Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-767nl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-11T09:49:46.469Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

African Historical Studies Academic Knowledge as ‘Usable Past’ and Radical Scholarship

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

In this paper, I am less interested in the differences between the main competing schools, than in their similarities. The differences were often artificially emphasized at the expense of basic common assumptions. All approaches we have used in African studies are deeply rooted in 19th-century epistemology since the neo-Marxist epistemological break never materialized (Jewsiewicki, 1987). Notwithstanding the fundamental importance of Marxist approaches to the transformation of academic knowledge about societies in Africa, there was no intellectual revolution.

The modern world system approach that belongs to the radical paradigm partially accounts for this failure. As knowledge is socially produced and strongly related to the power relationships, one cannot expect a radical epistemological break to occur in a society that is a historical product of 19th-century economic and social systems. In radical paradigm terms, how can one expect a capitalist mode of production to produce an epistemology and a theory that would be a “Copernican revolution” (Sahli quoted in Jewsiewicki, 1986: 5) in knowledge?

As Martha Gephart (1986: iii) stated recently, “An overview paper is a fortuitous marriage of an important topic and… individual.” Such is the case of this paper initially commissioned as an evaluation of Marxist African studies. The final result mediates my personal history as an African scholar and my perception of the growing difficulties of African studies with ‘Africa,’ their invented object. (Mudimbe, 1988)

In many respects the ambitions of this paper are similar to the goals of Meier and Rudwick (1986: xi):

We grew less interested in analyzing specific works than in understanding the interrelations between the trajectory of a scholarly specialty and developments in the changing social milieu and in the profession at large . … Thus, this volume is not a standard historiography, but an examination of several topics that illuminate the rise and the transformation of black history as a research field.

