Showing posts with label africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label africa. Show all posts

First Footsteps in East Africa Review

First Footsteps in East Africa
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Though I was aware of Burton before reading this text, I had no idea how much I would enjoy his writing. His language is eloquent, with an almost stereotypically dry British wit, especially as he describes his companions. At times, Burton seems to lose himself in the aesthetic response to Africa's environment, allowing his writing to swell to almost purple prose in his descriptions.
I also enjoyed reading this text through the lens of Edward Said's notions of Orientalism. Burton certainly falls prey to the Eurocentrism typical of his era, and at times his descriptions of the rationale of his Arab / Somali companions is borderline offensive. However, what I found most interesting in this text is Burton's own critique of Europeans. In First Footsteps, one could argue that Said's Orientalism isn't driven by culture but class. Burton is just as disgusted by the English working class as he is by Somali nomads.
The Kindle version contains no illustrations; I would highly recommend referring to a map while reading First Footsteps. Also, the footnotes are not linked, but I didn't find that particularly bothersome.

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This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts - the books may have occasional errors that do not impede the reading experience. We believe this work is culturally important and have elected to bring the book back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. This text refers to the Bibliobazaar edition.

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Fair Chase in North America Review

Fair Chase in North America
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Boddington proves once again why he is the best general hunting writer alive today. In his usual style, he covers nearly all of the huntable species in North America, blending together information about the game, the method of hunting it, appropriate rifles, and his personal experiences hunting that species. Not only is it informative and useful as a reference work, it is simply enjoyable to read.

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The Seven Lives of Colonel Patterson: How an Irish Lion Hunter Led the Jewish Legion to Victory Review

The Seven Lives of Colonel Patterson: How an Irish Lion Hunter Led the Jewish Legion to Victory
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Col. Patterson was an amazing man, very brave and completely devoted to the re-birth of the Jewish State of Israel. He lived a fascinating life and this book does a good job telling you about it. If you value the idea that one person can make a positive difference in this world, then get this book and enjoy learning about the life of Colonel John Henry Patterson and his active, unceasing devotion to Israel's re-birth.

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A History of Africa Review

A History of Africa
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With a sharp eye towards debunking a few centuries of self-serving white European mythic history about the origins of African societies, but without any particular ax to grind but those of intelligence and accuracy, J.D. Fage's work is scholarly and readable. It is a critical survey, with an excellent bibliography spanning a large number of subjects. His knowledge of west Africa is particularly impressive, and he clearly delineates the powers of both external cultural forces sweeping into Africa (Islam) as well as those that originated there.

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A History of Africa is a thorough narrative history of the continent from its beginnings to the twenty-first century. Long established at the forefront of African Studies, thisbook addresses the events of the 1990s and beyond.The issues discussed include:post-apartheid South Africathe prospects for democratization in Africa at the beginning of the new millenniumdevelopments in Muslim North Africa including the threat of Islamic fundamentalismeconomic and social developments including the devastating impact of Third World debt and the provision of debt reliefcultural, environmental and gender issues in Modern Africa.

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Saltwater Slavery: A Middle Passage from Africa to American Diaspora Review

Saltwater Slavery: A Middle Passage from Africa to American Diaspora
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Stephanie Smallwood has written a book entitled "Saltwater Slavery" that aims, as she says, to provide a linear analysis of the commodification process that transformed Africans into slaves. Her focus is on enslavement in the Gold Coast and trans-Atlantic trade during the 17th and early 18th centuries.
The book is broken into three sections - Capture and enslavement in the Gold Coast, transformation from human to commodity, and the African Diaspora in America. The first section is necessarily short and merely sets the tone for Smallwood's argument - that the enslavement process was a matter of commodifying humans into marketable objects.
The second section, the commodification of these people into objects, is well researched and eminently readable. Smallwood is especially powerful when evoking images of the horrors that individuals underwent during the process.
The third section, the African Diaspora, is also short and to the point, but does not benefit Smallwood's argument as much as the first two sections do.
Overall, this is a good book, but has some minor flaws - first, the Diaspora section is (as previously mentioned) a little weak, and the fact that Smallwood focuses on the Trans-Atlantic Commerce between the Gold Coast and the British Caribbean leaves something to be desired, since both Virginia & South Carolina were important colonies that had slaves during this period, but are largely omitted from the work.

