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Books > History > African history
In this landmark work, one of the world's most renowned
Egyptologists tells the epic story of this great civilization, from
its birth as the first nation-state to its final absorption into
the Roman Empire--three thousand years of wild drama, bold
spectacle, and unforgettable characters.
Award-winning scholar Toby Wilkinson captures not only the lavish
pomp and artistic grandeur of this land of pyramids and pharaohs
but for the first time reveals the constant propaganda and
repression that were its foundations. Drawing upon forty years of
archaeological research, Wilkinson takes us inside an exotic tribal
society with a pre-monetary economy and decadent, divine kings who
ruled with all-too-recognizable human emotions.
Here are the years of the Old Kingdom, where Pepi II, made king as
an infant, was later undermined by rumors of his affair with an
army general, and the Middle Kingdom, a golden age of literature
and jewelry in which the benefits of the afterlife became available
for all, not just royalty--a concept later underlying Christianity.
Wilkinson then explores the legendary era of the New Kingdom, a
lost world of breathtaking opulence founded by Ahmose, whose
parents were siblings, and who married his sister and transformed
worship of his family into a national cult. Other leaders include
Akhenaten, the "heretic king," who with his wife Nefertiti brought
about a revolution with a bold new religion; his son Tutankhamun,
whose dazzling tomb would remain hidden for three millennia; and
eleven pharaohs called Ramesses, the last of whom presided over the
militarism, lawlessness, and corruption that caused a crucial
political and societal decline.
Riveting and revelatory, filled with new information and unique
interpretations, "The Rise and Fall of Ancient Egypt "will become
the standard source about this great civilization, one that
lasted--so far--longer than any other.
This study critically examines for the first time the unlikely
friendship between apartheid South Africa and non-white Japan. In
the mid-1980s, Japan became South Africa's largest trading partner,
while South Africa purportedly treated Japanese citizens in the
Republic as honorary whites under apartheid. Osada probes the very
different foreign policy-making mechanisms of the two nations and
analyzes their ambivalent bilateral relations against the
background of postcolonial and Cold War politics. She concludes
that these diplomatic policies were adopted not voluntarily or
willingly, but out of necessity due to external circumstances and
international pressure.
Why did Japan exercise sanctions against South Africa in spite
of their strong economic ties? How effective were these sanctions?
What did the sensational term honorary whites actually mean? When
and how did this special treatment begin? How did South Africa get
away with apparently treating the Japanese as whites but not
Chinese, other Coloureds, Indians, and so forth? By using Japan's
"sanctions" against South Africa and South Africa's "honorary
white" treatment of the Japanese as key concepts, the author
describes the development of bilateral relations during this unique
era. The book also covers the fascinating historical interaction
between the two countries from the mid-17th century onward.
This book is the most complete, accessible, and up-to-date resource
for Ethiopian geography, history, politics, economics, society,
culture, and education, with coverage from ancient times to the
present. Ethiopia is a comprehensive treatment of this ancient
country's history coupled with an exploration of the nation today.
Arranged by broad topics, the book provides an overview of
Ethiopia's physical and human geography, its history, its system of
government, and the present economic situation. But the book also
presents a picture of contemporary society and culture and of the
Ethiopian people. It also discusses art, music, and cinema; class;
gender; ethnicity; and education, as well as the language, food,
and etiquette of the country. Readers will learn such fascinating
details as the fact that coffee was first domesticated in Ethiopia
more than 10,000 years ago and that modern Ethiopia comprises 77
different ethnic groups with their own distinct languages. Sidebars
provide brief encapsulations of topics relevant to Ethiopian
history, society, and culture Figures and tables summarize
statistics quoted in the text, offering up-to-date data on the
economy of the country and other aspects of Ethiopian life A
reference section provides extensive information such as addresses,
telephone numbers, and websites of major institutions and
businesses and economic, cultural, educational, exchange,
government, and tourist bureaus An annotated bibliography
facilitates in-depth research
The height of colonial rule on the African continent saw two
prominent religious leaders step to the fore: Desmond Tutu in South
Africa, and Abel Muzorewa in Zimbabwe. Both Tutu and Muzorewa
believed that Africans could govern their own nations responsibly
and effectively if only they were given the opportunity. In
expressing their religious views about the need for social justice
each man borrowed from national traditions that had shaped policy
of earlier church leaders. Tutu and Muzorewa argued that the
political development of Africans was essential to the security of
the white settlers and that whites should seek the promotion of
political development of Africans as a condition of that future
security. Desmond Tutu and Abel Muzorewa were both motivated by
strong religious principles. They disregarded the possible personal
repercussions that they might suffer as a result of their efforts
to alter the fundamental bases of their colonial governments. Each
man hoped to create a new national climate in which blacks and
whites could cooperate to build a new nation. Each played a part in
eventual independence for Zimbabwe in 1980 and for South Africa in
1994. Mungazi's examination of their efforts reveals how
individuals with strong convictions can make a difference in
shaping the future of their nations.
