An immersive and passionate history of Africa from the earliest times to the present.
Africa’s representation has long been riddled with stereotypes and errors indicative of widespread refusal to take its history seriously. Mainstream news coverage and cultural productions about the continent prioritize poverty, violence, and kleptocratic leaders. Badawi’s dazzling book rejects these racist caricatures in favor of a “holistic” and “honest” history that treats African history and humanity in its fullness. “I aim,” she writes, “to provide a counter-balance to the many negative perceptions of the continent and its people.” Badawi weaves a lustrous tapestry of Africa’s past that centers the African protagonists whose triumphs and defeats deserve more attention. She brings welcome attention to lesser-known figures, including women, who are difficult to locate in historical sources but who nonetheless shaped history. Famous African women leaders Hatshepsut, Cleopatra, Queen Kahina, Njinga, and Yaa Asantewaa all receive substantive treatment here. Yet Badawi also evokes less visible histories: for instance, her engrossing portrait of events in the Senegalese kingdom Nder in 1819, when women resisted an Arab slaving raid first by defending themselves with whatever weapons were on hand. When it became clear they could not defeat the slavers, they chose death, locking themselves in a village structure and setting it aflame. Badawi’s account of this “heroic sacrifice” renders an indelible image of ordinary African women as historical actors. Relying on local African experts to disrupt misguided Western narratives and emphasizing Africa’s history before European colonization, Badawi takes readers on a personal journey steeped in wonder and care for the continent and its peoples. Her crystalline, sometimes lighthearted writing propels the journey across every region of the continent, illuminating political, religious, and military histories and the personalities that enlivened them. This is not an academic text, as Badawi readily acknowledges. But it is a learned text, one that delivers on its promise of narrating an African history of Africa.
An elegant and vibrant African history that will appeal to novices and experts alike.