Description
About the Author
A career journalist with the BBC World Service and BBC News for three decades, specialising in Africa, Keith Somerville writes and lectures on African affairs and is Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London. He is the author of several books, including Radio Propaganda and the Broadcasting of Hatred.
Reviews
This important book could not have come at a better time. Its nuanced approach to Africa's many histories challenges unhelpful stereotypes, which too often have been applied to the entire continent as if it is a single country. It offers a rare and engaging combination of academic rigour and thoughtful, lucid journalism. -- Mary Harper, Africa Editor, BBC News
This introductory overview of the region's history by a veteran BBC journalist focuses on broad political and economic trends and eschews simple takeaways. It [performs] its most trenchant analysis on civil conflicts such as the Rwandan genocide and the liberation struggles in southern Africa. -- Foreign Affairs
Somerville sets about his task with energy and skill. He has worked on the subject for more than three decades and it shows. The material is handled with a sure touch, beginning by briefly sketching the pre-colonial and colonial history before tacking independence and its consequences. It then traces the key questions that have concerned the continent since then: the early days of independence leading to disillusionment, coups and dictators; revolutions and the economic crises of the 1970s and 1980s; genocide and good governance; the new millennium, China and 'Africa rising'. ... This is an authoritative, accessible account of Africa's difficult 50 years since independence written by someone who clearly has the continent's interests at heart. -- Martin Plaut, African Arguments
This unusually accessible study of Africa's many histories since 1970 owes its distinctiveness to the author's career. This is, thankfully, not an arid academic tome; it is a thoughtful, passionate account by a senior BBC journalist who spent three decades working on and in Africa. His intimacy with places and people give the book a grittiness that library research never provides. -- Richard Rathbone, Professor of African History, School of Oriental and African Studies, London
This superb book is the product of many decades of close observation of Africa's past and present by a retired senior BBC World Service journalist. It is genuinely innovative, demonstrating a fine understanding of the role of structure and agency in the continent's 'many histories'. The argument will appeal to an audience seeking a convincing and well-researched account. -- Jack Spence, OBE, Professor of Diplomacy, King's College London
Keith Somerville has produced a wonderfully complex, compassionate and accessible introductory history of Africa. This book combines the keen eye of a front-line journalist who witnessed some of the continent's most dramatic contemporary events, with the deep analytical perspective of an academic. It works brilliantly. -- Joanna Lewis, Assistant Professor in Imperial and African History, London School of Economics and Political Science
A provocative and well-argued book, which addresses the importance of continuities as well as change across the vast African continent. In these multiple narratives, African agency is put squarely centre stage. But this is the agency of African elites who, by exploiting inherited structures and weak institutions, have secured and entrenched their own advantage. Given these dynamics, the question remains how far and how fast can broad based socio-economic development be achieved? -- Sue Onslow, Senior Lecturer, Institute of Commonwealth Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London
Book Information
ISBN 9781849045155
Author Keith Somerville
Format Hardback
Page Count 500
Imprint C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd
Publisher C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd
Weight(grams) 612g
Dimensions(mm) 218mm * 147mm * 30mm