Black Spots: Roads and Risk in Rural Kenya

This dissertation examines “post-agrarian” transformations in Kenyan rural areas. But where rural transformation is usually written as a story about land, Black Spots is a story about roads. Kenya’s massive investment in roads infrastructure over the last decade has intersected with the decline in s...

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Main Author: Melnick, Amiel Bize
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.7916/D8M91RQM
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spelling ndltd-columbia.edu-oai-academiccommons.columbia.edu-10.7916-D8M91RQM2019-05-09T15:15:45ZBlack Spots: Roads and Risk in Rural KenyaMelnick, Amiel Bize2018ThesesEthnologyAfricansRural roads--Social aspectsAgriculture--Economic aspectsRural roads--Economic aspectsThis dissertation examines “post-agrarian” transformations in Kenyan rural areas. But where rural transformation is usually written as a story about land, Black Spots is a story about roads. Kenya’s massive investment in roads infrastructure over the last decade has intersected with the decline in smallholder agriculture in such a way that, for many rural residents, fortunes are now imagined on the road rather than on the land. Roadside trade, transport, and even salvage from crashes provide supplementary livings for rural populations facing declining agricultural opportunities. The dissertation argues that in the context of austerity policies and rural abandonment, road work and its “fast money” not only expose roadside residents to physical danger, but also entrench entrepreneurial risk ideology into local imaginaries. With the road accident as a lens illuminating a wider landscape of rural hazard, the dissertation shows how rural residents refashion relationships to land, work, technology, and loss in high-risk environments. At the same time, it demonstrates the limits of “risk”—that is, a calculated engagement with potential loss, conducted in the interest of profit—as a framework for managing contingency. In this sense, Black Spots is both an ethnography of risk and of what risk fails to capture. It tracks how rural residents learn to engage bodily and economic hazard and to understand it as risk; how they coordinate the disparate temporalities and technologies of life on the road and life on the land; and how they withstand loss when these attempts do not go as planned. The dissertation thus advances two parallel concerns: on the one hand, it demonstrates how economic practice is at once bodily and reasoned. On the other, it considers how experiences of and ideas about contingency are shaped in relation to shifting economic, social, and infrastructural possibilities.Englishhttps://doi.org/10.7916/D8M91RQM
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Ethnology
Africans
Rural roads--Social aspects
Agriculture--Economic aspects
Rural roads--Economic aspects
spellingShingle Ethnology
Africans
Rural roads--Social aspects
Agriculture--Economic aspects
Rural roads--Economic aspects
Melnick, Amiel Bize
Black Spots: Roads and Risk in Rural Kenya
description This dissertation examines “post-agrarian” transformations in Kenyan rural areas. But where rural transformation is usually written as a story about land, Black Spots is a story about roads. Kenya’s massive investment in roads infrastructure over the last decade has intersected with the decline in smallholder agriculture in such a way that, for many rural residents, fortunes are now imagined on the road rather than on the land. Roadside trade, transport, and even salvage from crashes provide supplementary livings for rural populations facing declining agricultural opportunities. The dissertation argues that in the context of austerity policies and rural abandonment, road work and its “fast money” not only expose roadside residents to physical danger, but also entrench entrepreneurial risk ideology into local imaginaries. With the road accident as a lens illuminating a wider landscape of rural hazard, the dissertation shows how rural residents refashion relationships to land, work, technology, and loss in high-risk environments. At the same time, it demonstrates the limits of “risk”—that is, a calculated engagement with potential loss, conducted in the interest of profit—as a framework for managing contingency. In this sense, Black Spots is both an ethnography of risk and of what risk fails to capture. It tracks how rural residents learn to engage bodily and economic hazard and to understand it as risk; how they coordinate the disparate temporalities and technologies of life on the road and life on the land; and how they withstand loss when these attempts do not go as planned. The dissertation thus advances two parallel concerns: on the one hand, it demonstrates how economic practice is at once bodily and reasoned. On the other, it considers how experiences of and ideas about contingency are shaped in relation to shifting economic, social, and infrastructural possibilities.
author Melnick, Amiel Bize
author_facet Melnick, Amiel Bize
author_sort Melnick, Amiel Bize
title Black Spots: Roads and Risk in Rural Kenya
title_short Black Spots: Roads and Risk in Rural Kenya
title_full Black Spots: Roads and Risk in Rural Kenya
title_fullStr Black Spots: Roads and Risk in Rural Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Black Spots: Roads and Risk in Rural Kenya
title_sort black spots: roads and risk in rural kenya
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.7916/D8M91RQM
work_keys_str_mv AT melnickamielbize blackspotsroadsandriskinruralkenya
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