Showing posts with label african diaspora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label african diaspora. Show all posts

Africans and Native Americans: The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red-Black Peoples Review

Africans and Native Americans: The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red-Black Peoples
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This book used historical sources from explorers, priests, and colonizers to describe the appearance of the indigenous peoples found in the Americas in the 14th, 15th, 16th centuries. From the witnesses own descriptions these people were dark copper-toned woolly-haired peoples often referred to by the witnesses as ethiopian and or negro. These are the ancestors so many so-call African-American elders spoke of to their children and grandchildren. This book should be required reading as well as be on every "black" family's book shelf. A fascinating read without the politics of the western scholar. I would also suggest another book entitled When Rocks Cry Out by Horace Butler.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Africans and Native Americans: The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red-Black Peoples



Buy NowGet 12% OFF

Click here for more information about Africans and Native Americans: The Language of Race and the Evolution of Red-Black Peoples

Read More...

Way of Death: Merchant Capitalism and the Angolan Slave Trade, 1730-1830 Review

Way of Death: Merchant Capitalism and the Angolan Slave Trade, 1730-1830
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Joseph Miller's Way of Death is an exhaustingly long volume for a non-academic reader, but a rich and rewarding one, if you like your history deeply rooted in archival sources. The title (and headings such as "Floating Tombs" and "Merchants of Death") make the book sound like popularization, though they actually are more a reflection of Miller's penchant for metaphor, which gives the book an almost Tolstoyan quality. Indeed, the division of the book into discrete sections that view the Angolan slaving economy as it affected those involved (native African individuals and polities, mixed-race "Luso-African" traders, Brazilian ship and plantation owners, Lisbon-based merchants, Portuguese governors) lets you see his subject with a depth and complexity reminiscent of good fiction. But it doesn't make Way of Death easy to read-the section most like a narrative account, which ties together a number of the previous threads, doesn't come till well after the 500th page. Miller feels no need to summarize political history, so I recommend as background an earlier short work such as David Birmingham's Trade and Conflict in Angola (though its economic history needs correction in the light of Miller's research).
Trained as an Africanist, Miller is particularly sensitive to the Central African sense of wealth as people rather than as goods or specie, and the different political economies leading from one kind of wealth to the other-a linkage that passes from the traditional elders and lineage systems, in which control of land and women's fertility was power, to the monarchs and warlords who used material goods to acquire dependents, to the merchant princes who stockpiled goods and slaves rather than dependents, to Luso-African traders who provided the link between textiles, muskets, and rum from Europe, Asia, and Brazil and the slaves given up by Africans. The boundaries were not stable, and the "slaving frontier" moved east from Luanda and the coast in jumps, partly in response to periodic war and drought. After three and a half centuries, this "catchment zone" for captives spread across a vast expanse of Central Africa from the Congo to the upper Zambezi and the edges of the Kalahari.
From the perspective of Atlantic economies, the financial basis of 18th-century Luso-Brazilian slaving was very rickety. Exchange of precious metals for slaves was rare. Those most immediately concerned on the African end took European goods to sell on credit and only saw reimbursement after the surviving slaves were sold-at more or less fixed prices-in Brazil. The chronic undercapitalization of Angolan slaving and the dependence of both the Angolan and Brazilian side on credit extended by Portuguese and (indirectly) British merchants is a major theme of the book. The appalling death rate among captives between point of capture and delivery in Brazil made slaves a highly perishable commodity and considerable financial risk. Those seeking to wrest a profit engaged in "tight-packing" on slave ships, which meant cheating on official capacity and reducing space for water and food in order to fit more slaves on board-which raised the death rate on ships even higher. Miller's title is no hyperbole-between the long trip from the hinterland, the dreadful conditions in Luanda barracoons, and the middle passage, a minority of those who began the "way of death" reached Brazil.
A must-read for anyone seriously interested in Central Africa or the Atlantic slave trade.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Way of Death: Merchant Capitalism and the Angolan Slave Trade, 1730-1830



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Way of Death: Merchant Capitalism and the Angolan Slave Trade, 1730-1830

Read More...

Senegambia and the Atlantic Slave Trade (African Studies) Review

Senegambia and the Atlantic Slave Trade (African Studies)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Un execelente libro pasa conocer sobre la trata de esclavos de esa parte de Africa. Mayormente desde la perperstiva desde el mundo africanos.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Senegambia and the Atlantic Slave Trade (African Studies)

This authoritative study of 400 years of Senegambian history is unrivaled in its detailed grasp of published and unpublished materials. Taking as his subject the vast area covering the Senegal and Gambia river basins, Boubacar Barry explores the changing dynamics of regional trade, clashes between African and Muslim authorities, the colonial system and the slave trade. This newly-translated book is a vital tool in our understanding of West African history.

