Usurious strangers and “a better tomorrow”: Agricultural loans, education, and the “poverty trap” in rural Sierra Leone

IF 1.2 4区 社会学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Catherine E. Bolten, Richard “Drew” Marcantonio
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Rice was historically a “total social phenomenon” in Sierra Leone, molding rural identities through farming. Crop yields are rapidly declining, forcing change among people who once claimed to be “wealthy” from rice and now face severe food insecurity. In response to change, they can take out loans—offered by “strangers”—to continue farming rice, or they can “diversify” and farm alternative crops. Low rice yields largely condemn those who accept a loan to farming solely to pay their debts, a “poverty trap” that most cannot overcome. However, the majority of farmers in our study area accepted seed and tractor loans, arguing that rice is “the only way” to offer their children a better life through education—even as no children from the villages have procured waged jobs—as it is the only commercial crop that pays school fees. We argue that thinking in terms of fetishes offers a constructive analysis of the dissolution of total social phenomena. Devoting the next generation to the new “fetish” of education is paradoxically dependent on retaining one's commitment to the old fetish of rice, allowing the usurious stranger to profit from this paradox.

素不相识的陌生人和“美好的明天”:农业贷款、教育和塞拉利昂农村的“贫困陷阱”
在塞拉利昂,水稻在历史上是一种“完全的社会现象”,通过农业塑造了农村的身份。农作物产量正在迅速下降,迫使那些曾经声称靠大米“致富”、现在面临严重粮食不安全的人做出改变。为了应对变化,他们可以向“陌生人”贷款,继续种植水稻,或者他们可以“多样化”,种植替代作物。低水稻产量在很大程度上迫使那些接受贷款从事农业的人仅仅是为了偿还债务,这是一个大多数人无法克服的“贫困陷阱”。然而,我们研究地区的大多数农民都接受了种子和拖拉机贷款,他们认为水稻是通过教育为孩子提供更好生活的“唯一途径”——尽管村子里没有孩子找到有工资的工作——因为它是唯一可以支付学费的商业作物。我们认为,从恋物癖的角度思考,为整个社会现象的解体提供了一种建设性的分析。把下一代奉献给教育的新“恋物”是矛盾的,它依赖于保留一个人对大米的旧恋物的承诺,允许高利贷的陌生人从这个悖论中获利。
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来源期刊
Economic Anthropology
Economic Anthropology ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
42
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