German English

______________

Save

Analyse Set

New Search

______________

Additional
catalogues

Subject search
as of 1946

Subject search
1501 - 1955

Reading room

______________

Just ask us

Library Account

Interlibrary
loan

Order digital copy

Book suggestion

______________

Privacy Policy

Barrierefreiheit

Impressum
(Imprint)

1 of 1
      
* results  search (Subject headings (XSP)) quality of life
 restrict (Basic classification (XBKL)) 57.36
Books
Title: 
Persons: 
Language/s: 
English
Publication statement: 
Durham ; London : Duke University Press, 2019
Extent: 
xi, 332 Seiten : Illustrationen
Note: 
Includes bibliographical references and index
Bibliogr. context: 
ISBN: 
978-1-4780-0391-5 pbk.
978-1-4780-0365-6 hardcover
Weitere Ausgaben: 978-1-4780-0457-8 (Fernzugriff) ebook
Subject heading: 
Subject: 
Further documents: 
Library of Congress Classification: HD9578.AE6
Dewey Decimal Classification: 338.8/8722338096718
Abstract: 
The offshore -- The enclave -- The contract -- The subcontract -- The economy -- The political.
"In OIL AND THE LICIT LIFE OF CAPITALISM IN EQUATORIAL GUINEA Hannah Appel considers how oil extraction creates forms of legality and legitimacy that mask its historical relationship to imperialism and slavery in Equatorial Guinea. As a former Spanish colony whose oil industry has developed in the shadow of it's neighbor Nigeria's (and stories of Nigeria's "resource curse"), Equatorial Guinea provides an understudied example of capitalism's imbrication of itself in state formation through oil extraction. Rooted in anthropology's turn to the study of infrastructure as a way to analyze the interactions of people, things, and the state, Appel's account focuses on structures and procedures that have enabled oil extraction and the flourishing of capitalism from Spanish colonization to the present day. Focusing on processes unique to petrocapital, such as offshore drilling, as well as those that have their roots or most prominent forms there, such as the contract or subcontractual labor, Appel shows how capitalism is not just the context in which oil extraction takes place, but itself a project, something that must be constantly reinforced and remade. Appel shows how ethnography provides a vital method for understanding capitalism's everyday reassertion and recreation of its own power as something that must be made and remade every day." - Provided by publisher
Further information: 
 
Shelf mark: 
10 A 100711
Location: 
Potsdamer Straße
 
 
 
Reference management: 
1 of 1
      
 
1 of 1