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Money Has No Smell: The Africanization of New York City Review

Money Has No Smell: The Africanization of New York City
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An old Latin saying, Pecunia non olet, translates as "Money has no odor". Originally related to the urine tax levied by Roman emperors upon the collection of urine in public latrines, it means that the value of money is not tainted by its origins. West African street peddlers in New York City use this ancient adage to justify why they sell baseball caps ornamented with foul language, or African statues and masks that these pious Moslems associate with idolatry and refer to simply as "wood". They also feel no qualms about selling bootlegged videos, unlicensed merchandise, and fake fashion goods, but they make it clear to their clients that they are not selling the originals. They believe in honesty in transactions, and avoid everything that reeks of "funny business".
For the tourists and African Americans who patronize their stalls, their replication of an African market in Harlem has a "smell": indeed, the buyers are in for the exoticism, and they want to experience a piece of Africa in New York City. Growing out from illegal stalls and having gone through several relocations, the African street market has become one of the city's tourist attractions. Some African American clients are on a quest for origins: they are looking after their African roots, and West African merchants have turned that longing for African origins into a commercial operation. They sell a commodified version of Afrocentrism, a specific ideological orientation that exerts a profound influence on African American sociocultural life. Associated with the figure of Malcolm X, Afrocentrism has been developed into a body of doctrine by scholars such as Molefi Asante who are tracing its roots to the ancient civilization of Egypt. It has led to the invention of modern rituals and traditions such as the festival of Kwanzaa, a seven-day African American holiday celebrated between Christmas and the New Year. Of course, for West African merchants in New York, the meaning of Kwanzaa has little cultural resonance; it is not so much a sacred celebration as a simulation of Africa that is good for business.
The story of "kente" cloth illustrates how commodities are created and transformed by transnational networks that use the Afrocentric ideology as a source of profit. Kente is the name of a colorful, intricate, handwoven silk cloth traditionally worn by Asante nobles in Ghana on ceremonial occasions. The antique clothes are colored with vegetable dyes of deep blue, yellow, green, and red hues and are stitched in subtle and elegant patterns. Silk and rayon kente strips--handwoven but admittedly inferior to the original cloths--gradually became popular in the United States. Many icons of African American cultural life began to wear these kente strips as scarves--colorful material badges of African identity. Sometime in the early 1990s, enterprising Koreans entrepreneurs saw an opportunity. Working from photographs of handwoven Ghanaian silk kente, they designed a cotton print cloth version--for a fraction of the original's cost. Small textile factories in New Jersey began to mass produce them, and they were then transformed into "kente" cloth caps, sports jackets with "kente" cloth lapels, as well as dresses, skirts, and trousers.
The story doesn't end here: the success of New Jersey "kente" shocked the African textile industry into action. Ghanaian textile factories reproduced the cloth design, undercutting the costs, and shipped it to New York City as well as to other West African markets, where the cloths were transformed in low-cost textile mills. The "Ghanaian" reproduction of kente, whatever its origin, surpassed the New Jersey version in quality at a cheaper price. Asian entrepreneurs in lower Manhattan also bought bolts of fabric from African wholesalers and transformed it into caps and cheap clothing in downtown sweatshops manned by Asian immigrants. And soon African "kente" was back on the streets of Harlem, peddled by West African cloth merchants and street vendors, and sold mostly to African Americans in search of authenticity. As the book notes, "this confluence of symbolic contradiction is a small reminder of how the flow of money, goods, and people across increasingly fragmented spaces is transforming social landscapes, making them less bounded, more confusing."
Paul Stoller, the author of this ethnographic study, is on a different quest. Before conducting fieldwork through participant observation in street markets in New York City, his research experience had been in the rural western region of the Republic of Niger, where he studied symbolic interactions and religious practices in ethnically diverse villages. His familiarity with the Nigerien cultural context, and knowledge of the Songhay language as well as of French, gained him acceptance among the Francophone African merchants, otherwise suspicious of outside interference that may draw attention to their undocumented status. His informants were apparently happy to have him hang around, discuss their lives, and accompany them in various business transactions or administrative formalities. One goes so far as to suggest to him to change career and become a diplomat: "You know, you should come to Côte d'Ivoire or better yet, to Niger, and give out visas. With someone who understands our ways as well as you do, it would be very good for business."

The Africanization of New York City refers to the ways West African immigrants recreate part of their communal life in their new environment. As the author shows, the street markets are organized like many West African markets, where the space is often apportioned and regulated through informal mechanisms. Members of the same ethnic group or place of origin usually occupy contiguous space and sell the same kind of merchandise. In Manhattan, the aristocracy of street vendors is formed by the Senegalese, often members of the Mourid religious brotherhood, who were the first to migrate and who established a lock on informal vending space. Kinship, ethnicity, and nationality also directly affect the density of contacts and degree of trust and cooperation, which is bolstered by Islamic morality. Practices of long-distance trade in West Africa is also reproduced in the United States, where merchants from the same kinship network or ethnic group often pool resources and travel to what they call the "American bush", peddling their wares in African American festivals or Third World commercial fairs.
The author is also interested in describing the global forces that have compelled these merchants to leave West Africa and develop their trade in the streets of New York. Most West African traders come to the United States as single men, leaving behind their wives, children, parents, and complex extended families. Most of them are undocumented immigrants; this means they may avoid going to physicians, postpone English instruction at night schools, keep their proceeds in cash rather than bank accounts, and fail to report the theft of inventory. As the author writes, "they work, eat, and sleep with only the slightest exposure to American social life. They count their days in America, waiting to have made enough money to return home with honor." Having completed this detailed ethnography, the reader may agree with the author that "There is something heroic about this group of West African traders."

