TY - JOUR
T1 - ‘He who relies on relatives and friends die poor’
T2 - Class closure and stratagems of civility in peri-urban Kenya
AU - Lockwood, Peter
N1 - Peter Lockwood is a Hallsworth Early Career Research Fellow in Political Economy at the University of Manchester. Previously he was a post-doctoral researcher at the Graduate Institute, Geneva (IHEID) on Project SALMEA (Self-Accomplishment and Local Moralities in Eastern Africa) and a Teaching Associate and Affiliated Lecturer at the University of Cambridge. He is completing a book about the erosion of peasant livelihoods in central Kenya and the region's crisis of male destitution. His published work has appeared in the Journal of Eastern African Studies and Social Analysis.
PY - 2023/3/14
Y1 - 2023/3/14
N2 - Africanist anthropology has tended to paint social relations on the continent in a positive light, giving the impression that a pro-social relationality will provide the poor with economic assistance in moments of need. This article troubles these accounts by turning to Kenya, where a history of socioeconomic stratification has created a landscape of class closure. Rather than generously give, upwardly mobile families seek to distance themselves from potential requests for material assistance. Meanwhile, they valorize their own hard work as the source of their success, encouraging the poor to follow suit: to pursue economic independence. In this context, the article underscores the work of relation-making as poor families attempt to keep social relationships with wealthy locals open by practising ‘civility’: hiding their anticipation of material support by concealing economic distress whilst outwardly performing their own success. Taking inspiration from F.G. Bailey's classic work on ‘stratagems and spoils’, the article emphasizes the interested, conscious effort of making relations as a means of combating economic exclusion in an unequal world.
AB - Africanist anthropology has tended to paint social relations on the continent in a positive light, giving the impression that a pro-social relationality will provide the poor with economic assistance in moments of need. This article troubles these accounts by turning to Kenya, where a history of socioeconomic stratification has created a landscape of class closure. Rather than generously give, upwardly mobile families seek to distance themselves from potential requests for material assistance. Meanwhile, they valorize their own hard work as the source of their success, encouraging the poor to follow suit: to pursue economic independence. In this context, the article underscores the work of relation-making as poor families attempt to keep social relationships with wealthy locals open by practising ‘civility’: hiding their anticipation of material support by concealing economic distress whilst outwardly performing their own success. Taking inspiration from F.G. Bailey's classic work on ‘stratagems and spoils’, the article emphasizes the interested, conscious effort of making relations as a means of combating economic exclusion in an unequal world.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85150621770&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/412fd565-c685-3c3d-a2db-fdfb2b42c53e/
U2 - 10.1111/1467-9655.13914
DO - 10.1111/1467-9655.13914
M3 - Article
SN - 1359-0987
VL - 29
SP - 326
EP - 346
JO - Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
JF - Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
IS - 2
ER -