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Paperback Slavery and African Life: Occidental, Oriental, and African Slave Trades Book

ISBN: 0521348676

ISBN13: 9780521348676

Slavery and African Life: Occidental, Oriental, and African Slave Trades

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Book Overview

This interpretation of the impact of slavery on African life emphasizes the importance of external demand for slaves by Occidental and Oriental purchasers in developing an active trade in slaves... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Good reading

I'm not a historian or history major, but I found this book to be a good introduction, and yet more valuable than just an introduction. (I kept this kind of vague to avoid spoiling it) Manning explained the economics of slavery's from its beginning and why it contributed to its end (abolitionist too). He wasn't lieing to the readers by portraying all Africans as all naiive victims... Manning clearly points out how slavery decimated Africa economically and helped create an African identity.

Slavery's Impact on Africa

Have you ever wondered about the impact of slavery on Africa or how slavery contributed to the making of our contemporary world? Or have you ever thought about how the world should come to terms with the legacy of African enslavement? Then Pat Manning's text is a good place to start. The text graphically shows the varying demographic impact of enslavement on different regions and peoples of the continent. It illustrates how the forced emigration of Africans adversely affected economies, politics, societies and cultures in different parts of Africa. Manning forceful restates Eric Williams' contention that slavery did lead to the development of capitalism - within the context of the larger Atlantic economy rather than the narrow Caribbean economy. For me, Manning is at his best when he discusses how the victims and beneficiaries of African enslavement can come to terms with the legacy of that tragedy. The main criticism of the text is the excessive (and sometimes redundant) quantative simulations and graphs that it contains. Nonetheless, it is a good starting point for students, scholars and general readers interested in the subject of slavery in Africa.

Insightful yet boring

This book is insightful and is based on evidence, but unlike most history novels it contains many diagrams, maps and graphs that complicate Manning's thesis, rather than clarifying it. The book is repetitive and dry while at the same time introducing new ideas. This book taught me about African culture and the economics behind the worldwide African slave trade, but it did so in an impersonal manner; it was general, not leaning on specific cases.
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