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Three Years with Sylvia Review

Three Years with Sylvia
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This is an absolutely wonderful book by one of the 20th century's true Renaissance men.
Widely known as a highly successful mercenary soldier, Mike Hoare was instrumental et al in the rescue of countless missionaries during the ferocious fighting which engulfed the Congo during the sixties.
But here, in a fascinating display of versatility, Hoare lays aside his weapons to write a superbly heart-warming tale of adventure on the high seas.
Hoare recounts how, while working in Asia, he decides to buy a 100 Baltic Trader yacht and together with his family, embarks on a three year odyssey afloat.
What follows is a touching tale of family life at sea, as Mike Hoare and family voyage from port to port, meeting outlandish characters and experiencing adventures that make this a fast-paced and thoroughly enjoyable read.
There were times that tears literally rolled down my cheeks as I cried with laughter at some of Hoare's misadventures, only to find myself rocked by true tragedy mere pages later.
This book is about life, and few authors today are as adept at capturing each nuance as Mike Hoare.

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Congo-Paris: Transnational Traders on the Margins of the Law (African Issues) Review

Congo-Paris: Transnational Traders on the Margins of the Law (African Issues)
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"Congo-Paris" is a fine example of the recent trend in anthropology away from the localized study of communities and towards analysis that transcends geographic boundaries. Not that this study is "multi-sited" (to use the dominant buzzword): MacGaffey and Bazenguissa conducted their fieldwork for the book entirely in Paris, interviewing dozens of subjects from both Congo-Brazzaville and Congo-Kinshasa. But Paris is just one venue in these transnational subjects' life histories as they range back and forth across national, legal, commercial, and cultural frontiers.
While the authors set out to validate the Congolese quest for relief from political and economic hardship at home, the image they present of this loosely-defined community of traders will do nothing for its image abroad. These individuals define themselves through the act of quietly circumventing the rules (particularly import duties and immigration laws), resisting governmental authority without manifesting any visible signs of dissent. This is understandable, given the corrupt and authoritarian Congolese regimes of recent decades. But the transnational traders' ethos of stealthy noncompliance extends to their overseas existence as well, with the result in these Parisian cases being a gamut of criminal activity from smuggling and apartment squatting to drug dealing and theft. "Model immigrants" they are not, regardless of whether their behavior represents a survival strategy. One wonders just how representative this underworld is of the larger community of Congolese living in Paris, and whether those Congolese living more lawful existences there object to being tarred with this brush of illegality.
Such moral qualms aside, I give "Congo-Paris" high marks for its thorough and penetrating analysis of its subjects, a very difficult group to interview given its members' legal status and clandestine activities. No doubt its success owes much to the collaboration between MacGaffey (British) and Bazenguissa (Congolese). The book also skillfully negotiates the difficult and shifting theoretical territory of anthropology to bring outside perspectives to bear on its subjects. Finally, it makes a strong case for redefining anthropology in the context of ongoing processes of globalization. I suspect that we will be seeing a good many more studies like this one in the future.

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Farmers, Traders, Warriors, and Kings: Female Power and Authority in Northern Igboland, 1900-1960 (Social History of Africa) Review

Farmers, Traders, Warriors, and Kings: Female Power and Authority in Northern Igboland, 1900-1960 (Social History of Africa)
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I read Achebe's Farmers, Traders, Warriors and Kings for a seminar on "African Women" this past semester; and I must say that of all of the books that we had to read (including Oyewumi, Robertson, Romero, Clark, etc.) this was by far my favorite! Achebe challenges readers to rethink the concepts of gender and power as she explores women "kings" in Africa's most populous nation of Nigeria. The histories presented, and the perspective from which they are presented, are extremely insightful and refreshing. In fact, each Igbo woman springs to life in this particularly rich text. As a piece of scholarship, Achebe's book is unsurpassed in its engagement with indigenous meaning, interpretation and understanding. She spent over ten months collecting the oral sources which form the body of the work. Her first chapter, a methodology and "self naming" piece is one of the most brilliant expressions of field research engagement of any scholar--African or otherwise--that I have read. In short, this book has led me to rethink my graduate concentration and I now plan on pursuing work on African women. I excitedly look forward to reading Achebe's new biography of a female king.

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