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Toby Green A Fistful of Shells (Paperback)

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Specificaties

Objectstaat
Nieuw: Een nieuw, ongelezen en ongebruikt boek in perfecte staat waarin geen bladzijden ontbreken of ...
Book Title
Fistful of Shells : West Africa from the Rise of the Slave Trade to the Age of Revolution
Publication Name
A Fistful of Shells
Title
A Fistful of Shells
Subtitle
West Africa from the Rise of the Slave Trade to the Age of Revolu
Author
Toby Green
Format
Trade Paperback
ISBN-10
022678973X
EAN
9780226789736
ISBN
9780226789736
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Genre
History
Release Date
05/03/2021
Release Year
2021
Language
English
Country/Region of Manufacture
US
Item Height
1.7in
Item Length
9in
Item Width
6in
Item Weight
30.2 Oz
Publication Year
2021
Topic
Africa / West, Europe / General
Number of Pages
650 Pages

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Product Information

By the time the "Scramble for Africa" among European colonial powers began in the late nineteenth century, Africa had already been globally connected for centuries, but with the growth of the slave trade came the decline of African kingdoms. Drawing on written histories, archival research in nine countries, art, oral history, archaeology, and letters, Green lays bare the transformations in Africa that have shaped global politics and economics since the fifteenth century and paints a masterful portrait of West Africa, past and present. Book jacket.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10
022678973x
ISBN-13
9780226789736
eBay Product ID (ePID)
27050022902

Product Key Features

Book Title
Fistful of Shells : West Africa from the Rise of the Slave Trade to the Age of Revolution
Author
Toby Green
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Topic
Africa / West, Europe / General
Publication Year
2021
Genre
History
Number of Pages
650 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9in
Item Height
1.7in
Item Width
6in
Item Weight
30.2 Oz

