Rural Society and Cotton in Colonial Zaire

Rural Society and Cotton in Colonial Zaire

by Osumaka Likaka
Rural Society and Cotton in Colonial Zaire

Rural Society and Cotton in Colonial Zaire

by Osumaka Likaka

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Overview

     This masterful social and economic history of rural Zaire examines the complex and lasting effects of forced cotton cultivation in central Africa from 1917 to 1960. Osumaka Likaka recreates daily life inside the colonial cotton regime. He shows that, to ensure widespread cotton production and to overcome continued peasant resistance, the colonial state and the cotton companies found it necessary to augment their use of threats and force with efforts to win the cooperation of the peasant farmers, through structural reforms, economic incentives, and propaganda exploiting African popular culture.
     As local plots of food crops grown by individual households gave way to commercial fields of cotton, a whole host of social, economic, and environmental changes followed. Likaka reveals how food shortages and competition for labor were endemic, forests were cleared, social stratification increased, married women lost their traditional control of agricultural production, and communities became impoverished while local chiefs enlarged their power and prosperity.
     Likaka documents how the cotton regime promoted its cause through agricultural exhibits, cotton festivals, films, and plays, as well as by raising producer prices and decreasing tax rates. He also shows how the peasant laborers in turn resisted regimented agricultural production by migrating, fleeing the farms for the bush, or sabotaging plantings by surreptitiously boiling cotton seeds. Small farmers who had received appallingly low prices from the cotton companies resisted by stealing back their cotton by night from the warehouses, to resell it in the morning. Likaka draws on interviews with more than fifty informants in Zaire and Belgium and reviews an impressive array of archival materials, from court records to comic books. In uncovering the tumultuous economic and social consequences of the cotton regime and by emphasizing its effects on social institutions, Likaka enriches historical understanding of African agriculture and development.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780299153335
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Publication date: 07/01/1997
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 210
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Osumaka Likaka is assistant professor of history at Wayne State University.  As a young boy, he witnessed the last years of forced crop production in Zaire with his father, an agricultural officer.

Table of Contents

Contents
Illustrations and Map
Tables
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Organization of Production: The Cotton Labor Process
Chapter 2 Forced Cotton Production and Social Control
Chapter 3 Sharing the Social Product: Peasants and the Market
Chapter 4 Cotton and Social Inequality
Chapter 5 The Infrapolitics of the Cotton Cultivators
Conclusion
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
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