Peasants, businessmen, and moral economy in the Chiweshe reserve, colonial Zimbabwe, 1930–1968
- 1 December 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Southern African Studies
- Vol. 19 (4) , 551-592
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03057079308708374
Abstract
In this paper we investigate how families in the Chiweshe Reserve expanded and transformed their discourse on ‘moral economy’ to try to accommodate the material changes — such as ox‐drawn ploughs and luxuries like bread and sugar — that came with colonialism. Through their discourse they worked at understanding the ‘proper’ relationships between rich and poor, among families, and within villages; the ‘moral economy’ was not an iron‐clad law. We trace changes and disruptions in this discourse by exploring the decline of communal work‐parties (nhimbe or hoka in ChiZesuru); the rise of local African businessmen; and the replacement of ‘traditional’ places for discourse like chiefs’ courts and work parties, by a colonial creation, the Chiweshe Reserve Council. By 1968, the discourse had become so disrupted that Chiweshe families could no longer agree upon how to apply ideas about neighbourly obligation to themselves. Their discourse on moral economy was driving them apart, rather than bringing them together.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- PAN-AFRICANISM, CAPITALISM AND RACIAL UPLIFT: THE RHETORIC OF AFRICAN BUSINESS FORMATION IN COLONIAL ZIMBABWEAfrican Affairs, 1993
- The unsettled land: the politics of land redistribution in Matabeleland, 1980–1990Journal of Southern African Studies, 1991
- Constraints and incentives in ‘successful’ Zimbabwean peasant agriculture: the interaction between gender and classJournal of Southern African Studies, 1991
- Agrarian Change from above: The Southern Rhodesia Native Land Husbandry Act and African ResponseThe International Journal of African Historical Studies, 1991
- Trees in fields in Southern ZimbabweJournal of Southern African Studies, 1989
- Technical development and peasant impoverishment: land use policy in Zimbabwe's Midlands ProvinceJournal of Southern African Studies, 1989
- The moral economy of the black miners’ strike of 1946Journal of Southern African Studies, 1986
- Soil erosion, conservationism and ideas about development: a Southern African exploration, 1900–1960Journal of Southern African Studies, 1984
- The Moral Economy of the Kiangsi Soviet (1928–1934)Journal of Asian Studies, 1983
- THE MORAL ECONOMY OF THE ENGLISH CROWD IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURYPast & Present, 1971