article

Grain, cattle, and power: social processes of intensive cultivation and exchange in precolonial western Kenya

Journal of anthropological research50 • Published In 1994 • Pages: 249-276

By: Håkansson, Thomas.

Abstract
The relationship between agricultural production and grain and cattle exchange is examined here in the context of the Lake Victoria basin and the highlands of western Kenya. The societies in this region were patrilineal and acephalous, with polygynous households, and used cattle for large bridewealth payments. The highland Gusii population practiced labor-intensive cultivation, maintained high population densities, and produced sizable grain surpluses for exchange against livestock from the lowland Luo, who produced less grain and experienced periodic famines (p. 249).
Subjects
Domesticated animals
Cereal agriculture
Settlement patterns
Production and supply
Exchange transactions
External trade
Mode of marriage
Household
Family relationships
Polygamy
Extended families
Lineages
Clans
culture
Gusii
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Eastern Africa
Document Type
article
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 2005
Field Date
1982-1983, 1985
Coverage Date
1790-1930
Coverage Place
western Kenya
Notes
N. Thomas Håkansson
Includes bibliographical references (p. 273-276)
LCCN
73645054
LCSH
Gusii (African people)