Africa: An Introduction

Author:   Eustace Palmer (Georgia College, USA)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367629830


Pages:   308
Publication Date:   02 July 2021
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Africa: An Introduction


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Author:   Eustace Palmer (Georgia College, USA)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.707kg
ISBN:  

9780367629830


ISBN 10:   0367629836
Pages:   308
Publication Date:   02 July 2021
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

1. The geography of Africa and topics in African history 2. Slavery 3. Imperialism in Africa 4. African nationalism and the drive towards independence 5. African politics 6. African social systems 7. Africa’s environmental problems 8. Religion in Africa 9. African economies 10. Women in Africa 11. Africa’s health issues 12. Education in Africa 13. African technology, music, and art 14. African literature

Reviews

Captivating, extremely well written and informative about various aspects of Africa. Dwight Call, Emeritus Vice President for International Education, Georgia College and State University, USA Palmer's encyclopedic analysis covers the African continent from her earliest beginnings to the mixed socio-economic difficulties of the contemporary Nation-State. Scholars, students (at all levels), and enthusiasts will find this text an unmatched exploration of the continent's achievements and failings, her complicity in her predation, and the appalling choices that hold back the realization of immense potentialities today. We witness the marginalization of Women and the Poor, elite gains in the plunder of resources, and Civil/Military repression partly relieved by limited corrective IMF strictures followed by sputtering political renewal in recent years. We proceed from pyramids to modern architecture; from Griot to Handel; from traditional dancing to ballet; from pre-colonial drumming and flutes to the cello. We are conducted from village Koranic education, through the seminal University of Timbuktu, Tutuola, Achebe, Laye and Wa Thiongo to Nwapa, Dangaremba and Soyinka. In all, a breathless pace, but with glorious compensations in profound erudition. Mac Dixon-Fyle, Professor Emeritus of History, DePauw University, USA Palmer's long overdue detailed book, Africa: An Introduction, provides in-depth information to the serious student who wants first-hand knowledge about various aspects of Africa from its history to slavery to imperialism to social systems to women to health issues to literature. The book provides a foundation for what happened on the continent of Africa to what is happening now. It is a much-needed resource due to increased interest in Africa from the academic front to political, social, and economic concerns. Mary Mears, Associate Professor of English, Middle Georgia State University, University System of Georgia Africa Council, Chair, USA The cross-cultural and international impact of Africa: An Introduction on a new generation of Africans and Africanists will be inevitable because of the author's sheer grasp of interdisciplinary studies and his very compelling way of providing evidence to highlight some important, but often neglected, cornerstones of the African experience. Depicting the wide variety of histories, cultural and religious traditions, social mores, and peoples of Africa, Palmer's highly readable and very well-informed book is a thoughtful and completely reliable guide to understanding a huge and complicated continent, its peoples, and events that have led to its present condition. The author clearly knows how to explore and present the ambiguous, beautiful, but oftentimes disastrous, histories of his beloved Africa. Abioseh Michael Porter, Ph.D., Professor of English, Drexel University, USA


