Introduction: People and History in Modern Africa
Dennis D. Cordell
Part I: Encounters: Two Worlds and New Worlds, 1800–1850
Chapter 1: José Manuel and Nbena in Benguela in the Late 1810s:
Encounters with Enslavement
José C. Curto
Chapter 2: Efusetan Aniwura of Ibadan (1820s–1874): A Woman Who
Rose to the Rank of a Chief but Whom Male Rivals Destroyed
Toyin Falola
Chapter 3: Moka of Bioko (late 1820s–1899): The Chief Who United a
Central African Island
Ibrahim Sundiata
Part II: Fashioning African Identities in the Era of European
Conquest, 1850–1910
Chapter 4: Hamet Gora Diop (1846–1910): Merchant and Notable from
Saint-Louis in Senegal
Mamadou Diouf
Chapter 5: Samuel Johnson (1846–1901) and The History of the
Yorubas: Christianity and a New Intelligentsia in West Africa
Toyin Falola
Chapter 6: Stories of Cape Slavery and Emancipation in the
Nineteenth Century
Pamela Scully
Chapter 7: Mama Adolphina Unda (c. 1880–1931): The Salvation of a
Dynastic Family and the Foundation of Fipa Catholicism,
1898–1914
Marcia Wright
Part III: The Contradictions of Colonialism, 1910–1960:
Exploitation and New Rights
Chapter 8: Colonial Administrator Adolphe A. M. Taillebourg
(1874–1934): Strict Interpreter of the Law or Humanitarian?
Issiaka Mandé
Chapter 9: Louis Brody (1892–1951) of Cameroon and Mohammed Bayume
Hussein (1904–1944) of Former German East Africa: Variety Show
Performers and the Black Community in Germany between the Wars
Andreas Eckert
Chapter 10: Siti binti Saad (c. 1885–1950): “Giving Voice to the
Voiceless,” Swahili Music, and the Global Recording Industry in the
1920s and 1930s
Laura Fair
Chapter 11: Maryan Muuse Boqor (b. 1938) and the Women Who Inspired
Her: Memories of a Mogadishu Childhood
Lidwien Kapteijns and Maryan Muuse Boqor
Part IV: Globalization, Family Strategies, and New Threats in the
Era of Independence, 1960–2012
Chapter 12: Wambui Waiyaki Otieno Mbugua (b. 1928): Gender Politics
in Kenya from the Mau Mau Rebellion to the Pro-Democracy
Movement
Cora Ann Presley
Chapter 13: Tina (b. 1942) of Côte d’Ivoire: Success in the
Masculine World of Plantation Managers
Agnès Adjamagbo
Chapter 14: Samba Sylla (b. 1948), Doulo Fofanna (b. 1948 or 1949),
and Djénébou Traore (b. 1972): The Colonies Come to France
Dennis D. Cordell and Carolyn F. Sargent
Chapter 15: Foday (b. ca. 1974) Meets the Rebels in 1991: Diamonds
Are Not a Boy’s Best Friend
Doug Henry
Dennis D. Cordell is professor of history and associate dean at Southern Methodist University.
This remarkable book traces the experiences of significant actors
who—without pretensions to heroism—changed society; women and men
who took charge of destiny rather than submitting to it. These are
stories that obliterate Afropessimism. Confronting the forces of
transition, negotiating the constraints of gender, religion, and
race; these individuals promoted a larger cause. Their histories
illustrate resilience and the infinite capital of human creativity
necessary to make their lives. The Human Tradition in Modern Africa
is a great lesson in humanity, an inexhaustible resource for those
who teach, and an inspiration for young scholars!
*Bogumil Jewsiewicki, Université Laval, Quebec City*
This collection of biographies and its masterful introduction
reveals a fresh view on Africa's past. History grasped through
biography becomes more concrete, more real, more contingent, hence
richer and more satisfying to the imagination. It is undoubtedly
the perfect complement to any text on modern African history.
*Jan Vansina, University of Wisconsin-Madison*
These life stories of everyday African men and women splendidly
humanize and gender the complexity of modern African history. Fully
participating in the making of their era, these people were living
actors in the large-scale history of their continent.
*Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch, Université Paris Diderot–Paris 7*
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