Alcohol and Empire: "Illicit" Gin Prohibition and Control in Colonial Eastern Nigeria

IF 0.7 4区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY AFRICAN ECONOMIC HISTORY Pub Date : 2003-01-01 DOI:10.2307/3601949
C. J. Korieh
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引用次数: 37

Abstract

defining the frontiers of commerce, law, culture, identity, and consciousness in colonial Africa.' Significant attention has also been drawn to the role of alcohol as a tool of imperial control and a source of revenue for the empire, but the analysis has yet to fully illuminate alcohol as a site of rural struggle during the colonial period.! This article uses a case study of Eastern Nigeria to examine the prohibition of "illicit" gin, known as ogogoro or hai hai by the British during the nineteen-thirties and nineteen-forties. The region is an excellent site for examining the important link between the prohibition of what colonial official called "illicit distillation" and colonial revenue. Thus, the article offers an understanding of prohibition, rooted not just in the moral and health imperatives upon which officials based the prohibition policy, but more importantly on its perceived impact on colonial revenue, which derived largely from custom duties and taxes on imported alcohol. By focusing on the prohibition of local gin production in Eastern Nigeria, the significance of alcohol as a contested terrain and site for local resistance is revealed.
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酒与帝国:东尼日利亚殖民地的“非法”杜松子酒禁止与控制
定义了殖民地非洲的商业、法律、文化、身份和意识的前沿。”酒精作为帝国控制的工具和帝国收入的来源所起的作用也引起了人们的极大关注,但分析尚未充分阐明酒精作为殖民时期农村斗争的场所。本文以尼日利亚东部的一个案例研究来考察20世纪30年代和40年代英国人对“非法”杜松子酒的禁令,这种杜松子酒被称为ogogoro或hai hai。该地区是考察禁止殖民地官员所谓的“非法蒸馏”与殖民地收入之间的重要联系的绝佳地点。因此,该条提供了一种对禁酒令的理解,其根源不仅在于官员制定禁酒令政策所依据的道德和健康必要性,更重要的是它对殖民地收入的感知影响,而殖民地收入主要来自进口酒类的关税和税收。通过重点讨论尼日利亚东部禁止当地生产杜松子酒,揭示了酒精作为一个有争议的地区和地方抵抗的场所的重要性。
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