A review of Empires in the Sun by Lawrence James,Pegasus Books, NY, 2017
This is an interesting history of Africa told from the
perspective of the colonial powers. Even though events on the continent are
clearly the focus of the record, author James relates how European nations
viewed and constructed their empires, and then saw them dissolved. Much of their considerations for empire were
justified by “mission civilsatrice” but the underlying reasons were
purely political and economic arising from inter European competition, not just
for global standing but also for validation of their respective national
cultures. For most of the several hundred years covered by the book Africans
were depicted as sub-human, ignorant, pliable, savage, etc. Yet throughout
James cites how Africans were progressing in defiance of such
stereotyping. And stereotyping it was. I
was intrigued by the accounts of how popular media – newspapers, personal
accounts, novels, films, comic books, expositions, etc.- shaped European popular
views of backward Africans and how such media supported and endorsed
governmental aspirations and policies to subjugate the continent. It is an astonishing portrait of racism.
The history begins in the fifteenth century and progresses
into the independence era. It deals with discovery, partition, colonialism, the
awaking of independence consciousness, the impact of two world wars, the cold
war, wars of independence and finally the end of apartheid.
I found several small errors of fact, but was dismayed by the
cover map which neglects to depict the nation of South Sudan. In 2017, the date
of publication, South Sudan had been independent for over five years.
This chronicle is detailed, sometimes too much so. The
narrative jumps around from place to place in Africa and from year to year.
Certainly, a reader needs already to have a solid background in African history
to appreciate such convolutions. That
being said, I found the book readable and provocative because it does indeed
elaborate on a long missing perspective on the history of the continent.
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