Gender, Spirituality, and Economic Change in Rural Gambia: Agricultural Production in the Lower Gambia Region, c. 1830s–1940s

IF 0.7 4区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY AFRICAN ECONOMIC HISTORY Pub Date : 2017-12-15 DOI:10.1353/AEH.2017.0004
Assan Sarr
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT:Across the Gambia River basin, farmers grew varieties of grains for local consumption and for sale. Maize, millet, and rice formed an important part of a complex social organization. In the mid-nineteenth century, however, the shift to cash crops changed important aspects of this social organization. The cash crop economy, which was highly restrictive, also encouraged social separation and alterations in the gender configurations of the region. The change from a household economy relying on growing grains for consumption to one of producing a legume to sell, which was eased along by the transformation of local spiritual ideas, resulted in alterations in settlement patterns impacting the lives of many female farmers. One particularly interesting area that scholars have noted but is yet to be fully developed is the ways in which religion or spirituality influenced African economic life. Therefore, the purpose of this article is to examine the ways spirituality or religion influenced the growth and the development of what became arguably the most important economic activity in West Africa during the second half of the nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries as well as gender dynamics in the affected societies.
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冈比亚农村的性别、精神和经济变化:下冈比亚地区的农业生产,约1830年代至1940年代
摘要:在冈比亚河流域,农民种植各种谷物供当地消费和销售。玉米、小米和水稻构成了一个复杂的社会组织的重要组成部分。然而,在19世纪中期,向经济作物的转变改变了这个社会组织的重要方面。限制性很强的经济作物经济也鼓励了该地区的社会分离和性别结构的改变。从依赖种植谷物消费的家庭经济转变为生产豆类销售的家庭经济,随着当地精神观念的转变,这种转变得到了缓解,导致了定居模式的改变,影响了许多女农民的生活。学者们注意到但尚未完全发展的一个特别有趣的领域是宗教或精神影响非洲经济生活的方式。因此,本文的目的是研究精神或宗教如何影响19世纪下半叶和20世纪初西非可以说是最重要的经济活动的增长和发展,以及受影响社会中的性别动态。
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