Shea Butter Republic
State Power, Global Markets, and the Making of an Indigenous Commodity
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- ISBN: 978-0-415-94460-1
- Binding: Hardback
- Published by: Routledge
- Publication Date: 23rd January 2004
- Pages: 320
About the Book
Shea butter (
butyrospermin parkii) has been produced and sold by rural West African women and circulated on the world market as a raw material for more than a century. Shea butter has been used for cooking, making soap and candles, leatherworking, dying, as a medical and beauty aid, and most significantly, as a substitute for cocoa butter in chocolate production. Now sold in exclusive shops as a high-priced cosmetic and medicinal product, it caters to the desire of cosmopolitan customers worldwide for luxury and exotic self-indulgence. This ethnographic study traces shea from a pre- to post-industrial commodity to provide a deeper understanding of emerging trends in tropical commoditization, consumption, global economic restructuring and rural livelihoods. Also inlcludes seven maps.