Routledge Library Editions: Immigration and Migration, a collection
of 20 previously out-of-print titles, features some key research on
a multitude of subject areas. Integration, assimilation,
multi-culturalism, historical and modern migration, questions on
culture, language, labour and law - all are covered here, forming a
snapshot of the immigrant experience across the world.
The most comprehensive, profound, and accurate book ever written in
the history of modern Sudan, Integration and Fragmentation of the
Sudan: An African Renaissance, is an encyclopedia of ancient and
modern history as well as the politics of Sudan. It is a library of
data that discusses Sudan from its economic, political, and social
standpoint since the Arab discovery and use of the term Bilad es
Sudan up through the modern republic of the Sudan after which South
and North Sudan collided in 1947. Although written to correct
fabrications, this book is a foundation on which future Sudans
shall live on. It is full of useful information that discusses and
provides feasible solutions to the fundamental problem of the Sudan
that ruptured the country from the Berlin Conference to the
post-independence era. For centuries, Sudanese and the
international community have been fed with idealistic information
as if Sudan started with the coming of the Arabs in the fourteenth
century. This persisted due to the lack of resources and formal
education among African natives. Khartoum's unreasonable diversion
of genuine history is one among the many causes of mistrust and
division in Sudan. The indigenous Africans found themselves
peripheral to Khartoum where economic and political power is
concentrated. Integration and fragmentation of Sudan: An African
Renaissance is a great source of knowledge for the public and
students of Sudanese politics. With the referendum and popular
consultation approaching, this book is a head-start for the
marginalized Black Africans to make an informed decision between
oppression and liberty. Examples and testimonies provided in the
text are reasons for the affected regions to permanently determine
their future. For freedom diehards this book lays the foundation on
which to celebrate the birth of Africa's newest sovereign nation
along the Nile River.
When Italian forces landed on the shores of Libya in 1911, many in
Italy hailed it as an opportunity to embrace a Catholic national
identity through imperial expansion. After decades of acrimony
between an intransigent Church and the Italian state, enthusiasm
for the imperial adventure helped incorporate Catholic interests in
a new era of mass politics. Others among Italian imperialists -
military officers and civil administrators - were more concerned
with the challenges of governing a Muslim society, one in which the
Sufi brotherhood of the Sanusiyya seemed dominant. Eileen Ryan
illustrates what Italian imperialists thought would be the best
methods to govern in Muslim North Africa and in turn highlights the
contentious connection between religious and political authority in
Italy. Telling this story requires an unraveling of the history of
the Sanusiyya. During the fall of Qaddafi, Libyan protestors took
up the flag of the Libyan Kingdom of Idris al-Sanusi, signaling an
opportunity to reexamine Libya's colonial past. After decades of
historiography discounting the influence of Sanusi elites in Libyan
nationalism, the end of this regime opened up the possibility of
reinterpreting the importance of religion, resistance, and Sanusi
elites in Libya's colonial history. Religion as Resistance provides
new perspectives on the history of collaboration between the
Italian state and Idris al-Sanusi and questions the dichotomy
between resistance and collaboration in the colonial world.
In Modern Architecture, Empire, and Race in Fascist Italy, Brian L.
