Saturday, October 28, 2017

Colonialism


Please read Things Fall Apart for Monday, SHORT for Wednesday, and AFRICANS for Friday. Anticipate a pop quiz this week. The Annotated Bibliography is due Friday. You can find the handout for the assignment on the Campus Portal. Please submit through TurnItIn.com.

Reading Questions for SHORT, Chapter 5:
  • How was colonial rule in Africa different from colonial rule in Latin America?
  • How has the study of the colonial period changed?
  • What are the "key facts" about European conquest?
  • Who resisted the Europeans? (see alsoAFRICANS,  p. 201)
  • What/who facilitated the conquest?
  • What's special about Ethiopia?
  • What was the Maji Maji rebellion? (see also AFRICANS, p. 202)
  • The "first successful human rights campaign of the 20th century" targeted what?
  • What impact did WW I have?
  • How did French and British approaches to controlling colonies differ?
  • Why did some Africans embrace colonialism?
  • How did Europeans run Africa "on the cheap"?
  • What caused widespread social change? (p. 106)
  • Define "ornamentalism."
  • What explains, in part, the political authoritarianism of contemporary Africa?
Reading Questions for AFRICANS, Chapter 9: 
  • How did Britain manipulate other European countries (p. 196) and interests (p. 197) in Africa?
  • What brought about the Anglo-Boer War and what were its outcomes and costs?
  • Who made up most colonial armies? (p. 199)
  • What was more burdensome than taxes?
  • Who were the most powerful Africans in colonial Africa? (pp. 205f)
  • What did European governments handle and what did they leave to private enterprise? (p. 209)
  • Which region experienced the most brutal exploitation and why?
  • What effect did railroad building have?
  • Why was famine such an issue during the early colonial period?

Monday, October 23, 2017

Nineteenth Century & Regional Diversity

Check out this map (it is particularly pertinent for this chapter).

Reading Questions for AFRICANS, Chapter 8:
  • Northern Africa: What was the chief reason for demographic stagnation? 
  • How did Muhammed Ali change Egypt? What did the British do about it? 
  • What did a strong Egypt mean for the Sudan?
  • What was notable about Ethiopia in this period?
  • Why did the French invade Algeria? What were the initial effects of the conquest?
  • How did attempts to modernize effect Tunisia and Morocco?
  • The West African Savanna: This was a period of political fragmentation but huge growth in what?
  • What was the most important event in nineteenth-century West Africa?
  • Why was the Sokoto Caliphate able to endure?
  • What made Hausaland the most prosperous region in tropical Africa?
  • How did slavery there contrast with South African estate slavery?
  • Southern Africa: Who created a large Zulu kingdom, and how did he do it? 
  • In contrast, how did the Sotho-Tswana people overcome segmentation? How did they resist white aggression?
  • How was the Lesotho kingdom created?
  • Why did the Britain introduce 5000 British settlers into the Eastern Cape in 1820?
  • What was the "Great Trek"? 
  • What is "Cape liberalism"?
  • How did the Africans view missionaries? What about the Zulu king?
  • What may have aided growth in South Africa?
  • How did the discovery of diamonds change the political situation?
  • Eastern Africa: What role did the Oman play in East Africa and what effect did it have on Swahili culture? 
  • What were the main imports and exports, and how were they transported?
  • Why did Livingstone say that eastern Africa was the open sore of the world?
  • What beneficial effects did long-distance trade have?
  • What was most responsible for population decline?
  • What was the context for the ensuing colonial rule of Africa?

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Midterm Exam

Our midterm exam will be in class on Wednesday. It will be in two parts:

(1) Map test (you must pass this to pass the midterm exam)
(2) Create an outline of the history of women in pre-colonial Africa based on information found in the assigned readings (Textbooks, Sundiata, and Abina).

You may bring your completed outline to class on Wednesday, or create it during the class period (open books and notes).


Thursday, October 5, 2017

Atlantic Slave Trade

Well, after some messaging of the syllabus, I think we are agreed to be behind one week for the rest of the term and vow to keep up with the readings going forward, yes?

Reading Questions for SHORT, Chapter 3:

  •  What were the two battles that pioneers of African historical studies had to fight? (p. 49)
  • What passed for African history before 1950 and what were its flaws? (p. 50)
  • What were some early indigenous written records? (pp. 51f.)
  • What role did the Bible play in increasing indigenous written records? (p. 53)
  • How about colonial rule? Why? (p. 56)
  • Define "oral tradition." (p. 57)
  • What historical information can and cannot be gotten out of oral traditions? (pp. 58ff.)
  • Name five other disciplines that historians have mined for the African past and explain their advantages and limitations. (pp. 60ff.)
  • What are the three types of written records by outsiders are being reevaluated? (p. 67ff.)
For Monday's class, please read Abina and the Important Men. 
For Wednesday and Friday, please prepare answers to the following; questions.

Reading Questions, Part I (AFRICANS, Chapter 7):

  • Slavery had existed in Africa as a response to what shortage? (p. 133)
  • What kind of societies in Africa refused to participate in the slave trade and resisted slavery the most? (p. 133)
  • Why did the Portuguese start trading in slaves? (p. 133)
  • Why did the King of Kongo try to back out of the trade and what was the response? (p. 134)
  • Why in 1519 did the Portuguese begin shipping slaves directly to the Americas? (p. 134)
  • What sources are used to determine the numbers of slaves exported from Africa? (p. 135)
  • Why did slave trading boom in the mid 17th century? (p. 135)
  • What percentage of exported slaves went to the Caribbean? Brazil? North America? (p. 135)
  • How could someone become a slave? (p. 136f.)
  • What were slaves traded for? (pp. 138f.)
  • What percentage of enslaved people died before they even started to work as slaves? (p. 139)
  • How does one estimate the demographic impact of the slave trade on Africa? (pp. 141f.)
  • What were the political consequences of the trade in Africa? (pp. 143ff.)
  • Did the trade effect Western Africa's economic development? Why or why not? (p. 150)
  • How did the trade influence religion and medicine? What is the Lemba society? (pp. 151f)
  • What European nation abolished the trade, and what did they do to enforce the ban? (pp. 152f.)
  • Was the transition to legitimate (non-slave) trade entirely beneficial? (pp. 154-158)
  • Why did the Kongo Kingdom embrace Christianity? (pp. 158f)
Reading Questions, Part II (SHORT, Chapter 4):
  • "How does the history of Africa fit into that of the rest of the world?"
  • Describe two examples of how Islam and Christianity were integrated into local African cultures.
  • What do the Atlantic slave trade and the Islamic slave trade have in common, and how do they differ?
  • Would you agree that the Atlantic slave trade has been given too much prominence? (p. 81)
  • What are two things make Baquaqua' narrative unusual/unique?
  • Why should the idea of diaspora include Africa itself? (p. 85)
  • What is notable about the Sokoto caliphate? (p. 88)
  • What changed the balance of power in many regions? (p. 89)
  • How do the four themes of this chapter illustrate the trick of "getting the balance right" between the agency of Africans and the impact of global forces (done/done to)?