Dash -peonage: the contradictions of debt bondage in the colonial plantations of Fernando Pó

2017 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Dash -peonage: the contradictions of debt bondage in the colonial plantations of Fernando Pó​
Martino, E.​ (2017) 
Africa87(1) pp. 53​-78​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0001972016000693 

Details

Authors
Martino, Enrique
Abstract
Dash in pidgin English means an ancillary gift to an exchange. What happened when the dash became attached to the indentured labour contracts that the Spanish Empire brought from Cuba to their last colony, Spanish Guinea? On the island of Fernando Po, which came to be almost wholly populated by Nigerian labour migrants, the conditional gift in the form of a large wage advance produced a particularly intense contradiction. In the historiography of unfree labour, the excess wage advance is thought to create conditions for the perpetuation of bondage through debt. However, in imperial contexts, the wage advance did not generate compliance and immobility; exactly the opposite - it produced unprecedented waves of further escalation and dispersed flight. The dash was pushed up by workers themselves and relayed by informal recruiters. Together they turned this lynchpin of indentured labour and debt peonage into a counter-practice that almost led to the collapse of the plantations in the 1950s. The trajectories of the dash led to a more pointed version of the foundational thesis of global labour history: namely, that it was actually free labour, not unfree labour, that was incompatible with labour scarcity-ridden imperial capitalism.
Issue Date
2017
Status
published
Publisher
Cambridge Univ Press
Journal
Africa 
ISSN
0001-9720
eISSN
1750-0184
ISSN
1750-0184; 0001-9720
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media