Africans: The History of a Continent

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, 1995 M08 25 - 323 pages
In a vast and all-embracing study of Africa, from the origins of mankind to the South African general election of 1994, John Iliffe refocuses African history on the peopling of an environmentally hostile continent. Africans have been pioneers struggling against disease and nature, and their social, economic and political institutions have been designed to ensure survival and maximise numbers. These institutions enabled them to survive the slave trade and colonial invasion, but in the context of medical progress and other twentieth-century innovations the same institutions have bred the most rapid population growth the world has ever seen. This demographic growth has lain behind the collapse of colonial rule, the disintegration of Apartheid, and the instability of contemporary nations. The history of the continent is thus a single story binding living Africans to their earliest human ancestors.
 

Contents

The frontiersmen of mankind
1
The emergence of foodproducing communities
6
The impact of metals
18
Christianity and Islam
37
Colonising society in western Africa
62
Colonising society in eastern and southern Africa
97
The Atlantic slave trade
127
Regional diversity in the nineteenth century
159
Colonial invasion
187
Colonial change 19181950
212
Independent Africa
243
Industrialisation and race in South Africa
271
Notes
285
Further reading
296
Index
310
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