Clio smiles, then weeps. A hundred years after its destruction, the empire of Benin enters the hall of fame of civilizations. Standing alongside old standards like Greece and Rome that have constituted the canon at least since the Renaissance, and next to some newcomers like the ancient Maya, the Aztec empire, China\u27s Tang Dynasty, and India\u27s Gupta Dynasty that have been ushered in by the spirit of multiculturalism, Benin—so far the sole representative of the African continent in the series Cultures of the Past — takes its position on the educational shelf that could shape the historical consciousness of future generations. Other West African kingdoms like Oyo, Dahomey, and Asante could have represented Africa in the global canon of...
Title: A History of the Yoruba PeopleAuthor: Steven Adebanji AkintoyePublisher: Amalion Publishing, ...
The Mali Empire is one of the largest and most widely known precolonial African states. It has featu...
Review of African Literatures and Beyond: A Florilegium by Bernth Lindfors and Geoffrey V. Davi
Clio smiles, then weeps. A hundred years after its destruction, the empire of Benin enters the hall ...
This is a review of Osita Okagbue's brilliantly researched book for Routledge’s Theatres of the Worl...
[Extract] Housebound as a child to nurse her ailing mother, Mary Kingsley's only escape were the boo...
Book review of Nanette de Jong's TambU: Curacaos African-Caribbean Ritual and the Politics of Memory...
Title: Women and Power in Africa in the Twentieth and Twenty- First CenturiesAuthor: Eno Blankson Ik...
With considerable fanfare, in Adieu !\u27Excision. Histoire et fin d\u27une tradition (Raymond Houns...
BOOK TITLE: ORAL TRADITION AS HISTORY MBAKWE, PAUL UCHE Department of History and International Rela...
Review of Women in Twentieth-Century Africa, by Iris Berger. Cambridge University Press, 2016
This issue of the CJAS includes reviews of two important books: The Mind of Africa by William Abraha...
Empire still has sufficient afterlife to bite at the heels of modern Britain: court cases and compen...
Nigerian scholar Adekeye Adebajo’s book The Curse of Berlin: Africa After the Cold War centres on th...
Review of the Book African Intellectual Heritage: A Book of Sources, edited by Molefi K. Assante a...
Title: A History of the Yoruba PeopleAuthor: Steven Adebanji AkintoyePublisher: Amalion Publishing, ...
The Mali Empire is one of the largest and most widely known precolonial African states. It has featu...
Review of African Literatures and Beyond: A Florilegium by Bernth Lindfors and Geoffrey V. Davi
Clio smiles, then weeps. A hundred years after its destruction, the empire of Benin enters the hall ...
This is a review of Osita Okagbue's brilliantly researched book for Routledge’s Theatres of the Worl...
[Extract] Housebound as a child to nurse her ailing mother, Mary Kingsley's only escape were the boo...
Book review of Nanette de Jong's TambU: Curacaos African-Caribbean Ritual and the Politics of Memory...
Title: Women and Power in Africa in the Twentieth and Twenty- First CenturiesAuthor: Eno Blankson Ik...
With considerable fanfare, in Adieu !\u27Excision. Histoire et fin d\u27une tradition (Raymond Houns...
BOOK TITLE: ORAL TRADITION AS HISTORY MBAKWE, PAUL UCHE Department of History and International Rela...
Review of Women in Twentieth-Century Africa, by Iris Berger. Cambridge University Press, 2016
This issue of the CJAS includes reviews of two important books: The Mind of Africa by William Abraha...
Empire still has sufficient afterlife to bite at the heels of modern Britain: court cases and compen...
Nigerian scholar Adekeye Adebajo’s book The Curse of Berlin: Africa After the Cold War centres on th...
Review of the Book African Intellectual Heritage: A Book of Sources, edited by Molefi K. Assante a...
Title: A History of the Yoruba PeopleAuthor: Steven Adebanji AkintoyePublisher: Amalion Publishing, ...
The Mali Empire is one of the largest and most widely known precolonial African states. It has featu...
Review of African Literatures and Beyond: A Florilegium by Bernth Lindfors and Geoffrey V. Davi