Abstract

Erik Gilbert. Dhows and the Colonial Economy of Zanzibar, 1860-1970. Athens: Ohio University Press/ Oxford: James Currey/ Zanzibar: Gallery Publications, 2004. xiii + 176 pp. Photographs. Maps. Glossary. Bibliography. Index. $26.95. Paper. In Dhows and the Colonial Economy of Zanzibar, 1860-1970, Erik Gilbert offers a thorough examination of the dhow trade and its relation to the colonial economy in Zanzibar. The work emphasizes the importance of the dhow-a wooden sailing vessel of Arabian origin-in shaping the history of various locales within its Indian Ocean trade domain, most notably Zanzibar. Basing his work on both archival research and interviews, Gilbert traces the survival of the dhow as a central element of the Zanzibar! economy over a ninety-year period, from its peak in the islands' colonial heyday until the period following the Zanzibar Revolution of 1964, during which the longestablished dhow trade was neglected in favor of rapid modernization. In contrast to prior historians who have regarded dhows as little more than relics of a bygone era, Gilbert presents evidence confirming that they have indeed remained the lifeblood of Zanzibar's economy from the colonial period until recent times. Gilbert begins his study c.1860, by which time the dhow trade had long been a staple of Zanzibar! life. He chronicles the dhow's prominence in the parallel development of the formal and informal economies under the colonial administration of Zanzibar, first as a sultanate of the Omani Arabs, followed by the establishment of the British Protectorate in 1890. Dhows destined for distant markets in Arabia and farther abroad carried slaves, cloves, ivory, and mangrove poles until 1897, when the British abolished the slave trade in Zanzibar. Thereafter, cloves and mangrove poles continued to be the dhow's primary exports, as they remain today. In exchange, dhows returning from foreign ports brought essential goods to Zanzibar, such as cloth and rice from India; coffee, dates, and dried fish from Arabia; and hides from Somalia. Gilbert explains the surprising resilience and longevity of the dhow trade in the face of British attempts to encourage modernization. Around the turn of the century, a conflict emerged between the official colonial economy and the growing informal economy. Gilbert characterizes this conflict in terms of a struggle between the colonial administration's dirigiste policies and the free-market tendencies of the informal economy. Despite the colonial state's attempts to modernize the economy through the increased adoption of steamers for shipping purposes, the informal dhow economy survived, and its indigenous entrepreneurial elements prospered, in essence subverting the colonial state in a way no other element of Zanzibari society could (19). …

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