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The Bluest Hands : A Social and Economic History of Women Dyers in Abeokuta (Nigeria), 1890-1940

Part of the Social History of Africa S. series
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By the second decade of the twentieth century in Abeokuta, a Yoruba town in southwestern Nigeria, most dyers were producing adire cloth, which featured a variety of patterns created by resist dyeing with indigo onto a primarily European manufactured cloth. - Highlights the dynamic way in which these women engaged with the colonial economy, taking full advantage of its infrastructure and credit, as well as the new technologies and the availability of imported European cloth. - Reveals how the women dyers constantly adapted to changes in the market, technology, political and economic conditions, consumer tastes and competition from other imported goods so that the industry not only survived but thrived as the town of Abeokuta was increasingly incorporated into the international economy.

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Product Details
James Currey
0852556500 / 9780852556504
Hardback
16/05/2002
United Kingdom
English
288p. : ill.
23 cm
undergraduate Learn More