If your history classes were anything like mine, you came out of school knowing precious little about Africa. Egypt was a big deal a long time ago, the slave trade was a bad thing that we (America) had thankfully put behind us, and there was this thing called "apartheid" in South Africa. Outside of these topics, Africa was a mysterious place to me. I knew that most of it was jungle outside of the giant desert on the north end of it. The people, I assumed, were not much more technologically advanced than those tribes that live deep in the Amazon and rarely make contact with the modern world.
For many years, this was enough for me. Africa was an ocean away, after all. What happened there in the past or the present affected my life about as much as the goings-on in India or China, whose history I was equally ignorant of. If something important happened there, I'd have learned about it in school, right? Lately, though, I've come to realize that what I know of Africa, just like India, China, and anywhere else in the world that isn't America or Europe, I'd absorbed through the filter of the Western perspective. With this filter in place, the parts of African history that needed to be known (or simply known of) to understand European and American history were cherry-picked out and the rest was discarded. Basically, if an element of African history didn't affect the Western world in some way, it was considered unimportant. Why? Human beings lived in Africa before they lived anywhere else on the planet. There are over 50 countries in Africa. How could a landmass that huge with that many different people and cultures living on it for longer than any other culture has existed not have stories to tell?
With globalization making the world smaller and my own country becoming more multicultural than ever before, I found myself seeking a more well-rounded view of human history. I wanted the whole story, not just the American or European version. Since Africa is literally where it all began, I decided to begin my journey through the world's history there. This book, The History of Africa, seemed like a good place to start, and it was! I couldn't have asked for a better overview/introduction to the continent. From the first kingdoms of Kemet (the actual name of the country that is consistently referred to as "ancient Egypt") and Nubia to the Mali and Wagudu empires of West Africa to the Yoruba and Hausu states to Great Zimbabwe and the Kongo, each of Africa's countries and cultures is given its time in the spotlight. The stories of each civilization are told in a concise, easily digestible way so that even those of us who are completely in the dark can absorb the information painlessly. I found it helpful to keep Google Maps handy since many of the places the author references were truly alien to me. By looking them up as I came across them in the reading, I ended up developing a working knowledge of African geography while learning its history!
I'll admit that I was bored at first, reading this book. The first thirty or so pages are all about Kemet, which I already had plenty of knowledge about. I did learn a few new things about them and their rivals the Nubians, but the book became much more interesting after I got through that section and started learning about the other African empires and peoples. As I made my way through the chapters, another reason that African history isn't really explored in Western history classes became painfully obvious. In the story of Africa, especially in the past five hundred years, Europe and America are invariably the villains. Between the Atlantic slave trade and the colonization and exploitation that followed the Berlin Conference, Africa has suffered greatly at the hands of the West. To say Europe has been unkind to Africa is one of the biggest understatements that can be made. The bottom half of the book ends up being almost entirely dedicated to the oppression of the African people by European colonizers and the battle for independence that followed.
The book is more of an overview of Africa's history than an all-in-one resource on the subject. I recommend it as a place to start if you're as clueless on the subject as I was.