Comparative Dimensions of Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory
The role and consequences of slavery in the history of Africa have been brought to the fore recently in historical, anthropological and archaeological research. Public remembrances - such as Abolition 2007 in Great Britain, which marked the bicentenary of the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act and which this volume also commemorates - have also stimulated considerable interest. There is a growing realisation that enslavement, whether as part of a sliding scale of 'rights in persons' or due to acts of violence, has a history on the African continent that extends back in time long before the Trans-Atlantic slave trade.

The nature of such enslavement is obscured by the lack of resolution in historical sources before the middle of the second millennium AD. Ground-breaking archaeological research is now building models for approaching slave labour systems via collaboration with historians and the critical scrutiny of historical data. Generally, such new research focuses at the landscape scale; rather than attempting to find physical evidence of slavery per se, it assesses the settlement systems of slavery-based economies, and the depopulation and abandonment which followed from wars of enslavement. The potential utility of this work is considerable, and is ultimately the only means whereby researchers will be able to resolve the many 'chicken-or-egg' issues which beset the historical study of slavery in Africa.
Recent decades have also witnessed an increase in attempts to commemorate and memorialise slavery on the African continent, through a combination of museum displays, historic site interpretation and public history projects. Unfortunately, there are still very few critical discussions of relevant case studies of this kind of public archaeology across the continent, and few examples of good practice. This volume addresses this lack by offering a selection of papers on recent archaeological studies of slavery, slave resistance and their contemporary commemoration, alongside archaeological assessments of the economic, environmental and political consequences of slave trading in a variety of historical and geographical settings.
1110858523
Comparative Dimensions of Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory
The role and consequences of slavery in the history of Africa have been brought to the fore recently in historical, anthropological and archaeological research. Public remembrances - such as Abolition 2007 in Great Britain, which marked the bicentenary of the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act and which this volume also commemorates - have also stimulated considerable interest. There is a growing realisation that enslavement, whether as part of a sliding scale of 'rights in persons' or due to acts of violence, has a history on the African continent that extends back in time long before the Trans-Atlantic slave trade.

The nature of such enslavement is obscured by the lack of resolution in historical sources before the middle of the second millennium AD. Ground-breaking archaeological research is now building models for approaching slave labour systems via collaboration with historians and the critical scrutiny of historical data. Generally, such new research focuses at the landscape scale; rather than attempting to find physical evidence of slavery per se, it assesses the settlement systems of slavery-based economies, and the depopulation and abandonment which followed from wars of enslavement. The potential utility of this work is considerable, and is ultimately the only means whereby researchers will be able to resolve the many 'chicken-or-egg' issues which beset the historical study of slavery in Africa.
Recent decades have also witnessed an increase in attempts to commemorate and memorialise slavery on the African continent, through a combination of museum displays, historic site interpretation and public history projects. Unfortunately, there are still very few critical discussions of relevant case studies of this kind of public archaeology across the continent, and few examples of good practice. This volume addresses this lack by offering a selection of papers on recent archaeological studies of slavery, slave resistance and their contemporary commemoration, alongside archaeological assessments of the economic, environmental and political consequences of slave trading in a variety of historical and geographical settings.
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Comparative Dimensions of Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory

Comparative Dimensions of Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory

Comparative Dimensions of Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory

Comparative Dimensions of Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory

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Overview

The role and consequences of slavery in the history of Africa have been brought to the fore recently in historical, anthropological and archaeological research. Public remembrances - such as Abolition 2007 in Great Britain, which marked the bicentenary of the Abolition of the Slave Trade Act and which this volume also commemorates - have also stimulated considerable interest. There is a growing realisation that enslavement, whether as part of a sliding scale of 'rights in persons' or due to acts of violence, has a history on the African continent that extends back in time long before the Trans-Atlantic slave trade.

The nature of such enslavement is obscured by the lack of resolution in historical sources before the middle of the second millennium AD. Ground-breaking archaeological research is now building models for approaching slave labour systems via collaboration with historians and the critical scrutiny of historical data. Generally, such new research focuses at the landscape scale; rather than attempting to find physical evidence of slavery per se, it assesses the settlement systems of slavery-based economies, and the depopulation and abandonment which followed from wars of enslavement. The potential utility of this work is considerable, and is ultimately the only means whereby researchers will be able to resolve the many 'chicken-or-egg' issues which beset the historical study of slavery in Africa.
Recent decades have also witnessed an increase in attempts to commemorate and memorialise slavery on the African continent, through a combination of museum displays, historic site interpretation and public history projects. Unfortunately, there are still very few critical discussions of relevant case studies of this kind of public archaeology across the continent, and few examples of good practice. This volume addresses this lack by offering a selection of papers on recent archaeological studies of slavery, slave resistance and their contemporary commemoration, alongside archaeological assessments of the economic, environmental and political consequences of slave trading in a variety of historical and geographical settings.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780197264782
Publisher: British Academy
Publication date: 01/13/2012
Series: Proceedings of the British Academy , #168
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Paul Lane is Senior Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of York.

Kevin C. MacDonald is Reader in African Archaeology at University College London.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction: Slavery, Social Revolutions, and Enduring Memories, Paul LaneSection 1: Slave Systems of Production in the African Interior: case studies from the Sudanic Belt2. Warfare, Captives and the Foundations of the Segou State, Kevin MacDonal3. Memories of Slavery in Kaarta, Mali, Moussa Sow4. The Medieval Slave Trade of the Central Sahel: Archaeological and Historical Considerations, Anne Haour5. Slavery and Slaving in the Medieval and Post-Medieval Kingdoms of the Middle Nile., David Edwards6. Enslavement and Everyday Life: Living with Slave Raiding in the Northeastern Mandara Mountains of Cameroon, Scott MacEachemSection 2: Archaeological Dimensions of the Atlantic Slave Trade: Evidence from Africa and the Middle Passage7. Archaeological Perspectives on the Atlantic Slave Trade: Contrasts in Time and Space in Benin and Guinea, Ken Kelly8. Slaves Without Shackles: An Archaeology of Everyday Life on Goree Island, Senegal, Ibrahima Thiaw9. Different Conversations About the Same Thing? Source Materials in the Recreation of a Nineteenth-Century, Slave-Raiding Landscape, Northern Ghana, Natalie Swanepoel10. Archaeological Perspectives on Colonial Slavery: Placing Africa in the African Diaspora Studies in the Caribbean, Kofi AgorsahSection 3: Elusive Slavery: Detecting Enslavement in the Archaeological Record of Eastern Africa11. The Invisible Archaeology of Slavery in the Horn of Africa?, Niall Finneran12. Monuments of Predation: Turco-Egyptian Forts in Western Ethiopia, Alfredo Gonzalez-Ruibal13. Slavery and Slave Trading in Eastern Africa: Exploring the Intersections of Historical Sources and Archaeological Evidence., Paul LaneSection 4: Remembering Slavery: Contemporary Perceptions14. Recovering and Remembering a Slave Route in Central Tanzania, Stephanie Wynn-Jones15. Memory, Oral History and the End of Slavery in Tanzania: Some Methodological Considerations, Jan-Georg Deutsch16. The Present in the Past: How Narratives of the Slave-Raiding Era Inform Current Politics in Northern and Central Nigeria, Roger Blench17. Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa, Antonia Malan & Nigel Worden18. Place of History: Archaeology and Heritage at Cidade Velha, Cape Verde, Chris Evans, Marie Louise Stig Sorensen and Konstantin Richter
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