
A Short History of Africa
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Narrado por:
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Ralph Cosham
This classic work draws on the whole range of literature about Africa as well as evidence provided by archaeology, oral traditions, language relationships, and social institutions. It marshals the most authoritative views of African specialists into an absorbing narrative and puts forward original conclusions that take the study of Africa a stage further.
©1998 Roland Oliver and J. D. Fage (P)1996 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Reseñas de la Crítica
"Well researched, well written, well presented...Howard's crisp English accent adds an air of importance to the text." ( KLIATT)
Any additional comments?
The language of this text is quite out of date, actually referring to black people in Africa as "colored" - quite out of date for modern language, especially when other ethnic groups are identified by actual names instead of outdated language.Needs an update
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Things I liked:
Comprehensive scope. From prehistory all the way through recent events, with a good distribution between periods.
The whole continent. For such a short work spanning such a long time scale, I was impressed that they didn't cut corners. Northern Africa is included as part of Africa, showing the full range of historical patterns and trajectories. Many "short" histories, and even many not-so-short ones, cut out Northern Africa as some kind of anomaly. This book manages to nicely incorporate Egypt, Libya, Morocco, Chad, Sudan, and others into the whole of African history. It's very interesting to see the flows of trade, people, ideas, and even the conflicts that have traversed the Sahara going back to ancient times as an integral part of the unique dynamics of the continent.
Focus on the big picture. This book does a really nice job taking so much time and space, so many peoples and places, so many cultures and religions, and synthesizing them into a workable narrative. You get a great sense of the larger story of African histories.
Multiplicity. In doing the above, the book doesn't shy away from the uniqueness of each region, sub region, nation, and all the cultures of the continent. The authors strike a good balance between the forest and the trees--managing to touch all the big bases with enough detail to provide substance without getting caught up in the minutia.
I'm especially pleased with the rather nice treatment of the ancient history in all the various regions, and likewise with medieval and colonial history, while still managing to give an impressive, sweeping account of everything you'd expect to hear about in the modern history (and some, like the West Saharan conflict) that I was surprised got more than a casual mention. The whole thing follows a well written narrative that bounces between all these geographical areas without the reader noticing or feeling disoriented.
If there's one criticism to make, I suppose it would be that to do all this in such a short volume leaves little room for historical controversy. Most of the book is a factual narrative style that sometimes glosses over, and other times skips entirely, some of the big historiographic questions. There's not enough time to go over competing hypotheses in detail, although the Authors do a decent job in several notable examples. Which is fine, just be aware that if you research more you'll uncover some distinctions regarding dates and exact chronologies, etc. But this is meant to be an overview and it's quite a brilliant one, so one can't expect exhaustive examination of each argument every time there's some ambiguity in the sources or in the archaeological record.
Highly recommended.
Concise, Comprehensive, Well-Written
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Good but...
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I did find the archeological evidence to be lacking for sub-saharan Africa and the narrative heavily biased by European perspectives.
It is up to today's African scholars to correct the record.
A rare and fascinating history of the continent
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Good medieval history
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Nice, brief, somewhat dated overview
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Extremely outdated!
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Boring
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