Money Matters: Instability, Values, and Social Payments in the Modern History of West African CommunitiesJane I. Guyer James Currey, 1995 - 331 sider "By examining currency and value in African communities over the past hundred years, this collection offers a social history of ordinary people's conceptions of money, their innovations in its use, and the interactions between indigenous monetary systems and those emanating from the international arena. The contributors to this volume include British, French, Ghanaian, Nigerian, and American scholars, all recognized specialists in the history, economics, and anthropology of African societies. Money Matters offers an essential complement to the new history of imperialism, suggests fresh ways of analyzing money in those vast areas of the globe outside the centers of financial power, and contributes to a new economic anthropology of West Africa."--BOOK JACKET. |
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Side 54
... Dahomian political jurisdiction , although part of the same cultural area ) , as the American mis- sionary Thomas Bowen observed , " neither is it possible to pay for provisions and labour in any kind , barter being unknown , and ...
... Dahomian political jurisdiction , although part of the same cultural area ) , as the American mis- sionary Thomas Bowen observed , " neither is it possible to pay for provisions and labour in any kind , barter being unknown , and ...
Side 57
... Dahomian conquest . By 1746 , the normal price of gold was again said to be five grand cabess , or 20,000 cowries , to the ounce , 25 percent above the rate of 1727.9 This rise in the price of gold was accompanied by a marked ...
... Dahomian conquest . By 1746 , the normal price of gold was again said to be five grand cabess , or 20,000 cowries , to the ounce , 25 percent above the rate of 1727.9 This rise in the price of gold was accompanied by a marked ...
Side 68
... Dahomian state ( e.g. , Serval 1878 ) . On the other hand , although the king in this period was chronically in debt to traders at Whydah , he probably did not benefit from the devaluation of debts through inflation , as he would ...
... Dahomian state ( e.g. , Serval 1878 ) . On the other hand , although the king in this period was chronically in debt to traders at Whydah , he probably did not benefit from the devaluation of debts through inflation , as he would ...
Innhold
The Currency Interface and Its Dynamics | 1 |
A Case Study | 8 |
Precolonial Currency Dynamics | 35 |
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Money Matters: Instability, Values, and Social Payments in the Modern ... Jane I. Guyer Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 1995 |
Money Matters: Instability, Values, and Social Payments in the Modern ... Jane I. Guyer Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 1995 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Abomey abusua accumulated African Studies Akan Arhin Arochukwu Asante Asantehene Ashanti assets bride bridewealth British currency Cameroon capital cash circulation cloth Coast cocoa coins colonial period colonial rule commercial commodities community banks Congo cowries cultural Dahomey Dahomian dollar Dupré Eastern Nigeria economic Ekejiuba European exchange funeral Gambian Ghana gold grand cabess Guyer Hogendorn Ibadan Igbo imported income indigenous inflation instability institutions iron Journal of African kola nuts Kukua Kumasi Kwélé labor land lineage loans London mandjong manillas marriage payments matrilineal mevek mezong mondjos monetary monetization N'Goko Sangha naira Nigeria Nigerian pound nineteenth century Onitsha oríkì ounce palm palm oil palm wine Paris percent person political pre-colonial production raphia region relations rural savings sector silver Slave Trade social payments society sources Teke tion traditional transactions Tsayi University Press village West Africa Whydah wives women Yoruba zong