McLaren examines the architecture of the late-Fascist era in
relation to the various racial constructs that emerged following
the occupation of Ethiopia in 1936 and intensified during the
wartime. This study is conducted through a wide-ranging
investigation of two highly significant state-sponsored
exhibitions, the 1942 Esposizione Universale di Roma and 1940
Mostra Triennale delle Terre Italiane d'Oltremare. These
exhibitions and other related imperial displays are examined over
an extended span of time to better understand how architecture,
art, and urban space, the politics and culture that encompassed
them, the processes that formed them, and the society that
experienced them, were racialized in varying and complex ways.
International human rights activist Lisa Shannon spent many
afternoons at the kitchen table having tea with her friend
Francisca Thelin, who often spoke of her childhood in Congo. Thelin
would conjure vivid images of lush flower gardens, fish the size of
small children, and of children running barefoot through her
family's coffee plantation, gorging on fruit from the robust and
plentiful mango trees. She urged Shannon to visit her family in
Dungu, to get a taste of "real" Congo, "peaceful" Congo; a place so
different than the conflict-ravaged places Shannon knew from her
activism work.
But then the nightly phone calls from Congo began: static-filled,
hasty reports from Francisca's mother, "Mama Koko," of
gunmen--Joseph Kony's Lord's Resistance Army-- who had infested
Dungu and began launching attacks. Night after night for a year,
Mama Koko delivered the devastating news of Fransisca's cousins,
nieces, nephews, friends, and neighbors, who had been killed,
abducted, burned alive on Christmas Day.
In an unlikely journey, Shannon and Thelin decided to travel from
Portland, Oregon to Dungu, to witness first-hand the devastation
unfolding at Joseph Kony's hands. Masquerading as Francisca's
American sister-in-law, Shannon tucked herself into Mama Koko's raw
cement living room and listened to the stories of Mama Koko and her
husband, Papa Alexander--as well as those from dozens of other
friends and neighbors ("Mama Koko's War Tribunal")--who lined up
outside the house and waited for hours, eager to offer their
testimony.
In "Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen," Shannon weaves together the
family's tragic stories of LRA encounters with tales from the
family's history: we hear of Mama Koko's early life as a
gap-toothed beauty plotting to escape her inevitable fate of wife
and motherhood; Papa Alexander's empire of wives he married because
they cooked and cleaned and made good coffee; and Francisca's
childhood at the family "castle" and coffee plantation. These
lively stories transport Shannon from the chaos of the violence
around her and bring to life Fransisca's kitchen-table stories of
the peaceful Congo.
Yet, as the LRA camp out on the edge of town grew, tensions inside
the house reach a fever pitch and Shannon and Thelin's friendship
was fiercely tested. Shannon was forced to confront her limitations
as an activist and reconcile her vision of what it means to affect
meaningful change in the lives of others.
"Mama Koko and the Hundred Gunmen" is at once an illuminating piece
of storytelling and an exploration of what it means to truly make a
difference. It is an exquisite testimony to the beauty of human
connection and the strength of the human spirit in times of
unimaginable tragedy.
The Facet of Black Culture is a very unique book that talks about
culture of the black people, the birth of a person to his final
departure to our ancestors and how his property will be shared if
he or she has any. This book begins with the brief history of some
ethnic groups in Africa, particularly Ghana. In this chapter you
will learn how some of the ethnic groups moved from their original
geographical locations to present-day Ghana after which you will
move to the next chapter, which talks about birth and naming
ceremony in Africa. Chapter 2 basically talks about how naming
ceremonies are performed in some parts of Africa. One will also
learn about the first religion in Africa in this book; the features
and beliefs of the traditional religion are found in this book.
Marriage is the dream of every young man and woman in Africa; how
marriage rites are performed Africa can also be found this book.
The meals and preparations, the art and craft, music and dance,
celebrations and festivals, death and funeral rites among black
people are all tactically discussed in The Facet of Black Culture.
This book examines French motivations behind the decolonisation of
Tunisia and Morocco and the intra-Western Alliance relationships.
It argues that changing French policy towards decolonisation
brought about the unexpectedly quick process of independence of
dependencies in the post-WWII era.
