Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T11:10:23.415Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

European Alcohol, History, and the State in Cameroon

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

On 17 August 1884, the flag was raised at Bimbia in Kamerun and the territory was annexed as a German colony. Gustav Nachtigal, Consul General, distributed Schnaps in celebration and then billed the liquor to the German government: “Schnaps shared at the festive celebration was to be paid by Berlin” (Stoecker 1960, 69; Hueckirtg and Launer 1986, 62). This fleeting event is a commanding metaphor for the crucial role which bottled alcoholic beverages came to play under German imperialism in Cameroon; spirits, above all other trade goods, helped to secure Germany's annexation of Cameroon, its control over indigenous labor, and access to the country's interior. The occasion sets the stage for a continuous history linking bottled European alcohol to capital accumulation, elite power structures, and changing social relations in Cameroon.

Today it is impossible to overlook the significance of bottled alcohol production and consumption in the Republic of Cameroon. Bars selling bottled beers mark rural commercial centers and proliferate on city streets. They are so pervasive that it is difficult to imagine city, town, or village without them, though this image is of relatively recent origin. Just as European alcohol played an important role in the penetration of West African trade, so too bottled European beers permeate many contemporary African economies as highly remunerative commercial activities serving both state and international interests.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adejemilua, Femi. 1989. “Trends in the Nigerian Brewing Industry.” Modern Brewery Age, January 23: 27-31, 33.Google Scholar
Aitken, P. P. 1989. “Alcohol Advertising in Developing Countries.” British Journal of Addiction 84:1443–45.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ambler, Charles. 1987. “Alcohol and Disorder in Precolonial Africa.” Boston University African Studies Center Working Paper.Google Scholar
Ambler, Charles. 1990. “Alcohol, Racial Segregation and Popular Politics in Northern Rhodesia.” Journal of African History 31:295313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ardener, Shirley. 1968. Eye-Witnesses to the Annexation of Cameroon 1883-1887. Buea: Government Press.Google Scholar
Austen, Ralph. 1987. African Economic History. London: James Currey.Google Scholar
Burns, A. C. 1929. History of Nigeria. London: George Allen and Unwin.Google Scholar
Cameroon, CAR, Chad Country Profile. 19901991. London: Business International Limited.Google Scholar
Cameroon, CAR, Chad Country Profile. 19911992. London: Business International Limited.Google Scholar
Cameroons Under United Kingdom Administration Report for the Year 1956. 1957. Colonial No. 334. London: Her Majesty's Stationary Office Google Scholar
Carlson, Robert. 1989. “Haya Worldview and Ethos: An Ethnography of Alcohol Production and Consumption in Bukoba, Tanzania.” Ph.D. diss., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.Google Scholar
Carlson, Robert. 1990. “Banana Beer, Reciprocity, and Ancestor Propitiation Among the Haya Bukoba, Tanzania.” Ethnology 29/4: 297311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cavanagh, John and Clairmonte, Frederick. 1985. Alcoholic Beverages: Dimensions of Corporate Power. New York: St. Martins Press.Google Scholar
Colson, Elizabeth and Scudder, Thayer. 1988. For Prayer and Profit. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
DeLancey, Mark W. 1986. “Cameroon's Foreign Relations.” In The Political Economy of Cameroon, edited by Schatzberg, Michael and Zartman, I. William. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Douglas, Mary ed. 1987. Constructive Drinking. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dumett, Raymond E. 1974. “The Social Impact of the European Liquor Trade on the Akan of Ghana (Gold Coast and Asante), 1875-1910.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History 5/1: 69101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Edwards, Griffith. 1979. “Drinking Problems: Putting the Third World on the Map.” The ancet 2/8139:402–4.Google ScholarPubMed
The Europa Year Book. 1983. London: Europa Publications Limited.Google Scholar
Eyo, Ekpo. 1979. Nigeria and the Evolution of Money. Lagos: The Central Bank of Nigeria.Google Scholar
Goddard, T. N. 1925. The Handbook of Sierra Leone. London: Grant Richards.Google Scholar
Godfrey, Christine. 1989. “Factors Influencing the Consumption of Alcohol and Tobacco: the Use and Abuse of Economic Models.” British Journal of Addiction 84:1123–38.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grant, Marcus ed. 1985. Alcohol Policies. WHO Regional Publications, European Series No. 18. Copenhagen: WHO Regional Office for Europe.Google Scholar
