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Dowden (director, Royal African Soc.) can be forgiven if each of the 18 chapters in his massive tome feels like an abridged version of a larger book; summarizing the history, politics, and people of an entire continent in one volume is a daunting task. Dowden, however, has a wealth of personal experience to qualify him for the job, having first visited Africa as a volunteer teacher in the 1970s and then become a highly regarded Africa-based journalist. Here he attempts to educate readers about Africa's many different nations and to counter the claim that journalists have harmed Africa by publicizing only negative news about it. He alternates chapters each devoted to a particular African nation with chapters on particular issues. Dowden writes in a conversational tone, freely offering up his opinions on controversial topics including politics, foreign investment, the AIDs crisis, and Africa's leadership vacuum. Like other recent works in English on Africa, such as Martin Meredith's The Fate of Africa: A History of Fifty Years of Independence and John Reader's Africa: A Biography of the Continent, this work is essentially subjective; unfortunately, books that describe Africa more objectively at this time are primarily directed at juvenile readers. Despite Dowden's optimistic conclusion, much of what he discusses is deeply tragic and can leave the reader feeling discouraged about Africa's future. Recommended for informed readers; includes an introduction by famed African author Chinua Achebe.
—April Younglove
Map vi
Acknowledgements xi
Foreword Chinua Achebe xiii
1 Africa is a night flight away: Images and realities 1
2 Africa is different: Uganda I 11
3 How it all went wrong: Uganda II 38
4 The end of colonialism: New states, old societies 51
5 Amazing, but is it Africa? Somalia 90
6 Forward to the past: Zimbabwe 127
7 Breaking apart: Sudan 158
8 A tick bigger than the dog: Angola 199
9 Missing the story and the sequel: Burundi and Rwanda 223
10 God, trust and trade: Senegal 255
11 Dancers and the leopard men Sierra Leone 284
12 The positive positive women: AIDS in Africa 321
13 Copying King Leopold: Congo 353
14 Not just another country: South Africa 380
15 Meat and money: Eating in Kenya 415
16 Look out world: Nigeria 439
17 New colonists or old friends? Asia in Africa 484
18 Phones, Asians and the professionals: The new Africa 509
Epilogue 543
Further Reading 551
Index 554
SinclairDB
Posted January 3, 2010
Everybody interested in Africa should read this book, because beyond the references to history, religious aspects, statistics and events, the text is permeated with Dowden's love and respect for the people of a culture he so skillfully helps us to understand.
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Overview
After a lifetime’s close observation of the continent, one of the world’s finest Africa correspondents has penned a landmark book on life and death in modern Africa. It takes a guide as observant, experienced, and patient as Richard Dowden to reveal its truths. Dowden combines a novelist’s gift for atmosphere with the scholar’s grasp of historical change as he spins tales of cults and commerce in Senegal and traditional spirituality in Sierra Leone; analyzes the impact of oil and the internet on Nigeria and aid on Sudan; and examines what has gone so badly wrong in Zimbabwe, Rwanda, Burundi, and the Congo. Dowden’s master work is an attempt to explain why Africa is the way it is, and enables its readers to see and