According to some estimates, Africa will soon have the highest
concentration of Christians in the world. But African Christianity
has had a long and conflicted history. Even today, modern
misinterpretations of Scripture argue for God's curse upon the
dark-skinned peoples of Africa. In this comprehensive study, Keith
Burton traces the story of biblical Africa and the place of the
Bible in the land of Ham. Beginning with the Old Testament, he
explores the geography of biblical Africa and moves beyond
stereotypical discussions of African ethnicity and identity. He
then chronicles the African presence in the church from the New
Testament onward, paying particular attention to the growth of
Islam in Africa as well as the impact of European colonialism and
the slave trade. Coming to the modern era, he examines the
achievements of African Christianity and visionary efforts to adapt
and reclaim Christianity for the African context. Burton invites
readers to discover anew the relevance of the biblical narrative
for African Christians as well as Scripture's influence on African
Christianity. This invigorating work places the story of the Bible
and African Christianity in a wider global context and challenges
readers to think differently about history and the biblical world.
This book opens up histories of childhood and youth in South
African historiography. It looks at how childhoods changed during
South Africa's industrialisation, and traces the ways in which
institutions, first the Dutch Reformed Church and then the Cape
government, attempted to shape white childhood to the future
benefit of the colony.
A Commonwealth of Knowledge addresses the relationship between
social and scientific thought, colonial identity, and political
power in nineteenth- and twentieth-century South Africa. It hinges
on the tension between colonial knowledge, conceived of as a
universal, modernizing force, and its realization in the context of
a society divided along complex ethnic and racial fault-lines. By
means of detailed analysis of colonial cultures, literary and
scientific institutions, and expert historical thinking about South
Africa and its peoples, it demonstrates the ways in which the
cultivation of knowledge has served to support white political
ascendancy and claims to nationhood. In a sustained commentary on
modern South African historiography, the significance of `broad'
South Africanism - a political tradition designed to transcend
differences between white English- and Afrikaans-speakers - is
emphasized. A Commonwealth of Knowledge also engages with wider
comparative debates. These include the nature of imperial and
colonial knowledge systems; the role of intellectual ideas and
concepts in constituting ethnic, racial, and regional identities;
the dissemination of ideas between imperial metropole and colonial
periphery; the emergence of amateur and professional intellectual
communities; and the encounter between imperial and indigenous or
local knowledge systems. The book has broad scope. It opens with a
discussion of civic institutions (eg. museums, libraries, botanical
gardens and scientific societies), and assesses their role in
creating a distinctive sense of Cape colonial identity; the book
goes on to discuss the ways in which scientific and other forms of
knowledge contributed to the development of a capacious South
Africanist patriotism compatible with continued membership of the
British Commonwealth; it concludes with reflections on the
techno-nationalism of the apartheid state and situates contemporary
concerns like the `African Renaissance', and responses to HIV/AIDS,
in broad historical context.
In the post-Cold War era, religion and religious extremism has been
the cause of most violent conflicts, thereby posing one of the
major security challenges confronting the world and, in recent
years, the stability and security of the African continent.
Unfortunately, some states targeted by terrorist insurgencies,
including Nigeria and Kenya, have been reactive, adopting coercive
responses rather than proactive long-term measures to address the
factors and drivers of religious extremism in a comprehensive and
sustained manner. Confronting Islamist Terrorism in Africa: The
Cases of Nigeria and Kenya addresses the fragility of state
institutions in terms of their ability and capacity to manage
diversity, corruption, inequality, human rights violations,
environmental degradation, weak security, and judicial problems, as
well as the current security challenges in Africa. It also serves
as an indispensable comparative study evaluating the similarities
and differences in two nations' approaches to the war on terror in
Africa.
This collection gathers together 31 previously out-of-print titles
focusing on revolution - the political, economic, military and
social aspects of the overthrow of state power. Ranging from
nineteenth-century France to late-twentieth-century Caribbean,
these books analyse the forms of revolt and the aftermaths of
revolution, examining the types of government that result and the
reactions of international opinion.
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