For Money and Elders: Ritual, Sovereignty, and the Sacred in Kenya

Author:   Robert W Blunt
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226655611


Pages:   216
Publication Date:   22 October 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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For Money and Elders: Ritual, Sovereignty, and the Sacred in Kenya


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Overview

Many observers of Kenya’s complicated history see causes for concern, from the use of public office for private gain to a constitutional structure historically lopsided towards the executive branch. Yet efforts from critics and academics to diagnose the country’s problems do not often consider what these fiscal and political issues mean to ordinary Kenyans. How do Kenyans express their own political understanding, make sense of governance, and articulate what they expect from their leaders?   In For Money and Elders, Robert W. Blunt addresses these questions by turning to the political, economic, and religious signs in circulation in Kenya today. He examines how Kenyans attempt to make sense of political instability caused by the uncertainty of authority behind everything from currency to title deeds. When the symbolic order of a society is up for grabs, he shows, violence may seem like an expedient way to enforce the authority of signs. Drawing on fertile concepts of sovereignty, elderhood, counterfeiting, acephaly, and more, Blunt explores phenomena as diverse as the destabilization of ritual “oaths,” public anxieties about Satanism with the advent of democratic reform, and mistrust of official signs. The result is a fascinating glimpse into Kenya’s past and present and a penetrating reflection on meanings of violence in African politics.

Full Product Details

Author:   Robert W Blunt
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226655611


ISBN 10:   022665561
Pages:   216
Publication Date:   22 October 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

What happens when political elites and elders turn out to be dishonest and self-dealing rather than the ritual and political guarantors of truth they are meant to be? Blunt shows how in Kikuyu and Kenyan societies, such failures have led to attempts by ordinary people to impose certainty through often violent means. For Money and Elders provides the means to understand how money, seniority, religion, and violence all combine to create toxic political cultures that nonetheless have the ability to perpetuate themselves. Though argued through fine-grained ethnographic material from Kenya, his important work is equally applicable to contemporary realities in the US and many other parts of the world. --Mike McGovern, author of A Socialist Peace? For Money and Elders is a first-rate work of scholarship that offers a strikingly original and compelling account of the role of the Kikuyu in Kenya's colonial history, focusing on the complex ways in which crucial ritual, religious, and political dynamics from the pre-colonial and colonial period have played out in the post-Kenyatta era. Blunt masterfully combines an acute understanding of long-term cultural and institutional dynamics with brilliant, finely-grained readings of local cosmologies and ritual practices to develop an important and exciting new political anthropology of the Kenyan state and postcolonial governance. --Ruth Marshall, University of Toronto This book is the anthropology of African politics for a new generation. As students of African states are slowly beginning to realize that their toolkit of analytic concepts is not only inadequate to explain the realities of political life on the continent but bordering on racist, Blunt brings us a penetrating analysis of how the powers backing political authority actually form, are contested, and are hollowed out over a long span of Kenyan history. Anchored in a deep connection over many years with the people of whom he writes, facilitated by the mastery of their language, and respectful of the ancestors in the discipline who opened the way, For Money and Elders will be a book for the ages. --Adam Ashforth, author of The Trials of Mrs. K.


This book is the anthropology of African politics for a new generation. As students of African states are slowly beginning to realize that their toolkit of analytic concepts is not only inadequate to explain the realities of political life on the continent but bordering on racist, Blunt brings us a penetrating analysis of how the powers backing political authority actually form, are contested, and are hollowed out over a long span of Kenyan history. Anchored in a deep connection over many years with the people of whom he writes, facilitated by the mastery of their language, and respectful of the ancestors in the discipline who opened the way, For Money and Elders will be a book for the ages. --Adam Ashforth, author of The Trials of Mrs. K. For Money and Elders is a first-rate work of scholarship that offers a strikingly original and compelling account of the role of the Kikuyu in Kenya's colonial history, focusing on the complex ways in which crucial ritual, religious, and political dynamics from the pre-colonial and colonial period have played out in the post-Kenyatta era. Blunt masterfully combines an acute understanding of long-term cultural and institutional dynamics with brilliant, finely-grained readings of local cosmologies and ritual practices to develop an important and exciting new political anthropology of the Kenyan state and postcolonial governance. --Ruth Marshall, University of Toronto


