Description
For centuries Europeans regarded Africa merely as a land mass to be circumnavigated on the way to the riches of the Indies. It was the ‘Dark Continent’, the last territory to be fully explored by Europeans. Incredibly, it was described as a land without history until the coming of the white man.
In reality, the African continent has a rich and varied past stretching back over thousands of years. But its story is far more than that of a single indigenous human society, for Africa has a triple heritage of three civilisations which helped to shape it – its own rich inheritance, Islamic culture and the impact of Western traditions and life- styles. The Africans takes a challenging look at this triple heritage and examines the interplay between these civilisations.
The images of indigenous Africa are contradictory: the continent encompasses both the rural simplicity of village life and the sophisticated cultures capable of carrying out such feats of skill as the building of the ancient pyramids and Great Zimbabwe. Basic to all African cultures, however, is a close relationship between mankind and nature. The coming of Islam and Westernism has irrevocably distorted this ancient relationship – the introduction of capitalism and the cash economy have produced disastrous results. The African no longer holds nature in awe, he holds it in avarice and profit.
The influence of the triple heritage is not confined to the current conflict between mankind and nature, it is present also in the tensions between city and countryside, between soldiers and politicians, between the elite and the masses, between the religious and the secular, between a longing for autonomy and the shackles of dependence upon imported cultures.
Africa is at a crucial stage in its history as it is torn between cultures. Is the decay of Africa’s colonial institutions a ‘curse of the ancestors’ pronounced upon the compact which Westernised Africans have made with the twentieth century? The Africans examines the soul of a continent – a soul which is at present split three ways.
Hardcover. 316 pages. In very good to excellent preloved condition.