Impatient accumulation, immediate consumption problems with money and hope in central kenya

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Abstract

Contemporary anthropological accounts of economic uncertainty often use the concept of hope as a means of recovering human agency in relation to broader socio-economic structures. At times, how-ever, the emphasis anthropologists place on hope can appear too generi-cally existential. This article argues for a more specific emphasis on the object of hope—an appreciation of more concrete desires held by marginal persons, orienting their economic activity. In the case I unfold from peri-urban central Kenya, low-status male youth are shown to lack the money they require to unlock pleasurable experiences of drinking, a sign of having wealth and the living of a good life. Rendered hopeless, young men turn to crime as an alternative means of realizing their desires for consumption in the short term.

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Lockwood, P. (2020). Impatient accumulation, immediate consumption problems with money and hope in central kenya. Social Analysis, 64(1), 44–62. https://doi.org/10.3167/sa.2020.640103

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