Type
Social Science Research Council Papers
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Abeles, M. 1976, Anthropologie et marxisme. Bruxelles: Editions Complexes.Google Scholar
Achebe, Chinua. 1975. Morning Yet on Creation Day. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Adair, D. 1982, “Un concept précaire: L'accumulation primitive,” Les temps modernes 434: 539–49.Google Scholar
Adam, H. and Giliomee, H. (eds.) 1979. Ethnic Power Mobilized. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Adamson, Walter. 1981. “Marx's Four Histories: An Approach to His Intellectual Development,” History and Theory 20: 379402.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adler, A. 1976. “L'ethnologie marxiste: vers un nouvel obscurantisme,” L'Homme 16/4: 118–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Afana, Ossende. 1969. “Les classes sociales en Afrique de l'Ouest,” Revue Partisane 7: 10–8.Google Scholar
Afigbo, A.F. 1971. “The Masses and Nationalism: Some Observations on the Nigerian Example,” Ikorok 1/2: 4764.Google Scholar
Ajayi, Ade. 1968. “The Continuity of African Institutions under Colonialism,” in Ranger, T.O. (ed.) Emerging Themes of African History, Dar-es-Salaam: East African Publishing House 189200.Google Scholar
Ajayi, Ade. 1969. “Colonialism. An Episode in African History,” in Gann, L.H. and Duignan, P. (eds.) Colonialism in Africa, Vol. I. The History and Politics of Colonialism 1870-1914, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 497509.Google Scholar
Ajayi, Ade. 1972. “History in developing society,” Proceedings of the Second Congress of Africanists. Paris: Présence africaine, 131–41.Google Scholar
Ajayi, Ade. 1982, “Expectations of Independence,” Daedalus 3: 19.Google Scholar
Ake, C. 1976. “Explanatory Notes on the Political Economy of Africa,” Journal of Modern African Studies 14: 123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ake, C. 1978. Revolutionary Pressures in Africa, London: Zed Press.Google Scholar
Ake, C. 1986. “Editorial: Raison d'être,” African Journal of Political Economy 1: iiix.Google Scholar
Alavi, H. 1975a. “India and the Colonial Mode of Production,” The Socialist Register. London: Merlin Press, 2836.Google Scholar
Alavi, H. 1975b. “Dependence, Autonomy and the Articulation of Power,” Working Paper No. 7, Montreal: CDAS.Google Scholar
Alavi, H. et al 1982. Capitalism and Colonial Production. Essays on the Rise of Capitalism in Asia. London: Groom Helm.Google Scholar
Allen, C.H. 1970, “Lumpenproletarian and Revolution,” Political Theory and Ideology in African Society. Edinburgh: African Studies Centre, 91121.Google Scholar
Allen, V.L. 1972. “The Meaning of the Working Class in Africa,” Journal of Modern African Studies 10: 169–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alpers, E. 1973. “Re-thinking African Economic History: Contribution to the Discussion of Roots of Underdevelopment,” Ufahamu: 97129.Google Scholar
Alpers, E. 1975. Ivory and Slaves in East Africa. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Alpers, E. and Fontaine, P. 1982. Walter Rodney, Researcher and Scholar: A Tribute Los Angeles: UCLA CAAS.Google Scholar
Althusser, L. 1969. Pour Marx, Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Althusser, L. 1972. Lenine et la philosophic, Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Amin, S. 1964. “The Class Struggle in Africa,” Africa, Latin America, Asia Revolution 1: 2347.Google Scholar
Amin, S. 1970. L'accumulation à l'échelle mondiale, Paris: Editions Anthropos (English translation, 1974).Google Scholar
Amin, S. 1972. “Underdevelopment and Dependence in Black Africa; Historical Origins,” Journal of Peace Research 2: 105–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amin, S. 1973a. Le développement inégal. Essai sur les formations sociales du capitalisme périphérique, Paris: Editions de Minuit.Google Scholar
Amin, S. 1973b. “Transitional Phase in Sub-Saharan Africa,” Monthly Review 25/5: 52–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amin, S. 1974. “Mode of Production and Social Formations,” Ufahamu 4/3: 5785.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amin, S. (ed.) 1974. Modern Migrations in Western Africa. London: International African Institute.Google Scholar
Amin, S. (ed.) 1978. Sociétés précapitalistes et capitalisme. Paris: Editions Anthropos.Google Scholar
Amin, S. (ed.) 1979a. Classe et Nation dans l'histoire et la crise contemporaine. Paris: Editions de Minuit.Google Scholar
Amin, S. (ed.) 1979b. “Sous-développement et histoire. Le cas de l'afrique,” L'Homme et la société 5154: 137–45.Google Scholar
Amin, S. (ed.) 1979c. Le sauvage à la mode, Paris: Le Sycamore.Google Scholar
Amselle, J.L. 1979. “Le fetichisme et la sociétéL'Homme et la société 5154: 163–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Amselle, J.L. (ed.) 1976. Les migrations africaines: réseaus et processus migratoires, Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Amselle, J.L. and Mbokolô, E. (eds.) 1985. Au coeur de l'ethnie, Paris: Découverte.Google Scholar
Anderson, P. 1980. Arguments within English Marxism. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Anderson, P. 1983. In the Tracks of Historical Materialism. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Aptheker, B. 1982. Woman's Legacy: Essays on Race, Sex, and Class in American History. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.Google Scholar
