In The Yoruba: A New History, Akinwumi Ogundiran examines the development of the ideas and practices that have shaped the Yoruba identity and experience going back as far as AD 800.
In The Yoruba: A New History, Akinwumi Ogundiran examines the development of the ideas and practices that have shaped the Yoruba identity and experience going back as far as AD 800.
Akinwumi Ogundiran is Chancellor's Professor and Professor of Africana Studies, Anthropology & History at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. He is a co-editor of Materialities of Rituals in the Black Atlantic, named a Choice magazine's 2015 outstanding book.
Inhaltsangabe
Dedication List of Illustrations List of Tables List of Appendices Glossary of Yorùbá words Preface Acknowledgment I. Introduction 1. Writing a New History II. Birth of the Yorùbá Community of Practice, ca. 300 BC-AD 1420 2. The Emergence of a House Society 3. Knowledge Capital and Referentiality III. Atrophy and Regeneration, 1400-1650 4. Atrophy 5. Regeneration and Restoration IV. Atlantic Entanglements, 1630-1840 6. Merchant Capital Revolution 7. Sociality of Merchant Capital 8. Perennial Inequality 9. A House Divided V. Conclusion 10. The Past in the Present Bibliography Appendices Index
Dedication List of Illustrations List of Tables List of Appendices Glossary of Yorùbá words Preface Acknowledgment I. Introduction 1. Writing a New History II. Birth of the Yorùbá Community of Practice, ca. 300 BC-AD 1420 2. The Emergence of a House Society 3. Knowledge Capital and Referentiality III. Atrophy and Regeneration, 1400-1650 4. Atrophy 5. Regeneration and Restoration IV. Atlantic Entanglements, 1630-1840 6. Merchant Capital Revolution 7. Sociality of Merchant Capital 8. Perennial Inequality 9. A House Divided V. Conclusion 10. The Past in the Present Bibliography Appendices Index
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