What happens when political elites and elders turn out to be dishonest and self-dealing rather than the ritual and political guarantors of truth they are meant to be? Blunt shows how in Kikuyu and Kenyan societies, such failures have led to attempts by ordinary people to impose certainty through often violent means. For Money and Elders provides the means to understand how money, seniority, religion, and violence all combine to create toxic political cultures that nonetheless have the ability to perpetuate themselves. Though argued through fine-grained ethnographic material from Kenya, his important work is equally applicable to contemporary realities in the US and many other parts of the world. -- Mike McGovern, author of A Socialist Peace? This book is the anthropology of African politics for a new generation. As students of African states are slowly beginning to realize that their toolkit of analytic concepts is not only inadequate to explain the realities of political life on the continent but bordering on racist, Blunt brings us a penetrating analysis of how the powers backing political authority actually form, are contested, and are hollowed out over a long span of Kenyan history. Anchored in a deep connection over many years with the people of whom he writes, facilitated by the mastery of their language, and respectful of the ancestors in the discipline who opened the way, For Money and Elders will be a book for the ages. -- Adam Ashforth, author of The Trials of Mrs. K. For Money and Elders is a first-rate work of scholarship that offers a strikingly original and compelling account of the role of the Kikuyu in Kenya's colonial history, focusing on the complex ways in which crucial ritual, religious, and political dynamics from the pre-colonial and colonial period have played out in the post-Kenyatta era. Blunt masterfully combines an acute understanding of long-term cultural and institutional dynamics with brilliant, finely-grained readings of local cosmologies and ritual practices to develop an important and exciting new political anthropology of the Kenyan state and postcolonial governance. -- Ruth Marshall, University of Toronto


This book is the anthropology of African politics for a new generation. As students of African states are slowly beginning to realize that their toolkit of analytic concepts is not only inadequate to explain the realities of political life on the continent but bordering on racist, Blunt brings us a penetrating analysis of how the powers backing political authority actually form, are contested, and are hollowed out over a long span of Kenyan history. Anchored in a deep connection over many years with the people of whom he writes, facilitated by the mastery of their language, and respectful of the ancestors in the discipline who opened the way, For Money and Elders will be a book for the ages. --Adam Ashforth, author of The Trials of Mrs. K. For Money and Elders is a first-rate work of scholarship that offers a strikingly original and compelling account of the role of the Kikuyu in Kenya's colonial history, focusing on the complex ways in which crucial ritual, religious, and political dynamics from the pre-colonial and colonial period have played out in the post-Kenyatta era. Blunt masterfully combines an acute understanding of long-term cultural and institutional dynamics with brilliant, finely-grained readings of local cosmologies and ritual practices to develop an important and exciting new political anthropology of the Kenyan state and postcolonial governance. --Ruth Marshall, University of Toronto What happens when political elites and elders turn out to be dishonest and self-dealing rather than the ritual and political guarantors of truth they are meant to be? Blunt shows how in Kikuyu and Kenyan societies, such failures have led to attempts by ordinary people to impose certainty through often violent means. For Money and Elders provides the means to understand how money, seniority, religion, and violence all combine to create toxic political cultures that nonetheless have the ability to perpetuate themselves. Though argued through fine-grained ethnographic material from Kenya, his important work is equally applicable to contemporary realities in the US and many other parts of the world. --Mike McGovern, author of A Socialist Peace?


Author Information

Robert W. Blunt is associate professor of religious studies at Lafayette College, Pennsylvania, where he is also affiliated with the Africana studies department.

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