Grant, Marcus and Ritson, Bruce. 1983. Alcohol and the Prevention Debate. London: Croom Helm.Google Scholar
Hagaman, Barbara. 1980. “Food For Thought: Beer in a Social and Ritual Context in a West African Society.” Journal of Drug Issues 10. 203–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heath, Dwight. 1975. “A Critical Review of Ethnographic Studies of Alcohol Use.” In Research Advances in Alcohol and Drug Problems, Vol. II, edited by Gibbins, R. J. et al New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Heath, Dwight. 1987. “A Decade of Development in the Anthropological Study of Alcohol Use: 1970-1980.” In Constructive Drinking, edited by Douglas, Mary. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hodder, B. W. and Ukwu, U. I.. 1969. Markets in West Africa: Studies of Markets and Trade Among the Yoruba and Ibo. Ibadan: Ibadan University Press.Google Scholar
Huecking, Renate and Launer, Ekkehard. 1986. Aus Menschen Neger Machen: Wie Sich das Handelshaus Woermann in Afrika Entwickelt hat. Hamburg: Verlag am Galgenberg.Google Scholar
The International Year Book and Statesmen's Who's Who. 1985. East Grinstead: Information Services Ltd.Google Scholar
Jacobson, Michael and Atkins, Robert. 1983. The Booze Merchants: The Inebriating of America. Washington, DC: Center for Science in the Public Interest.Google Scholar
Karp, Ivan. 1980. “Beer Drinking and Social Experience in an African Society: An Essay in Formal Sociology.” In Explorations in African Systems of Thought, edited by Karp, Ivan and Bird, Charles. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Keddie, James and Cleghorn, William. 1979. Brewing in Developing Countries. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press.Google Scholar
Kofele-Kale, Ndiva. 1986. “Ethnicity, Regionalism, and Political Power: a Post-Mortem of Ahidjo's Cameroon.” In The Political Economy of Cameroon, edited by Schatzberg, Michael and Zartman, I. William. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Leis, P. E. 1964. “Palm Oil, Illicit Gin and the Moral Order of the Ijaw.” American Anthropologist 66:828–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
The Liquor Traffic in Southern Nigeria. Report of the Government Committee of Inquiry.” 1909. Rhodes House Library. Document 723.17 r.6. Oxford, England.Google Scholar
Lloyd, Peter. 1967. Africa in Social Change. Baltimore, Maryland: Penguin.Google Scholar
Lugard, F. D. 1892. “The Liquor Traffic in Africa.” The Nineteenth Century 42: 766–84.Google Scholar
Lugard, F. D.. 1926. The Dual Mandate in British Tropical Africa. Edinburgh: William Blackwood and Sons.Google Scholar
MacGaffey, Janet. 1991. The Real Economy of Zaire. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Marchés Tropicaux et Méditerranéens. 1984. “L'économie Camerounaise en 1982-1983.” July 27:1901–6.Google Scholar
Marchés Tropicaux et Méditerranéens. 1988. “Le Marché Africain des Boissons.” December 30:3813–20.Google Scholar
Marchés Tropicaux et Méditerranéens. 1990. “Cameroun: Marché des boissons; les effets de la crise.” February 2:333–35.Google Scholar
Marshall, Mac ed. 1979. Beliefs, Behaviors, and Alcoholic Beverages: A Cross-Cultural Survey. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Molamu, Louis. 1989. “Alcohol in Botswana: A Historical Overview.” Contemporary Drug Problems 16/1:342.Google Scholar
Nafziger, Wayne. 1988. Inequality in Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ndongko, Wilfred. 1986. “The Political Economy of Development in Cameroon: Relations Between the State, Indigenous Business, and Foreign Investors.” In The Political Economy of Cameroon, edited by Schatzberg, Michael and Zartman, I. William. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Netting, R. M. 1964. “Beer as a Locus of Value Among the West African Kofyar.” American Anthropologist 66: 375–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newbury, Colin. 1971. British Policy Towards West Africa. Select Documents 1875-1914. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
The Nigeria Handbook. 1953. Lagos: The Government Printer.Google Scholar
O'Kelly, Elizabeth. 1980. “Eleven Delightful Years in the Cameroons, 1950-61.” Mss. Afr. S. 889, Rhodes House Library, Oxford, Great Britain.Google Scholar
Oliver, Roland and Sanderson, G. N.. 1985. The Cambridge History of Africa, c. 1870-1905, Vol. 6. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Olorunfemi, A. 1984. “The Liquor Traffic Dilemma in British West Africa: The Southern Nigerian Example, 1895-1918.” International Journal of African Historical Studies 17/2: 229–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pan, Lynn. 1975. Alcohol in Colonial Africa. Uppsala: The Scandinavian Institute of African Studies.Google Scholar
