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The nature of decline: distinguishing myth from reality in the case of the Luo of Kenya

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2007

Lesa B. Morrison
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, Duke University.

Abstract

Narrative is an important means of structuring and giving meaning to experience. While the resulting framework is incomplete because human beings choose only particular aspects to remember, narratives often persist and influence behaviour, often to poor effect. Considering this, the example of the Luo of Kenya is a cautionary one, particularly given African neopatrimonial understandings of state and society. Luo lore establishes the group as once elite and now in abject poverty, victim of a powerful and jealous Kikuyu enemy. This article explores the nature of this elite status, and the means by which group members have responded to particular indicators at the expense of others. This re-examination invites questioning of Luos' conclusion that they were, as respondents say, ‘put out in the cold' from a position of prominence, a stance that has helped shape Kenya into ethnic rather than policy interests.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2006 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

The author gratefully acknowledges Robert A. Wortham for extremely productive conversations about community level data; Moses Oyoo Tala, Charles Edward Ochieng', and Felix Ochieng' for assistance in name coding; E. S. Atieno-Odhiambo for his counsel, and Julius Nyang'oro, Eunice Sahle, Ericka Albaugh, Michael C. Munger, and two anonymous reviewers for invaluable comments on previous drafts.