Additional Product Features

Reviews
A Fistful of Shells , Green's survey of the economic history of West African slave-trading states from the Niger valley to the drainage area of the Zaire, is exemplary: scholarly, sensitive, enlightening and often vivid. The author, a lecturer at King's College London, does much more than make Africa seem normal. He proclaims a daunting ambition: to explore the local and global implications of West Africa's economies during the age of slavery. He succeeds., a groundbreaking book. He brings together almost everything known about the economic history of the West African empires and peoples until the beginning of the 19th century in a coherent vision., ...a necessarily dense but highly accessible history of the rise and fall of the early modern nations of West Africa, covering a region ranging from present day Senegal to Angola., A Fistful of Shells is the fruit of research conducted in the archives of nine nations and required the author to undertake fieldwork across eight West African states. It shows. Passages from the author's travels provide observations and anecdotes that usefully link the past to the present day and give voice to the lives and experiences of African themselves. Ranging far beyond economics, Green's thesis becomes, ultimately, an almost philosophical meditation on the nature of value across differing cultures and societies during a long and underexamined era of early globalisation., Toby Green is uniquely qualified to evoke its breathtaking cultural diversity and the sophistication of its civilisations, having travelled extensively through the region over a period of two decades and immersed himself in its archives as well as its oral history and performance culture., A rich and insightful work. . . . What emerges is a radically different view of the region from the one that has been generally available. West Africa, according to Green, was both cosmopolitan in its outlook, culturally and politically sophisticated and in some ways globally connected long before Europeans arrived to 'civilise the natives.' . . . Green concludes by pointing to the lack of history being taught in schools and universities in West Africa and elsewhere; if it is taught at all, it tends to focus on the slave trade. A Fistful of Shells shows that there was so much more, and of so much relevance when looking at the issues of our own time., His book is a work of staggering scholarship, drawing on previously untapped sources locked away in European vaults and historical records which, taken as a whole, contradict the age-old perceptions foisted on Africa., This impressive and welcome book engages with the new wave of studies on African economic history and places African societies at the center of global events. Green interrogates and historicizes state failure, violence, corruption, military ideologies, commodification, and globalization, convincingly arguing that roots of many of the current political and economic problems in Africa lie in the past. It is timely, relevant, and necessary in today's political and economic environment., For both Africanists and non-Africanists, this book sets by way of example a commanding challenge to finally dispense with habits of mind dating from the Atlantic slave trade era which unwittingly reduce Africa's historical importance and generative power, and to start making the connections which reveal West Africa's dynamic history within its shores and within the Atlantic world., One of its great strengths is that it reveals the often surprising success that Africans had throughout the first four hundred years of their encounter with Europe. . . . [a] sprawling and nuanced look at the steady depletion of a continent with a powerful lament about the lack of academic interest in Africa's precolonial eras., A rich and insightful work. . . . What emerges is a radically different view of the region from the one that has been generally available. West Africa, according to Green, was both cosmopolitan in its outlook, culturally and politically sophisticated and in some ways globally connected long before Europeans arrived to 'civilise the natives.' . . . Green concludes by pointing to the lack of history being taught in schools and universities in West Africa and elsewhere if it is taught at all, it tends to focus on the slave trade. A Fistful of Shells shows that there was so much more, and of so much relevance when looking at the issues of our own time., Green doesn't conjure a nostalgic vision of a 'merrie Africa' before European contact. Rather, he shows that cultural and commercial ties connecting west Africa to the wider world existed and flourished long before the consolidation of a capitalist system dominated by Europe and its settler-colonies. What was lost in the acceleration of western capitalism was a more generous, expansive and flexible idea of equality., The concept that is still prevalent in the West - that African history only really began when Europeans arrived - is a concept that still needs debunking. And author Toby Green, through dint of travel to West Africa and diligent research of archives in nine nations, has done just that, writing a remarkable book in the process., This meticulously researched book, based on archival research in nine countries, lays out a comprehensive overview of the economic history of West Africa and West-Central Africa before and after the slave trade. . . . A valuable history written in an accessible style., Drawing on written accounts and oral histories from nine countries, Green traces the long-term consequences of a European-dominated capitalist system that gave rise to mounting inequality and political upheaval in West and West-Central Africa. . . . Summing Up: Essential., Green's A Fistful of Shell s illuminates the flourishing and connected economy of West Africa that existed long before a European capitalist system established itself on the continent. Extraordinarily written and researched, the book paints a huge, complex canvas, crammed with individual detail., This original and thoughtful work is based on detailed first-hand knowledge of and collaboration with the cultures and peoples it depicts. Green uses a combination of documentary sources, both primary and secondary (many previously unexplored by European scholars), material culture and oral sources, including both extensive local collections and literature such as the Sunjata epic , skilfully woven into a persuasive and insightful narrative. . . . For all its impressive scholarship A Fistful of Shells is notably readable, supported by great illustrations and a stunning cover - and, in the best sense, personal., Green has written an important, well-researched, and highly enjoyable book. This volume is a major contribution to the 'renaissance of African economic history' and speaks to many ongoing debates that are relevant both within and outside academia...in the coming years this volume will be a must-read for all scholars, students, and general readers interested in the economic past of African societies both on the continent and in the diaspora., A 'Fistful of Shells' implies a materialist approach to western African history but Green is far more ambitious in synthesizing the scholarship that has emerged over the past several decades. He is as concerned with political history, the role of religion, and artistic achievements as he is with the economy. Hence, the books succeeds as an introduction, admittedly a very long and detailed one, to the history of western Africa and hence will enable non-specialists to acquire an overview that will help correct the continuing relative ignorance of African history among non-specialists and students., All too often, the history of early modern Africa is told from the perspective of outsiders. In his book A Fistful of Shells: West Africa from the Rise of the Slave Trade to the Age of Revolution , Toby Green draws upon a range of underutilized sources to describe the evolution of West Africa over a period of four transformative centuries. With these sources Green demonstrates that the region was integrated into the developing transcontinental trade networks far earlier than is often portrayed in more Western-centric accounts, and in ways that influenced the development of local communities long before European ships arrived off of their coast., ...historian Toby Green unearths some of the roots of Africa's current problems, while restoring the continent's rightful place in global economic history.
Table of Content
List of Maps Foreword Note on Spellings/Names Glossary Introduction Part One Causes: Economic Divergence in West and West- Central Africa Timelines for Part One 1 'Three Measures of Gold': The Rise and Fall of the Great Empires of the Sahel 2 Causeways across the Savannah: From Senegambia to Sierra Leone 3 Ready Money: The Gold Coast and the Gold Trade 4 Rivers of Cloth, Masks of Bronze: The Bights of Benin and Biafra 5 The Kingdom of Kongo: From Majesty to Revolt Coda to Part One Part Two Consequences: Politics, Belief and Revolutions from Below Timeline for Part Two: West African Political History, c. 1680-1850 Prologue to Part Two 6 'With Boots Worth 3 Slaves': Slavery and Value in the Eighteenth Century 7 On a War Footing: The 'Fiscal- Military State' in West African Politics 8 Feeding Power: New Societies, New Worldviews 9 Transnational Africas, Struggle and the Rising of Modernity 10 Warrior Aristocracies and Pushback from Below 11 Let them Drink Rum! Islam, Revolution and the Aristocracy Conclusion Bibliography Notes List of Illustrations Index
Copyright Date
2021
Dewey Decimal
966
Intended Audience
Trade
Dewey Edition
23

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