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.
CITATION STYLE
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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