Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-05T02:19:17.277Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Economic History

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Ralph A. Austen*
Affiliation:
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Extract

The problem in determining what areas of research should be discussed under the rubric of African economic history lies less in the definition of the term “economic” than in that of “African” and of “history.” For a subfield like this historians must lean to some extent upon the work of other Africanist social scientists. There does exist a considerable body of writing by economists and anthropologists about economic activities in Africa. However, the economists have concentrated their efforts upon those sectors of the contemporary African economy which, at least historically, are identified with alien enterprises. Anthropologists do write about economic systems rooted in the indigenous African past, but their focus has been almost entirely upon the arrival of “primitive”--that is, subsistence-oriented--levels of production and exchange within these systems, thus offering little insight into the dynamics of historical development.

Historians can, of course, learn a great deal from these studies and must consider the Impact of European enterprise and the role of subsistence sectors in their own work. But if economic history is to make a major contribution to African studies, it must attempt to explore the continuities between past and present; this requires attention to what one important recent contribution has called “an intermediate category” located “midway between subsistence and a fully-fledged market economy” (Gray and Birmingham 1970, pp. 4, 1). The only serious attempt to investigate such developments has been in the further subfield of precolonial trading history, which will be discussed first in this paper.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1971

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

African Research Group. Radical Study Guide. Cambridge, Mass., 1969.Google Scholar
Akinola, G. A. The Zanzibar Sultanate. Forthcoming doctoral dissertation, Ibadan University.Google Scholar
Alagoa, E. J.Long Distance Trade and States in the Niger Delta.” Journal of African History, Vol. XI, No. 3 (1970).Google Scholar
Alpers, Edward A.Trade, State and Society Among the Yao in the Nineteenth Century.” Journal of African History, Vol. X, No. 4 (1969).Google Scholar
Amin, Samir. Le monde des affaires senegalaises. Paris, 1969.Google Scholar
Austen, Ralph A. Northwest Tanzania Under German and British Rule. New Haven, 1968.Google Scholar
Austen, Ralph A.The Abolition of the Overseas Slave Trade: A Distorted Theme in West African History.” Journal of the Historical Society of Nigeria, Vol. V, No. 2 (1970).Google Scholar
Ballhaus, Jolanda. “Die Landkonzessionsgesellshaften.” In Stoecker, Hellmuth, ed. Kamerun unter Deutscher Kolonialherrshaft, Vol. II. East Berlin, 1968.Google Scholar
Bauer, P. T. West African Trade. London, 1963.Google Scholar
Betts, Raymond. The “Scramble” for Africa. Boston, 1966.Google Scholar
Boahen, Adu. Britain, the Sahara, and the Western Sudan. Oxford, 1964.Google Scholar
Bohannan, Paul and Dalton, George, eds. Markets in Africa. Garden City, 1965.Google Scholar
Brett, E. A.Economic Development of Kenya.” In Brett, E. A. and Ghai, D., eds. Economic History of East Africa. Nairobi, forthcoming.Google Scholar
Brunschwig, Henri. “Politique et economie dans l'empire francais d'Afrique noire 1870-1914.” Journal of African History, XI (1970), 401418.Google Scholar
Buttner, Thea. “Das prekolonialishe Afrika in die Diskussion zur asiatishen Produktionsweise.” Jahrbuch fur Wirtschafstgeschichte (1967), Part IV.Google Scholar
William, Cohen. Rulers of Empire: The French Colonial Service in Africa. Forthcoming.Google Scholar
Collins, Robert O. The Partition of Africa. New York, 1969.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C.La. mode de production africaine.” La Pensee, No. 138 (1969).Google Scholar
Crowder, Michael. West Africa Under Colonial Rule. London, 1968.Google Scholar
Dalton, George. Tribal and Peasant Economies. Garden City, 1967.Google Scholar
Dalton, George. ed. Primitive, Archaic and Modern Economies: Essays of Karl Polanyi. Garden City, 1968.Google Scholar
De Grigori, Thomas R. Technology and the Economic Development of the Tropical African Frontier. London, 1969.Google Scholar
Dike, K. O. Trade and Politics in the Niger Delta. Oxford, 1956.Google Scholar
Ehrlich, Cyril. “The Uganda Economy, 1903-1945.” In Harlow, Vincent, Chilver, E. M., and Smith, Allison, eds. History of East Africa, Volume II. Oxford, 1965.Google Scholar
Fieldhouse, D. K.The Economic Exploitation of Africa: Some British and French Comparisons.” In Gifford, Prosser and Louis, William Roger, eds. France and Britain in Africa. New Haven, 1972.Google Scholar
Firth, Raymond, ed. Themes in Economic Anthropology. London, 1970.Google Scholar
Flint, John. Sir George Goldie and the Making of Nigeria. London, 1960.Google Scholar
Gann, L. H. and Duignan, Peter. Burden of Empire. New York, 1967.Google Scholar
Gavin, Robert. Palmerston's Policy Towards East and West Africa, 1850-1865. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Oxford, 1958.Google Scholar