Arblaster, A. 1984. The Rise and Decline of Western Liberalism. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Aron, R. 1969. D'une sainte famille à l'autre. Essai sur les marxismes imaginaires. Paris: Gallimard.Google Scholar
Arrighi, G. 1970. “Labor Supplies in Historical Perspective: Study of the Proletarianization of the African Peasantry in Rhodesia,” Journal of Development Studies 3: 197235.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arrighi, G. 1979. “Peripheralization of Southern Africa I: Changes in Production Processes,” Review 3/2: 161–91.Google Scholar
Arrighi, G. 1983. The Geometry of Imperialism. New York: Schocken.Google Scholar
Arrighi, G. and Saul, J.S. 1968. “Socialism and Economic Development in Tropical Africa,” Journal of Modern African Studies 6/2: 141–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arrighi, G. 1973. Essays on the Political Economy of Africa, New York: Monthly Review.Google Scholar
Asad, T. (ed.) 1973. Anthropolgy and the Colonial Encounter. Atlantic Highlands: Humanities.Google Scholar
Asad, T. and Wolpe, H. 1976. “Concepts of Modes of Production,” Economy and Society 5/4: 470506.Google Scholar
Atieno-Odhiambo, E.S. 1971. “Some Reflections on African Initiative in Early Colonial Kenya,” East African Journal 8/6: 30–6.Google Scholar
Augé, M. 1975. Théories du pouvoir et idéologic: étude de cas en Côte d'Ivoire, Paris: Herman.Google Scholar
Augé, M. 1976. “Les blancs du discours: idéologie en général, idéologie de classe et société primitive,” Dialectiques 15/16:95–8.Google Scholar
Augé, M. 1977. Pouvoirs de vie, pouvoirs de mart. Introduction à une anthropologic de la répression, Paris: Flammarion.Google Scholar
Augé, M. 1979. Symbole, fonction, histoire. Les interrogations de l'anthropologic. Paris: Hachette.Google Scholar
Austen, R. 1982. “Capitalism, Class, and African Colonial Agriculture: The Making of Marxism and Empirism,” Journal of Economic History 42: 559–62.Google Scholar
Awiti, A. 1972. “Class Struggle in Rural Society of Tanzania,” Maji Maji 7: 139.Google Scholar
Babu, B.R. 1981. African Socialism or Socialist Africa. London: Zed Press.Google Scholar
Bagayogo, I. 1983, “De l'usage de l'épopée dans l'aire mande,” Afrique-Asie, 12 September: 50–2.Google Scholar
Bailey, AM. and Llobera, (eds.) 1981. The Asiatic Mode of Production: Sciences and Politics. London and Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Balandier, G. 1974. Anthropo-logiques. Paris: PUF.Google Scholar
Balandier, G. 1977. Histoire d'autres. Paris: Stock.Google Scholar
Balibar, E. and Estalet, R. 1966. Lire le capital. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Banaji, J. 1972. “For a Theory of Colonial Modes of Production,” Economic and Political Weekly 7 (23 December): 2408–502.Google Scholar
Banaji, J. 1973. “Backward Capitalism, Primitive Accumulation and Modes of Production,” Journal of Contemporary Asia 3/4: 229302.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banaji, J. 1976. “The Peasantry in the Feudal Mode of Production: Towards an Economic Model,” Journal of Peasant Studies 3/3: 229320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banaji, J. 1977. “Modes of Production on a Materialist Conception of History,” Capital and Class 3: 144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Banton, M. 1975. “1960: A Turning Point in the Study of Race Relations,” in Mintz, S. (ed.) Slavery, Colonialism and Racism. New York: Norton, 3144.Google Scholar
Baran, P. 1957. The Political Economy of Growth. New York: Monthly Review Press.Google Scholar
Barone, C. 1982. “Samir Amin and the Theory of Imperialism: A Critical Analysis,” The Review of Radical Political Economics 14: 1023.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barongo, Y. (ed.) 1983. Political Science in Africa. A Critical Review. London: Zed Press.Google Scholar
Bayart, . 1979. l'Etat au Cameroun. Paris: Foundation Nationale des sciences politiques.Google Scholar
Bayart, . 1985. “L'énonciation du politique,” Bulletin de liaison du CERI 4: 329.Google Scholar
Bazin, J. 1986. “The Past in the Present: Notes on Oral Archeology,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 5974.Google Scholar
Bazin, J. and Terray, E. (eds.) 1982. Guerres de lignages et guerres d'Etat en Afrique. Paris: Editions des Archives Contemporaines.Google Scholar
Beer, C. and Williams, G. 1975. “The Politics of the Ibadan Peasantry,” African Studies Review 5: 235–56.Google Scholar
Beinart, W. 1982. The Political Economy of Pondoland, 1860-1930. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beinart, W. and Bundy, C. 1987, Hidden Struggle in Rural Africa. London: Currey.Google Scholar
Bell, D. 1960. The End of Ideology. On the Exhaustion of Political Ideas in the Fifties. Glencoe: Free Press.Google Scholar
Benot, Y. 1972. Idéologie des indépendances africaines, Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Berdichewsky, B. 1979. “Anthropology and the Peasant Mode of Production,” in Berdichewsky, B. (ed.) Anthropology and Social Change in Rural Class. The Hague, Paris and New York: Mouton, 539.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berg, E. 1965. “The Development of a Labour Force in Sub-Saharan Africa,” Economic Development and Cultural Change 13: 394412.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berman, B. 1984. “The Concept of ‘Articulation’ and the Political Economy of Colonialism,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 18/2: 407–14.Google Scholar
