1981
DOI: 10.2307/523902
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Africa and the World Economy

Abstract: Africa's involvement in the changing world economy has been a long one, and its effects on the lives of Africans have been profound. Samir Amin and W. W. Rostow, Felix Houphouet-Boigny and Samora Machel, would hardly dispute such a statement. But the question of whether this involvement has led Africans along a road toward material and social progress or into a dead end is very much in dispute. The title of this paper is the same as that of the introductory section of S. Herbert Frankel's classic study of 1938… Show more

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Cited by 117 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 260 publications
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“…Cooper's piece is based on admirably thorough scholarship, and literally bursts with ideas about possible new lines of analysis. His central theme, stated in a more general form in an earlier article (Cooper 1981 ), is the problematic nature of capitalism in African cities. The implantation of capitalism in Africa, says Cooper, was far from homogeneous in its effects across the continent; nor can these effects be automatically deduced from capitalism's intrinsic nature.…”
Section: Urban Studies In Africa*mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cooper's piece is based on admirably thorough scholarship, and literally bursts with ideas about possible new lines of analysis. His central theme, stated in a more general form in an earlier article (Cooper 1981 ), is the problematic nature of capitalism in African cities. The implantation of capitalism in Africa, says Cooper, was far from homogeneous in its effects across the continent; nor can these effects be automatically deduced from capitalism's intrinsic nature.…”
Section: Urban Studies In Africa*mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, recent critiques of Marxist analyses of African society and history by Frederick Cooper ( 1981) and Gavin Kitching (1980, 4-5, 438-455), most notably, should remind us all that caution and modesty are at least as important elements in our efforts as are attempts to make major theoretical contributions at every tum in the road.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In the unmarked zones of African social history, on the other hand, specialists remain properly suspicious of attempts to force local experiences into the frames of world systems, modemization, capitalism, or other purported general structures and processes (see Cohen, 1985;Cooper, 1981Cooper, , 1983. In the well-trodden field of European social history, attempts to make connections between small-scale social life and large-scale transformations predominate.…”
Section: Disciplinesmentioning
confidence: 99%