Voices of the Poor in Africa, Volume 12

Front Cover
University Rochester Press, 2004 - Business & Economics - 287 pages
An ambitious new approach to African studies, utilizing indigenous sources to bring back the voices of the native Africans in their own words rather than that of colonizers and foreigners.

Elizabeth Isichei explores the Atlantic slave trade, as reflected in the poetics of rumour and the poetics of memory -- an approach different from the quantitative and demographic studies which have transformed the subject over the past twenty years. To this and to her study of popular consciousness in the colony and postcolony, she brings together a wide range of disciplines -- ethnography, art and art history, and contemporary literary theory among them -- to look at the intellectual history of Africa, from African rather than European premises. The result is a history of popular consciousness which shows the experiences of ordinary people, often in protest to an ongoing experience of exploitation.

Elizabeth Isichei is Professor of Religious Studies, Otago University, Dunedin, New Zealand and author of over a dozen books on African history and religion. She holds an Oxford doctorate, and aD.Litt from the University of Canterbury, and is a fellow of the Royal Society [N.Z.]

 

Contents

Introduction Truth from Below
An Overview
21
The Slave Traders
31
The Imported Commodities
45
Cowries
61
Transformations Enslavement and the Middle Passage in African American Memory
73
An Overview
85
The Entrepreneur and the Zombie
94
Dangerous Women in an Age of AIDS
149
Village Intellectuals and the Challenge of Poverty
165
Mami Wata Icon of Ambiguity
184
Symbolic Appropriations of Modernity
206
Converging Worlds Polarized Worlds the Realm Beneath the Sea Revisited
220
Eating the State Ridicule and the Crisis of the Quotidian
231
Conclusion
242
Bibliography
253

Colonial Vampires The Theft of Life and Resources
107
Changing Bodies Changing Worlds
122
Symbolic Money
134

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases