This complex study by native Igbo speaker Korieh (Marquette Univ.) combines oral evidence with mastery of documentary and secondary sources to examine Igbo agricultural society from procolonial to present times. Korieh's stance is that of an African Nationalist, but the integrity of his use of historical evidence leads to conclusions in which British coonial rulers emerge smelling a bit sweeter than their nationalist inheritors ... the book's last section is pure tragedy, detailing the effects of civil war and the emergence of petroleum thereafter, which virtually destroyed the agricultural economy. Summing Up: Highly recommended. - J.E. Flint, Emeritus, Dalhousie University in CHOICE (Current Reviews for Academic Libraries), February 2011, vol. 48 No. 06 -- J.E. Flint, Emeritus, Dalhousie University -- CHOICE (Current Reviews for Academic Libraries), February 2011, vol. 48 No. 06, Feb 2011
British attempts to modernize the densely populated Igbo region were focused largely on intensive production of palm oil as a cash crop for export and on the assumption of male dominance within a conventional western hierarchy. This colonial agenda, however, collided with a traditional culture in which females played important social and political roles and male status was closely tied to yam cultivation. Drawing on an astonishing array of sources, including oral interviews, newspapers, private journals, and especially letters of petition from local farmers and traders, Korieh puts the reader in direct contact with ordinary people, evoking a feeling of what it was like to live through the era. As such, The Land Has Changed reveals colonial interactions as negotiated encounters between officials and natives and challenges simplistic notions of a hegemonic colonial state and a compliant native population.
- List of illustrations
- List of Tables
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Perspectives, Setting, Sources
- "We Have Always Been Farmers": Society and Economy at the Close of the Nineteenth Century
- Pax Britannica and the Developing of Agriculture
- Gender and Colonial Agricultural Policy
- Peasants, Depression, and Rural Revolts
- The Second World War, the Rural Economy, and Africans
- The Affican Elite, Agrarian Revolution, and Socio-political Change, 1954-80
- On the Brink: Agricultural Crisis and Rural Survival
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index