The world of the Yoruba taxi driver: an interpretive approach to vehicle slogans
- 1 January 1988
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Africa
- Vol. 58 (1) , 1-13
- https://doi.org/10.2307/1159867
Abstract
Opening Paragraph: The purpose of this paper is to analyse the slogans which are so prominent and ubiquitous on motor vehicles as expressions of social stratification among the Yoruba of southwestern Nigeria. I interpret the slogans in the context of the taxi owners' and drivers' social interactions, not just as disembodied expressions of a total Yoruba world view. In studying the slogans I pay particular attention to processes of accumulation of wealth, status mobility and the way these are affected by cultural values. It is argued that the vehicle owners make different claims at different stages of their careers. Their fears and hopes at each stage must be understood in the light of the contemporary Christian and traditional mix of beliefs about destiny, the world and God.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Accumulation, wealth and belief in Asante history: I. To the close of the nineteenth centuryAfrica, 1983
- The Yoruba TodayThe International Journal of African Historical Studies, 1982
- Nigerian Truck ArtAfrican Arts, 1979
- Affluence and Underdevelopment: the Nigerian ExperienceThe Journal of Modern African Studies, 1978
- Role Segregation for Fun and Profit: The Daily Behavior of the West African Lorry DriverAfrica, 1978
- Sociology and Development. Edited by Emanuel de Kadt and Garith Williams. (London: Tavistock Publications and New York: Harper and Row, 1974. Pp. 374. $19.00, cloth; $6.75, paper.)American Political Science Review, 1977
- Explanatory Notes on the Political Economy of AfricaThe Journal of Modern African Studies, 1976
- A Sociohistorical Study of the Development of Entrepreneurship among the Ijebu of Western NigeriaAfrican Studies Review, 1973
- Going home again Nigerians: The dream is unfulfilledTrans-action, 1965
- Destiny and the Unconscious in West AfricaAfrica, 1961