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In this book, Runoko tells his daughter, Assata-Garvey, all about
the African diaspora. The book is divided into sections on Asia,
Europe, Australia, the Pacific islands and the Americas. Runoko has
taken thousands of good photographs on his frequent travels: 25 of
them, of which several in colour, illustrate this book. There are
also two maps.
Runoko Rashidi is the foremost living scholar in the field of
research into Black communities all over the world. He is not the
kind of academic who sits in an ivory tower studying manuscripts.
In fact, he has met with Black communities in over 100 countries
and visited countless museums and historical sites and given
thousands of lectures. He has taken beautiful photographs, some of
which feature in his other books published by Books of Africa,
Black Star, African Star over Asia, Uncovering the African Past and
his book for children, Assata-Garvey and Me. This book contains 202
of Runoko's best photographs mainly from museums in Egypt, Europe
and America. 118 of the pictures depict the African essence of
great Egyptian art from the early dynasties of Kmt down to Roman
times. Also included are pictures of Black people in Western Asia
and in China; black Buddhas in Vietnam and Thailand; images of
Black people in Europe - in Crete and among the Etruscans and
Romans; and images of the famous Olmec heads in Mexico. This is a
book to treasure, a perfect companion to Runoko's other works.
This is the third in a trilogy by the well-known African-American
scholar, Runoko Rashidi. In the first two volumes which have sold
well, Black Star: The African Presence in Early Europe, and African
Star over Asia: The African Presence in the East he interpreted the
work of earlier scholars and provided new evidence of the important
historical role of Black people in Europe and Asia. This new book
pays tribute to the great scholar, Ivan Van Sertima, author of They
Came before Columbus and founder of the Journal of African
Civilizations. It brings together the author's own research and
that of Van Sertima and other Black scholars including Chancellor
Williams, William Leo Hansberry, John G.Jackson and Cheikh Anta
Diop. It discusses the origins, the nature and the historical
development of the civilisations, providing details of the
dynasties. It throws light on African links with Sumer, South Asia
and, not least, the Olmec and their successors in Mexico. It
punctures several racial myths including those relating to
anthropological theory.
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