Papers Relative to the Liquor Trade in West Africa.” 1897. Rhodes House Library. Document 710.121S. Oxford, England.Google Scholar
Partanen, Juha. 1991. Sociability and Intoxication. Alcohol and Drinking in Kenya, Africa and the Modern World, Vol. 39. The Finnish Foundation for Alcohol Studies: Gummerus Kirjapaino Oy.Google Scholar
Perham, Margery. 1962. Native Administration in Nigeria. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Phillips, Anne. 1989. The Enigma of Colonialism: British Policy in West Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Report of a Committee on Trade and Taxation for British West Africa. 1922. London: His Majesty's Stationary Office.Google Scholar
Rogerson, C. M. and Tucker, B. A.. 1986. “Multinational Corporations, the State and Indigenous Beer Production in Central Africa.” In Multinational Corporations and the Third World, edited by Dixon, C. J. and Drakakis-Smith, D.. Boulder: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Rudin, Harry. 1968. Germans in the Cameroons 1884-1914. Hamden, CT: Archon Books.Google Scholar
Saul, Mahir. 1981. “Beer, Sorghum and Women: Production for the Market in Rural Upper Volta.” Africa 51/3:746–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schatzberg, Michael. 1980. Politics and Class in Zaire: Bureaucracy, Business and Beer in Lisala. New York: African Publishing Company.Google Scholar
Schmidt, Agathe. 1940. “Arbeit und Beruf im Leben des Eingeborenen von Nsei im Grassland von Kamerun.” Koloniale Rundschau 31: 325–64.Google Scholar
Scott, William. 1980. Development in the Western Highlands 1980. U.S. AID/Cameroon Office of African Agriculture and Rural Development, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Selvaggio, Kathleen. 1983. “Who Bottles Up Alcohol Study.” Multinational Monitor 4/11:916.Google Scholar
Statistical Yearbook 1987. 1990. New York: United Nations Statistical Office Google Scholar
Stoecker, Helmuth. 1960. Kamerun unter Deutscher Kolonialherrschaft. Band I. Berlin: Ruetten und Loening.Google Scholar
Stoecker, Helmuth. 1986. German Imperialism in Africa from the Beginnings until the Second World War. London: C. Hurst and Company.Google Scholar
Stolper, Gustav. 1940. German Economy 1870-1940 Issues and Trends. New York: Reynal and Hitchcock.Google Scholar
Sulkunen, P. 1985. “International Aspects of the Prevention of Alcohol Problems: Research Experiences and Perspectives.” In Alcohol Policies, edited by Grant, M.. Copenhagen: WHO Regional Office for Europe.Google Scholar
Survey of Economic and Social Conditions in Africa, 1987-88. 1990. New York: United Nations.Google Scholar
Swantz, Marja-Liisa. 1990. “Alcohol Research in Developing Societies from the Point of View of Development Studies.” In Alcohol in Developing Countries, edited by Maula, Johanna, Lindblad, Maaria, and Tigerstedt, Christoffer. Helsinki: Nordic Council for Alcohol and Drug Research.Google Scholar
Van Onselen, Charles. 1982. Studies in the Economic and Social History of the Witwatersrand 1886-1914, Vol 1: New Babylon. Hallow Essex: Longman.Google Scholar
Walsh, B. M. 1985. “Production of and International Trade in Alcoholic Drinks: Possible Public Health Implications.” In Alcohol Policies, edited by Grant, M.. Copenhagen: WHO Regional Office for Europe.Google Scholar
West Africa. Reports on the British Sphere of the Cameroons. 1922. London: His Majesty's Stationary Office.Google Scholar
Willame, Jean-Claude. 1986. “The Practices of a Liberal Political Economy: Import and Export Substitution in Cameroon (1975-1981).” In The Political Economy of Cameroon, edited by Schatzberg, Michael and Zartman, I. William. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
World Bank. 1991a. “Staff Appraisal Report Republic of Cameroon Food Security Project.” No. 9048-CM. Unpublished paper. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
World Bank. 1991b. “Coopération Régionale et Adjustement Structurel.” No. 9747-AFR. Unpublished paper. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
The World Fact Book. 1990. United States Central Intelligence Agency. Washington, D.C Google Scholar
The World in Figures. 1987. Boston: G. K. Hall and Company.Google Scholar
Wyndham, H. A. 1930. “The Problem of West African Liquor Traffic.” Journal of the Royal Institute of International Affairs 9: 801–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yguel, Jacques and Luciani, S., Duflo, B., M'Bamezoui, C., Froment, A., Gentilini, D.. 1990. “Consumption of Alcoholic Drinks in Three Different Parts of Cameroon.” In Alcohol in Developing Countries (no.18), edited by Maula, Johanna, Lindblad, Maaria, and Tigerstedt, Christoffer Helsinki: Nordic Council for Alcohol and Drug Research.Google Scholar
Zahn, F. M. 1886. “Der überseeischen Branntweinhandel seine verderblichen Wirkungen und Vorschläge zur Beschränkung desselben.” Allgemeine Missions-Zeitschrift 13:939.Google Scholar