You have to face the raw fact that Africa's history isn't some footnote to Europe's glory days, but a brutal tapestry of ingenuity crushed under boots of outsiders who redrew maps with rifles and ink. "The History of Africa" strips away the tourist-brochure gloss, laying bare how ancient hubs like Great Zimbabwe thrived on gold and trade long before Columbus dreamed of horizons, only to get labeled "primitive" by scribes with agendas. It's not about pitying the continent; it's about calling out the theft, how pharaohs built pyramids while scribes tallied slaves, and how Mandela's walk to freedom echoed the chains that bound his forebears from the Congo to the Cape.Woven through these pages are the buried stories: the Songhai Empire's scholars debating stars in Timbuktu libraries torched by zealots, the Berlin Conference's cigar-chomping carve-up that sowed seeds for a century of civil wars, and the quiet revolutions of women like Nzinga who outfoxed colonizers with spears and strategy. No white-knight saviors here, just hard reckonings with famines engineered by cash crops, genocides filed under "progress," and borders that still bleed because someone in a parlor decided it. Critics call it "unbalanced," but the ledgers don't lie: Africa's arc bends toward resilience, forged in the fires of forgotten resistances that make today's headlines look like reruns.In a world still haggling over reparations while streaming safari selfies, why cling to the old script that paints Africa as eternal victim? This book hands you the unedited reel, no filters, just the grit of migrations that peopled the planet and uprisings that redrew it. Dive in if you're ready to swap myths for maps scarred by truth; skip it if comfort's your compass. The cradle of humanity deserves better than bedtime stories, the drumbeat calls, will you march?
Bitte wählen Sie Ihr Anliegen aus.
Rechnungen
Retourenschein anfordern
Bestellstatus
Storno