Palmer's encyclopedic analysis covers the African continent from her earliest beginnings to the mixed socio-economic difficulties of the contemporary Nation-State. Scholars, students (at all levels), and enthusiasts will find this text an unmatched exploration of the continent's achievements and failings, her complicity in her predation, and the appalling choices that hold back the realization of immense potentialities today. We witness the marginalization of Women and the Poor, elite gains in the plunder of resources, and Civil/Military repression partly relieved by limited corrective IMF strictures followed by sputtering political renewal in recent years. We proceed from pyramids to modern architecture; from Griot to Handel; from traditional dancing to ballet; from pre-colonial drumming and flutes to the cello. We are conducted from village Koranic education, through the seminal University of Timbuktu, Tutuola, Achebe, Laye and Wa Thiongo to Nwapa, Dangaremba and Soyinka. In all, a breathless pace, but with glorious compensations in profound erudition. Mac Dixon-Fyle, Professor Emeritus of History, DePauw University, USA Palmer's long overdue detailed book, Africa: An Introduction, provides in-depth information to the serious student who wants first-hand knowledge about various aspects of Africa from its history to slavery to imperialism to social systems to women to health issues to literature. The book provides a foundation for what happened on the continent of Africa to what is happening now. It is a much-needed resource due to increased interest in Africa from the academic front to political, social, and economic concerns. Mary Mears, Associate Professor of English, Middle Georgia State University, University System of Georgia Africa Council, Chair, USA The cross-cultural and international impact of Africa: An Introduction on a new generation of Africans and Africanists will be inevitable because of the author's sheer grasp of interdisciplinary studies and his very compelling way of providing evidence to highlight some important, but often neglected, cornerstones of the African experience. Depicting the wide variety of histories, cultural and religious traditions, social mores, and peoples of Africa, Palmer's highly readable and very well-informed book is a thoughtful and completely reliable guide to understanding a huge and complicated continent, its peoples, and events that have led to its present condition. The author clearly knows how to explore and present the ambiguous, beautiful, but oftentimes disastrous, histories of his beloved Africa. Abioseh Michael Porter, Ph.D., Professor of English, Drexel University, USA


Palmer's encyclopedic analysis covers the African continent from her earliest beginnings to the mixed socio-economic difficulties of the contemporary Nation-State. Scholars, students (at all levels), and enthusiasts will find this text an unmatched exploration of the continent's achievements and failings, her complicity in her predation, and the appalling choices that hold back the realization of immense potentialities today. We witness the marginalization of Women and the Poor, elite gains in the plunder of resources, and Civil/Military repression partly relieved by limited corrective IMF strictures followed by sputtering political renewal in recent years. We proceed from pyramids to modern architecture; from Griot to Handel; from traditional dancing to ballet; from pre-colonial drumming and flutes to the cello. We are conducted from village Koranic education, through the seminal University of Timbuktu, Tutuola, Achebe, Laye and Wa Thiongo to Nwapa, Dangaremba and Soyinka. In all, a breathless pace, but with glorious compensations in profound erudition. Mac Dixon-Fyle, Professor Emeritus of History, DePauw University, USA


Palmer's encyclopedic analysis covers the African continent from her earliest beginnings to the mixed socio-economic difficulties of the contemporary Nation-State. Scholars, students (at all levels), and enthusiasts will find this text an unmatched exploration of the continent's achievements and failings, her complicity in her predation, and the appalling choices that hold back the realization of immense potentialities today. We witness the marginalization of Women and the Poor, elite gains in the plunder of resources, and Civil/Military repression partly relieved by limited corrective IMF strictures followed by sputtering political renewal in recent years. We proceed from pyramids to modern architecture; from Griot to Handel; from traditional dancing to ballet; from pre-colonial drumming and flutes to the cello. We are conducted from village Koranic education, through the seminal University of Timbuktu, Tutuola, Achebe, Laye and Wa Thiongo to Nwapa, Dangaremba and Soyinka. In all, a breathless pace, but with glorious compensations in profound erudition. Mac Dixon-Fyle, Professor Emeritus of History, DePauw University, USA Palmer's long overdue detailed book, Africa: An Introduction, provides in-depth information to the serious student who wants first-hand knowledge about various aspects of Africa from its history to slavery to imperialism to social systems to women to health issues to literature. The book provides a foundation for what happened on the continent of Africa to what is happening now. It is a much-needed resource due to increased interest in Africa from the academic front to political, social, and economic concerns. Mary Mears, Associate Professor of English, Middle Georgia State University, University System of Georgia Africa Council, Chair, USA


Author Information

Eustace Palmer is Emeritus Professor of English and erstwhile Coordinator of Africana Studies at Georgia College and State University, USA. He was born in Sierra Leone, and taught at Fourah Bay College, the University of Sierra Leone, for several years, before relocating to the United States. He is one of the pioneer critics of African literature and is regarded as one of the world’s leading authorities in that field.

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