Female Monarchs and Merchant Queens in Africa. Nwando Achebe
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СКАЧАТЬ available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020002540

       To my husband, Folu Ogundimu, For your unconditional love, support, and friendship, This book is affectionately dedicated to you

       Contents

       Illustrations

       Preface: Until Lions Have Their Own Historians, the Story of the Hunt Will Always Glorify the Hunter—Africanizing History, Feminizing Knowledge

       Acknowledgments

       Introduction

       1. Spiritual Monarchs: God, Goddesses, Spirit Mediums, and Rain Queens

       2. Queens, Queen Mothers, Princesses, and Daughters

       3. Merchant Queens

       4. Female Headmen, Kings, and Paramount Chiefs

       5. African Women Today

       Conclusion

       Notes

       Bibliography

       Index

       Illustrations

       Figure I.1. The African worldview

       Figure 1.1. Narmer Palette, Egypt, ca. 3100 BCE

       Figure 1.2. Nehanda Nyakasikana with Sekuru Kaguvi, following their capture

       Figure 1.3. Temple of the Pythons, Ouidah, Benin

       Figure 2.1. Bust of Nefertiti, Queen Consort of Akhenaten, 18th Dynasty, Egypt

       Figure 2.2. Jewelry of Amanishakheto from her pyramid at Meroe

       Figure 2.3. Statue of Princess Inikpi, Idah Market, Kogi State

       Figure 3.1. Madam Tinubu (ca. 1810–1887), Nigerian businesswoman

       Figure 3.2. Madam Onokoro Nwoti

       Figure 3.3. A textile merchant presents her colorful fabrics in Togo

       Figure 4.1. The Temple of Hatshepsut in Luxor

       Figure 4.2. King Nzingha, 1657

       Figure 4.3. King Ahebi Ugbabe’s insignia of office

       Figure 5.1. Sahle-Work Zewde at the United Nations Office in Nairobi, 2016

       Figure 5.2. Quran, Mus’haf Al Tajweed

       Figure 5.3. Isabel dos Santos, 2019

       Preface

      Until Lions Have Their Own Historians, the Story of the Hunt Will Always Glorify the Hunter—Africanizing History, Feminizing Knowledge

      Whose histories, whose stories, whose archives? Almost six decades ago, Africanist historian Terence Ranger pondered the question of to what degree African history was actually truly African, and whether the methods and concerns derived from Western historiography were in fact sufficient tools for researching and narrating African history. This issue remains a foremost concern of many African-born researchers such as myself, who continue to question the manner in which African worlds have historically and contemporarily been (re)constructed.

      We are cognizant of the fact that Africa was the site of some of the worst external abuses, a reality which resulted in a production of knowledge that has almost exclusively been shaped by these influences. We also share concerns regarding the ability of Africans to tell their own stories, on their own terms, free from Eurocentric biases. We are especially concerned about this because the inconceivable and arbitrary violence born out of slavery and colonial discourse has produced an African canon that is as dehumanizing and silencing as brute force.

      From Muslim traders and travelers of the seventh to fifteenth centuries documenting African worlds in their travel logs to the accounts of European and Arab slavers, travelers, missionaries, and colonialists writing African worlds during the age of exploration, international slave trades, and conquest, these narratives have survived in what the eighth king of Dahomey, King Agonglo, described in 1793 as “books that never die,” chronicling historical perspectives that were variously skewed, incomplete, and/or ethnocentric in their leanings. It is these narratives that have propelled the very nature of Africanist scholarship in the present day. Again, I ask, whose stories, whose histories, whose archives?

      Given this historical reality, I have responded to the challenge of Africanizing and feminizing knowledge by attempting to restore voice and dignity to a people beset with memories of having been reduced to objects by slavers and colonial oppressors. I have done this by (re)framing and (re)telling the African gendered narrative in solidly African-centered and gendered terms. The end result is a body of scholarship—six monographs and a slew of journal articles and book chapters—that is unapologetically African-centered.

      I have not rested easy with simply writing back at the received African canon. I have also, for the past twenty-five years, dedicated my career to honing my teaching of African history in the US college classroom. At Michigan State University, I have developed and taught several award-winning undergraduate-level courses on Africa, courses in which I have disseminated African-centered knowledge about Africa to thousands of young and inquiring minds.

      In this context, I see myself as a missionary in reverse: one whose job it is to teach African worlds on their own terms; a person whose job it is to teach Africa in ways that Africans themselves conceptualize their histories and their worlds. And the end result of this pedagogical odyssey are histories that do not always neatly fit into Western-defined models of historical writing, understanding, and interpretation. Take for instance the fact that Africans do not necessarily conceptualize their histories in exclusively linear and strictly chronological terms. The proof of this can be found when a researcher approaches a living African archive, an African elder, with the following clear-sighted questions: “What year did a particular СКАЧАТЬ