MASTER AND SERVANT IN COLONIAL KENYA, 1895–1939
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Published:2000-09
Issue:3
Volume:41
Page:459-485
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ISSN:0021-8537
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Container-title:The Journal of African History
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J. Afr. Hist.
Author:
ANDERSON DAVID M.
Abstract
THE recruitment of African labour at poor rates of pay and under primitive
conditions of work was characteristic of the operation of colonial capitalism
in Africa during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The implications of
these conditions have been generalized very widely in the historiography of
colonial Kenya. Where capital was centred upon extractive industries or
upon settler agriculture (as in Kenya), historians have found much evidence
to indicate that colonial states (and the metropolitan government) readily
colluded with capital in providing the legal framework within which labour
could be recruited and maintained in adequate numbers and at low cost to
the employer. The state itself was the largest employer of labour throughout
British colonial Africa and shared an interest in encouraging Africans into
the labour market. Criticisms of labour conditions prevailing in any colony
were thus likely to be interpreted as criticisms of the state itself.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
48 articles.
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1. Bibliography;Primitive Normativity;2023-12-08
2. Notes;Primitive Normativity;2023-12-08
3. Conclusion;Primitive Normativity;2023-12-08
4. Eating the Other;Primitive Normativity;2023-12-08
5. Queering Settler Romance;Primitive Normativity;2023-12-08