Gertzel, Cherry. John Holt: A British Merchant in West Africa in the Era of Imperialism. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Oxford, 1959.Google Scholar
Gray, Richard and Birmingham, David, eds. Pre-Colonial Trade in Africa. Oxford, 1970.Google Scholar
Hancock, W. K. Problems of Economic Policy, 1918-1939: Survey of British Commonwealth Affairs, Vol. II. London, 1942.Google Scholar
Herskovitz, Melville and Harvitz, Mitchell, eds. Economic Transition in Africa. Evanston, 1964.Google Scholar
Heussler, Robert. Yesterday's Rulers. London, 1963.Google Scholar
Heussler, Robert. The British in Northern Nigeria. Oxford, 1968.Google Scholar
Hill, Polly. Migrant Cocoa Farmers of Southern Ghana. Cambridge, 1963.Google Scholar
Hill, Polly. “A Plea for Indigenous Economics.” Economic Development and Cultural Change, XV (October 1966), 1020.Google Scholar
Hill, Polly and Neal, Walter C.. In Economic Development and Cultural Change, XVII (October 1968), 8994.Google Scholar
Hopkins, A. G.Economic Imperialism in West Africa: Lagos, 1880-92.” Economic History Review, XXI (1968), 580606.Google Scholar
Horwitz, R. The Political Economy of South Africa. London, 1967.Google Scholar
Hrbek, R. In Ranger, T. O., ed. Emerging Themes in African History. Nairobi, 1968.Google Scholar
Ikime, Obaro. Merchant Prince of the Niger Delta. London, 1968.Google Scholar
Iliffe, John. Tanganyika Under German Rule. Cambridge, 1968.Google Scholar
Johnson, Marion. “The Ounce in Eighteenth Century West African Trade.” Journal of African History, VII (1966), 197214.Google Scholar
Journal of African History, III (1962), 469501. Various criticisms of Robinson and Gallagher's Africa and the Victorians.Google Scholar
Kilby, Peter. Industrialization in an Open Economy: Nigeria, 1945-66. Cambridge, 1969.Google Scholar
Klein, Martin. Islam and Imperialism in Senegal. Stanford, 1968.Google Scholar
LeClair, Edward E. and Schneider, Harold K., eds. Economic Anthropology. New York, 1968.Google Scholar
Malowist, M.The Social and Economic Stability of the Western Sudan in the Middle Ages.” Past and Present, Vol. XXXIII (1966).Google Scholar
Mazenot, G. La Likouala-Massoak, 1878-1920. Unpublished dissertation, Ecole Practique des Hautes Etudes, Paris, 1968.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, Claude, ed. The Development of Trade and Markets in West Africa. London, 1971.Google Scholar
Müller, F. F. Deutschland-Zanzibar-Ostafrika. East Berlin, 1959.Google Scholar
Nair, Kannon Kutty. Politics and Society in Old Calabar, 1841-1906. Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Ibadan, 1967.Google Scholar
Neumark, S. Daniel. Foreign Trade and Economic Development in Africa. Stanford, 1964.Google Scholar
Newbury, Colin. “North African and Western Sudan Trade in the Nineteenth Century: A Réévaluation.” Journal of African History, Vol. VII (1960).Google Scholar
Newbury, Colin. “Trade and Authority in West Africa, 1850-1880.” In Gann, L. H. and Duignan, Peter, eds. Colonialism in Africa, I. Cambridge, 1969.Google Scholar
Newbury, Colin and Forstner, A. S. Kanya. “French Policy and the Origins of the Scramble for Africa.” Journal of African History, X, 3 (1969), 253276.Google Scholar
O'Conner, James. The Meaning of Economic Imperialism. Boston, 1968.Google Scholar
Polanyi, Karl. Dahomey and the Slave Trade. Seattle, 1966.Google Scholar
Polanyi, K. et al. Trade and Markets in the Early Empires. Glencoe, 1957.Google Scholar
Robinson, Ronald and Gallagher, John. “The Imperialism of Free Trade.” Economie History Review, VI (1953), 131.Google Scholar
Robinson, Ronald and Gallagher, John. Africa and the Victorians. London, 1961.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ryder, A. C. Benin and the Europeans. London, 1969.Google Scholar
Sautter, G. De l'Atlantique au Fleuve Congo. Paris, 1966.Google Scholar
Stokes, Eric. “Late Nineteenth Century Expansion and the Attack on Economic Imperialism: A Case of Mistaken Identity.” The Historical Journal, XII (1969), 283301.Google Scholar
Suret-Canale, Jean. Afrique noire occidentale et centrale: l'ere colonial Paris, 1964.Google Scholar
Tetzlaff, Rainer. Koloniale Entwicklung und Ausbeuting. West Berlin, 19.Google Scholar
Turner, Henry Ashby. “Bismarck's Imperialism.” In Gifford, Prosser and Louis, William Roger, eds. Britain and Germany in Africa. New Haven, 1967.Google Scholar
Unomah, A. C. Dissertation on the Unyanyembe Nyamwezi state, Ibadan University, forthcoming.Google Scholar
Vansina, Jan. Review of Gray and Birmingham. In Journal of African History, XI, 4 (1970), 613614.Google Scholar
von Strandmann, , Pogges, Hartmut and Smith, Alison. Bibliographical essay in Gifford, Prosser and Louis, William Roger, eds. Britain and Germany in Africa. New Haven, 1967.Google Scholar
Webster, J. B. and Boahen, Adu. The Revolutionary Years: West Africa Since 1800. London, 1967.Google Scholar
Wehler, Hans-Ulrich. Bismarek und der Imperialismus. Cologne, 1969.Google Scholar
Wehler, Hans-Ulrich. “Bismarck's Imperialism.” Past and Present (forthcoming).Google Scholar
Wolf, Eric. Peasants. Englewood Cliffs, N. J., 1966.Google Scholar
Woodis, Jack. Africa: The Roots of Rebellion. London, 1962.Google Scholar