operate at larger scales and how they reach a "larger world".
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When the Future Decides

TL;DR: In this paper, women in Cameroon regularly assert that because they are uncertain about what the future will bring, they cannot make any plans, but they do plan, strategize, and indeed act quite effectively.
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Tomatoes, land and hearsay: Property and history in asante in the time of structural adjustment

TL;DR: The authors argued for a more processual approach, which takes account of the negotiability and ambiguity of many institutional arrangements, drawing on a case study of recent changes in land rights and agricultural practices in a rural community in Ghana.
Journal ArticleDOI

Witchcraft, Modernity and the Person: The morality ofaccumulation in Central Malawi

TL;DR: In this article, the author affirme that les discours de sorcellerie dans le district of Dedza a Malawi sont des discussions sur la maniere don't la prosperite peut etre acquise d'une facon moralement acceptable (contraire a l'individualisme) plutot that des reactions a limposition d'un ordre global de production, de transaction and de consommation de matieres premieres.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seasonal food insecurity and perceived social support in rural Tanzania.

TL;DR: Greater social support is associated with food security, suggesting that it may protect against the occurrence of seasonal food insecurity and increasing wealth at the community level may influence food insecurity through both direct and indirect means.
References
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Book

Culture and practical reason

TL;DR: Sahlins as mentioned in this paper argues that symbols enter all phases of social life, including those which we tend to regard as strictly pragmatic, or based on concerns with material need or advantage, as well as those which are purely symbolic, such as ideology, ritual, myth, moral codes, and the like.
Book

Gifts and commodities

Chris Gregory
TL;DR: Gregory's Gifts and Commodities as mentioned in this paper is one of the undisputed classics of economic anthropology and has been widely cited as a critical history of colonial Papua New Guinea and a comparative ethnography of exchange in Melanesian societies.
Book

African Systems of Kinship and Marriage

TL;DR: Kinship among the Swazi, Hilda Kuper Nyakyusa kinship, Monica Wilson kinship and marriage among the Lozi of northern Rhodesia and the Zulu of Natal, Max Gluckman kinship among Tswana, I Schapera some types of family structure amongst the central Bantu, AI Richards kinship as discussed by the authors, M Fortes double descent among the Yako, Daryll Forde dual descent in the Nuba hills.