Buy NowGet 7% OFF

Click here for more information about Senegambia and the Atlantic Slave Trade (African Studies)

Read More...

The Infidel: A Novel Based on the Life of John Newton Review

The Infidel: A Novel Based on the Life of John Newton
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The Infidel is a sometimes dark but powerfully moving story of one man's struggle to understand and accept God's faithfulness and divine grace. Mr. Musser crafts a vivid and compelling account of the life of John Newton, a British sea captain and the author of the beloved hymn "Amazing Grace." From Newton's lonely childhood through his tumultuous teenage and adult years aboard various military and slave ships, Mr. Musser expertly crafts this adventure. The story tracks Newton's life through his physical and spiritual journey filled with riches and rags, love and loss, hope and sorrow, debauchery and redemption. I thoroughly enjoyed The Infidel and highly recommend this book for its entertainment value, historical perspective and its ultimate message of redemption through God's truly amazing grace.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Infidel: A Novel Based on the Life of John Newton

A faithless wretch of a man in a vile and violent profession, John Newton stood as the infidel, a life lived in opposition to the gospel.Blinded by ambition, he was lost in a sea of greed, money, and power. But this slave ship captain would have an encounter with a grace so amazing that not only would it change him; it would also bless the world with his writing one of the most endearing and enduring hymns of the Christian faith.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Infidel: A Novel Based on the Life of John Newton

Read More...

The Westo Indians: Slave Traders of the Early Colonial South Review

The Westo Indians: Slave Traders of the Early Colonial South
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This is an entire book devoted to a "polity" or group of American Indian people who are not well known by the general public. However, they had a substantial influence on the development of colonial southeastern North America in the 17th century.
The author first addresses the identification of these people and presents compelling evidence that they were remnants of the Erie Indians of the northeast, who migrated to Virginia and then South Carolina after the devastating "Beaver Wars" of the mid seventeenth century. They then developed an economy centered around traffic in human beings, captured people from local tribes who were then traded to the European (primarily English) colonists in exchange for manufactured goods, especially firearms and ammunition.
This is a story of movements and reorganization of native American people, including the Westos as well as the other tribes with whom they came in contact. It depicts the Indians not as victims of European power so much as active players in colonial trade and politics.
The author tells the story clearly and coherently, and he provides excellent documentation. This is not simply a chronology of names and dates, but a true historical story, which is retold very well.
This is a book for people interested in history. It is not about the material culture of an "Indian tribe." Firearms figure prominently in the Westo world, but there is very little detail about the actual guns they used... just a couple of paragraphs, and "gun guys" might be disappointed. There are some nice maps, although they would be easier to read if they were enlarged to full-page size. There are no other illustrations. The index is comprehensive.
This is an excellent book, scholarly but easy to read, and highly recommended for readers interested in the factual history of the American southeast.

Click Here to see more reviews about: The Westo Indians: Slave Traders of the Early Colonial South


A comprehensive study that rescues the Westo from obscurity.

The Westo Indians, who lived in the Savannah River region during the second half of the 17th century, are mentioned in few primary documents and only infrequently in secondary literature. There are no known Westo archaeological sites; no artifacts can be linked to the group; and no more than a single word of their language is known to us today. Yet, from the extant evidence, it is believed that the Westos, who migrated from around Lake Erie by 1656, had a profound effect on the development of the colonial South.

This volume reproduces excerpts from all 19 documents that indisputably reference the Westos, although the Europeans referred to them by a variety of names. Most of the information was written by Lords Proprietors who never met the Westos, or by a handful of Carolinians who did. But the author is able to chart a highly plausible history of this Native group who, for a period, thrived on the Southern frontier.

The narrative traces their northeastern origins and how the Erie conflicts with the Five Nations Iroquois in the Beaver Wars forced them southward, where they found new economic opportunities in the lucrative slave trade. At the height of their influence, between 1659 and 1680, it is believed the Westos captured and sold several thousand Indians from Spanish Florida, often trading them for guns. Eventually, their military advantage over the Indians of the lower South was compromised by the rise of powerful confederacies of native peoples, who could acquire equivalent firearms from the Europeans. Even though the aggressive Westos declined, they had influenced profound change in the Southeast. They furthered the demise of chiefly organization, helped to shift the emphasis from agricultural to hunting economies, and influenced the dramatic decrease in the number and diversity of native polities.




Buy Now

Click here for more information about The Westo Indians: Slave Traders of the Early Colonial South

Read More...