“The World and Africa” is simply phenomenal. It is Du Bois at his best. He covers so much ground and packs-in so much information as he tells a highly detailed history of the continent of Africa going back thousands of years, while simultaneously weaving in a modern analysis of the dire consequences Euro-American colonial plunder on the continent. As he notes toward the beginning of the book, “Manifestly, the present plight of the world is a direct outgrowth of the past.” In other words, the white world’s treatment of African and African people directly led to the disasters of the 20th Century. Du Bois set out to tell the history of Africa, seeking to dispel the “Africa has no history" trope, which he identifies as a poisonous and racist justification for oppression and subordination.
Du Bois traces the roots of both World Wars and the Great Depression back to the colonial plundering of Africa by the nations of Europe (and Europe's satellite nation / empire, the United States). Du Bois also traces details the valiant history of the Pan Africanist movement. Du Bois spends the meat of this book centering African history, detailing the role of ancient African civilizations all over the continent, the rise and devastating consequences of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade, and the ultimate conquering of Africa by the Euro-American colonial powers. There are so many amazing nuggets of information in this book, for instance, Du Bois lists out the African slave revolts that took place in the the Americas from 1522-1895, briefly detailing how these revolutionary offensive acts were the first “workers” revolts in the modern era. Du Bois also takes a page out of Eric Williams’ Capitalism and Slavery, explaining how slavery and the slave trade was the lifeblood of Euro-American industrial capitalism, and eventually gave way to an even more profitable form of enslavement—colonial imperialism. Du Bois explains how white supremacist ideology, rooted in scientific racism and anti-Blackness, ultimately developed as a justification and means of facilitating these systems of domination and genocide.
In explaining the devastating effects of colonialism and enslavement, Du Bois turns back the hands of time in order to depict just what was lost on the continent of Africa. In doing so, Du Bois details the history of the vibrant societies of old, from Egypt, Ethiopia, and Nubia, to the Sudanese empires of Ghana, Ashanti, Dahomey, Mali, and Mossi, to the Central African states of Great Zimbabwe and Kingdom of Kongo, Du Bois notes that all these civilizations were African in kind and nature, firmly dispelling the racist mythology of the so-called “Dark Continent.” Du Bois also spends much time upending the practice of imposing modern constructions of “race” on African societies, noting that while ancient Africans (notably the Egyptians) acknowledged differences in skin color, they did not organize society around those differences, nor did they subscribe to or understand “race” as we do.
This book is an ode to African history and culture. It is a defense of African civilization, and ultimately, a window into what the future might hold. Must read for anyone who wants to understand how the world came to be what it is today, and what must be done to change it.