2003
DOI: 10.1525/ae.2003.30.1.136
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In a cup of tea: Commodities and history among Samburu pastoralists in northern Kenya

Abstract: In this article, I explore the 20th‐century history of Samburu pastoralists through the lens of a particular beverage, tea. In classic anthropological analyses, "drug foods" such as tea have been taken as emblematic of the spread of global capitalism. Tea, however, is a rare example of a commodity that Samburu have adopted as a central component of a self‐defined "traditional" culture specifically counterposed to change. Tracing historical transformations in practices and meanings associated with tea use, I co… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
(23 reference statements)
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“…Research from the early 2000s in Samburu shows that although milk now supplies only 10% of overall energy intakes (compared to > 50% from maize), it provides necessary micronutrients and is essential for childhood health (Iannotti and Lesorogol 2014b). For adults, milk in Samburu is generally prepared as tea, boiled together with water and then sweetened with sugar (Holtzman 2003). When milk is abundant it is also fermented into a thick, sour drink.…”
Section: Samburu Kenyamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research from the early 2000s in Samburu shows that although milk now supplies only 10% of overall energy intakes (compared to > 50% from maize), it provides necessary micronutrients and is essential for childhood health (Iannotti and Lesorogol 2014b). For adults, milk in Samburu is generally prepared as tea, boiled together with water and then sweetened with sugar (Holtzman 2003). When milk is abundant it is also fermented into a thick, sour drink.…”
Section: Samburu Kenyamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Un survol de la littérature académique portant sur la nourriture et la boisson -littérature vaste et en expansion -révèle qu'elle est dominée par un paradigme de recherche que Jon Holtzman (2003) appelle « un programme d'analyse du global » (global analytical agenda). Pendant les trois dernières décennies, les chercheurs travaillant au sein de ce paradigme ont documenté en détail la façon dont les consommateurs réagissent à l'arrivée des produits réellement globaux tels que le Coke, le Pepsi, les Big Macs, les frites, pour n'en citer que quelques-uns.…”
Section: Aller-retour Entre Le Local Et Le Globalunclassified
“…Although, within this framework, custom and tradition are constituted as unchanging, the content and form of Luo tradition has been shift ing, as is the case with other inventions of tradition in African societies (e.g., Kratz 1993;Gable 1995Gable , 2002Holtzman 2003;Sanders 2003). Thus, over the course of the last century, there has been an increasing concern with 'Luo rules' and with chira, the sickness that strikes as a consequence of not following the rules.…”
Section: The Reification Of the 'Luo Rules': Luo Traditionmentioning
confidence: 99%