Andrew asked this question about Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies:
Many historians have reexamined and abandoned the notion that Africa was always primitive and poor. John K. Thornton, for example, argues that Africa's backwardness is a recent phenomenon; before perhaps the 18th century, societies in sub-Saharan Africa were just as advanced as those in Europe or Asia. How does this square with Diamond's theory that Africa was geographically predisposed to poverty and backwardness?
Andrew @MegaSolipsist

Mmmmm, yes and no. He does talk about crops, but only to make the point that Africa's shortage of cultivable crops and domesticable anim…more
@MegaSolipsist

Mmmmm, yes and no. He does talk about crops, but only to make the point that Africa's shortage of cultivable crops and domesticable animals explain why it was always so backwards economically and technologically. Essentially, he's trying to explain how Africa's backwardness is not the result of racial inferiority. My point, drawing on Thornton's work, is that he's trying to explain something that didn't happen. Regardless of what crops and animals were available, Africa was NOT technologically or economically backward prior to maybe the eighteenth century. Diamond created an environmentalist explanation for a problem that doesn't exist(less)
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