What do you think?
Rate this book


192 pages, Paperback
First published March 22, 2007
For the first, so-called 'nationalist' generation of professional historians, too, it was states that were all-important. Their concern was to 'decolonise' the past by demonstrating that Africa, far from being the primitive tribal real of European imperialist mythology, had a long and noble tradition of state-building.
According to archaeologist Roderick McIntosh, the essence of Middle Niger civilisation was not hierarchy but pluralist 'heterarchy'. Its real genius, in other words, may have been in the ability to organise itself without recourse to coercive state power, rather than in the glorious history of empire-building.
But living in the depths of the equatorial rain forest, as did the 'pygmies' of the Ituri region of the present-day Democratic Republic of Congo, or in desert areas, like the San (or 'Bushmen') of the Kalahari in southern Africa, was seldom the result of accident. Isolation was frequently either the outcome of strategies devised by people unwilling to risk repeated predation by better-armed, hostile outsiders, or the consequence of being driven into marginal ecologies by more powerful peoples' capacity to confiscate richer arable land, pasture, or hunting grounds. Despite the 'new age' tendency to romanticize the San way of life, admittedly a brilliant adaptation to one of the harshest environments on the planet, most San would almost certainly have settled for a softer existence.
...
But recent research has shown that Africa's many decentralised societies were as much the products of historical forces as its great kingdoms - including active resistance on the part of independent frontiersmen and -women to would-be state-builders. As we have seen with the Middle Niger, independent communities and cultures often persevered as predatory states rose and fell.
This excellent book will no doubt inspire more to tackle the field’s myriad challenges in the service of universal scholarship.