The Broken Hoe
Cultural Reconfiguration in Biase Southeast Nigeria
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9780226388489
The Broken Hoe
Cultural Reconfiguration in Biase Southeast Nigeria
In this study of the Biase, a small ethnic group living in Nigeria’s Cross River State, David Uru Iyam attempts to resolve a long-standing controversy among development theorists: must Third World peoples adopt Western attitudes, practices, and technologies to improve their standard of living or are indigenous beliefs, technologies, and strategies better suited to local conditions?
The Biase today face social and economic pressures that seriously strain their ability to cope with the realities of modern Nigeria. Iyam, an anthropologist and a Biase, examines the relationship between culture and development as played out in projects in local communities.
Western technologies and beliefs alone cannot ensure economic growth and modernization, Iyam shows, and should not necessarily be imposed on poor rural groups who may not be prepared to incorporate them; neither, however, is it possible to recover indigenous coping strategies given the complexities of the postcolonial world. A successful development strategy, Iyam argues, needs to strengthen local managerial capacity, and he offers suggestions as to how this can be done in a range of cultural and social settings.
The Biase today face social and economic pressures that seriously strain their ability to cope with the realities of modern Nigeria. Iyam, an anthropologist and a Biase, examines the relationship between culture and development as played out in projects in local communities.
Western technologies and beliefs alone cannot ensure economic growth and modernization, Iyam shows, and should not necessarily be imposed on poor rural groups who may not be prepared to incorporate them; neither, however, is it possible to recover indigenous coping strategies given the complexities of the postcolonial world. A successful development strategy, Iyam argues, needs to strengthen local managerial capacity, and he offers suggestions as to how this can be done in a range of cultural and social settings.
248 pages | 28 halftones, 7 line drawings, 11 tables | 6 x 9 | © 1995
Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface
1: Issues in Rural Development
2: The Biase of Southeastern Nigeria
3: Use of Environmental Resources
4: Managing the Environment
5: The Economy
6: Biase Social Organization and the Reconstruction of Gender Roles
7: Rural Politics in a State Polity
8: Ideology
9: Implications for Anthropology
Glossary of Agwagune Words
References
Index
Preface
1: Issues in Rural Development
2: The Biase of Southeastern Nigeria
3: Use of Environmental Resources
4: Managing the Environment
5: The Economy
6: Biase Social Organization and the Reconstruction of Gender Roles
7: Rural Politics in a State Polity
8: Ideology
9: Implications for Anthropology
Glossary of Agwagune Words
References
Index
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