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| Document Type: | Book |
|---|---|
| All Authors / Contributors: |
Axel Harneit-Sievers |
| ISBN: | 1580461670 9781580461672 |
| OCLC Number: | 237051321 |
| Description: | IX, 388 S. : ill., Kt. |
| Series Title: | Rochester studies in African history and the diaspora, 23 |
| More information: |
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
Anyone wanting sources on the Igbo and the intellectual and cultural context of these works, and hard to find information about their authors, will find this book invaluable. However one delimits this region ... tracing the continuities from precolonial to the present is a worthy and immensely difficult scholarly task. This work, drawing on multidisciplinary studies, is a brilliant contribution to Igno and Nigerian studies. --Michael D. Levin, INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORICAL STUDIES Recommended. CHOICE In this major contribution to African studies, the author, an Igbo expert, traces the course of local communities in southeastern Nigeria from the pre-colonial period through colonial times, and the post-colonial era to the present. The author brilliantly explains how these communities adjusted again and again with surprising vitality to the changes attempted by British colonial governments and the modern Nigerian state, arguing convincingly that despite urbanization, Christianity, and modernity, the many hundreds of local Igbo communities have thrived in a population of some fifteen million today. The author systemically explains how these communities have exhibited flexibility to changing external forces as active participants and not merely as reactors to new conditions. Harneit-Sievers skillfully combines anthropology, history, religion, and politics to provide the long view of how a people sharing a major African culture have lived in social cooperation over time in the changing African world. --Simon Ottenberg, professor emeritus of anthropology, University of Washington Constructions of Belonging magnificently articulates the Igbo odyssey with modernity during the twentieth century, their triumphs, fears, dilemmas, and uneasy engagement with the Nigerian state. Informed by a profound reading of social theory, historian Axel Harneit-Sievers -- who knows the Igbo inside-out -- integrates the best elements of apparently conflicting modes of analysis, avoiding the customary pitfalls in the scholarly discourse about the Igbo. The result is a book -- as sophisticated as it is accessible -- that paints a candid portrait of a complicated people negotiating tremendous challenges during a period of dizzying changes. --G. Ugo Nwokeji, assistant professor of African and African Diaspora history, University of California, Berkeley Read more...
