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In Buying Time, Thomas F. McDow synthesizes Indian Ocean, Middle Eastern, and East African studies as well as economic and social history to explain how, in the nineteenth century, credit, mobility, and kinship knit together a vast interconnected Indian Ocean region. That vibrant and enormously influential swath extended from the desert fringes of Arabia to Zanzibar and the Swahili coast and on to the Congo River watershed.
In the half century before European colonization, Africans and Arabs from coasts and hinterlands used newfound sources of credit to seek out opportunities, establish new outposts in distant places, and maintain families in a rapidly changing economy. They used temporizing strategies to escape drought in Oman, join ivory caravans in the African interior, and build new settlements.
The key to McDow's analysis is a previously unstudied trove of Arabic business deeds that show complex variations on the financial transactions that underwrote the trade economy across the region. The documents list names, genealogies, statuses, and clan names of a wide variety of people-Africans, Indians, and Arabs; men and women; free and slave-who bought, sold, and mortgaged property. Through unprecedented use of these sources, McDow moves the historical analysis of the Indian Ocean beyond connected port cities to reveal the roles of previously invisible people.
Show moreIn Buying Time, Thomas F. McDow synthesizes Indian Ocean, Middle Eastern, and East African studies as well as economic and social history to explain how, in the nineteenth century, credit, mobility, and kinship knit together a vast interconnected Indian Ocean region. That vibrant and enormously influential swath extended from the desert fringes of Arabia to Zanzibar and the Swahili coast and on to the Congo River watershed.
In the half century before European colonization, Africans and Arabs from coasts and hinterlands used newfound sources of credit to seek out opportunities, establish new outposts in distant places, and maintain families in a rapidly changing economy. They used temporizing strategies to escape drought in Oman, join ivory caravans in the African interior, and build new settlements.
The key to McDow's analysis is a previously unstudied trove of Arabic business deeds that show complex variations on the financial transactions that underwrote the trade economy across the region. The documents list names, genealogies, statuses, and clan names of a wide variety of people-Africans, Indians, and Arabs; men and women; free and slave-who bought, sold, and mortgaged property. Through unprecedented use of these sources, McDow moves the historical analysis of the Indian Ocean beyond connected port cities to reveal the roles of previously invisible people.
Show moreThomas F. McDow synthesizes Indian Ocean, Middle Eastern, and East African studies to explain how in the nineteenth century, credit, mobility, and kinship knit together a vast interconnected Indian Ocean region. McDow’s new historical analysis of the Indian Ocean reveals roles of previously invisible people.
Thomas F. McDow is an assistant professor of history at Ohio State University. He teaches courses on the history of Africa, the Indian Ocean, and the world.
“Deeply researched and impressive in scope. It highlights the
importance of multi-site research—McDow conducted extensive
archival research on three continents and makes particularly strong
use of sources from Zanzibar, India, and the United Kingdom. The
book is clearly written and compelling. It is suitable to be
assigned in whole or in part to undergraduate and graduate courses
on the history of the Indian Ocean and East Africa and should be in
the library of every scholar of the nineteenth-century Indian
Ocean.”
*International Journal of African Historical Studies, Vol. 53 No. 2
(2020)*
“In Buying Time, McDow argues for a transnational western Indian
Ocean network of credit and debt that linked both coastal and
interior Oman to Zanzibar and the continental African interior in
the long nineteenth century. With remarkable, previously ignored
Arabic legal documents at its heart, McDow’s analysis is notably
innovative in the way it links environmental factors, debt, and
mobility.”
“If scholars have long known in a general way that Oman and East
Africa were connected, McDow traces out many of the specific and
unexpected ways in which they were, in the stories and actions of
specific persons. This is new territory.”
“This is a brilliant, readable study…[McDow] demonstrates
effectively that seas connect traders and peoples rather than
divide them.…Summing up: Highly recommended.”
*CHOICE*
McDow’s stimulating elaboration of the Omanis’ alternative
understanding of space as composed of reliable obligations to and
from others, at whatever geographical distance, reveals a western
Indian Ocean world in motion, greatly enabled by its regular
seasonally alternating monsoon winds…. McDow delivers provocatively
on his initial promise of depicting ‘a historical process rooted in
Islamic finance and adapted to a burgeoning global commodity
trade’.
*Journal of World History*
“McDow has given us a compelling and beautifully crafted account of
the people who moved across the nineteenth-century western Indian
Ocean and the factors that both enabled and constricted their
mobility. He has captured the cadence of their lives and reveals to
what extent time and financial transactions shaped their agency
across the ocean, as abolitionists and imperialists competed with
and against them.”
*Transnational, Cross-Regional, and Global Connections*
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