Bernard, C. 1980. “Les activités dites non exploiteuses. Recherche sur la signification du concept de ‘petite production marchande’ en milieu urbain à partir de quelques cas algériens,” Tiers-Monde 82: 307–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernstein, H. 1977. “Marxism and African History: Endre Sik and His Critic,” Kenya Historical Review 5: 121.Google Scholar
Bernstein, H. 1978. “Notes on Capital and Peasantry,” Review of African Political Economy 10: 6073.Google Scholar
Bernstein, H. 1979, “Concepts for the Analysis of Contemporary Peasantries,” Journal of Peasant Studies 6: 421–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernstein, H. and Depelchin, J. 19781979. “The Object of African History: A Materialist Perspective,” History in Africa: A Journal of Method 5: 119; 6: 17-43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernstein, H., Depelchin, J. O'Brien, D. and Nafziger, F. 1978. Development Theory: Three Essays, London: Verso.Google Scholar
Bernstein, H., Depelchin, J. O'Brien, D. Nafziger, F. and Campbell, B.K. (eds.) 1985. Contradictions of Accumulation in Africa: Studies in Economy and State, Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Berry, S. 1981. “Peasants in Africa: Articulation of Modes of Production by Klein and Wolpe,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 14/2: 344–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bezbakh, P. 1982. “Pour en finir avec le mode de production féodal,” L'Homme et la Societe 65/66: 6776.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bezbakh, P. 1983. La société féodo-marchande. Paris: Silex.Google Scholar
Bezbakh, P. et al 1981. Approches de la transition. Lyon: Presses de l'Université de Lyon.Google Scholar
Biaya, T. K. 1984. “De l'aube du temps jusqu' alors: L'histoire contemporaine des Luluwa par Nyunyi wa Lwimba,” in Jewsiewicki, B. (ed.) Etat Indépendent du Congo beige: République Démocratique du Congo. République du Zaire? Quebec: Saf, 2334.Google Scholar
Block, M. (ed.) 1975. Marxist Analyses and Social Anthropology. London: Malaby Press.Google Scholar
Bonnafe, P. 1978. Ngo Lipfu, le lignage de la mart. Paris: Université Paris X.Google Scholar
Bonner, P. 1980. “Classes, the Mode of Production and the State in Precolonial Swaziland,” in Marks, S. and Atmore, A. (eds.) Economy and Society in Pre-Industrial South Africa. London: Longman, 80101.Google Scholar
Bonner, P. 1983. Kings, Commoners and Concessionaires: The Evolution and Dissolution of the 19th Century Swazi State. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonté, P. 1974. “From Ethnology to Anthropology: On Critical Approaches to the Human Sciences,” Critique of Anthropology 2: 5168.Google Scholar
Bonté, P. 1976. “Marxisme et anthropologie: les malheurs d'un empiriste,” L'Homme 16/4: 129–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonté, P. 1977. “Classes et parente,” Dialectiques 21:103–15.Google Scholar
Bonté, P. 1978. “Non-Stratified Social Formation among Pastoralist Nomads,” in Freedman, J. and Rowlands, N. (eds.) The Evolution of Social Systems. London: Duckworth, 173200.Google Scholar
Booth, D. 1985. “Marxism and Development Sociology: Interpreting the Impasse,” in Shaw, (ed.) Marxist Sociology Revisited, London: Macmillan: 136–57.Google Scholar
Bouhdiba, A. 1981. “Les sciences sociales à la recherche du temps,” Revue Internationale des sciences sociales 33: 635–47.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. 1980. “Le capital social,” Actes de la recherche en sciences sociales 31: 24.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. 1984. Homo Academicus. Paris: Editions de Minuit.Google Scholar
Bowler, P. 1984. Evolution: The History of an Idea. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Bozzoli, B. (ed.) 1979, Labour, Townships and Protest: Studies in the Social History of the Witwatersrand. Johannesburg: Ravan.Google Scholar
Bozzoli, B. (ed.) 1983a. “Marxism, Feminism and South African Studies,” Journal of Southern African Studies 9/2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bozzoli, B. (ed.) 1983b. Town and Countryside in the Transvaal: Capitalist Penetration and Popular Response, Johannesburg: Ravan.Google Scholar
Braudel, F. 1979. Civilisation materialle, économie et capitalisme (1500-1800). Paris: Armand Colin.Google Scholar
Braverman, R.E. 1973. “African Workers Advance,” The African Communist 53: 5861.Google Scholar
Braverman, R.E. 1974. “The African Working Class: Recent Changes, New Prospects,” The African Communist 59: 4860.Google Scholar
Brenner, R. 1977. “The Origins of Capitalist Development: A Critique of Neo-Smithian Marxism,” New Left Review 104: 2592.Google Scholar
Brunschwig, H. 1976. “Une autre conception de l'histoire?Cahiers d'études africaines 612: 5965.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunschwig, H. 1983. Noirs et blancs dans l'Afrique noire française. Paris: Flammarion.Google Scholar
Bujtenhuijs, R. 1982. Essays om Mau Mau. Leiden: African Studies Center.Google Scholar
Bundy, C. 1979. The Rise and Fall of the South African Peasantry. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Burawoy, M. 1974. “Race, Class, and Colonialism,” Social and Economic Studies 23/4: 521–50.Google Scholar
Burawoy, M. 1978. Manufacturing Consent: Changes in the Labour Process under Monopoly Capitalism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Burawoy, M. and Skocpol, T. Marxist Inquiries: Studies in Labor, Class, and States. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Burke, F. 1969. “The Meaning of Montreal,” Africa Today 16/5: 89.Google Scholar
Burke, P. 1983. “The Virgin, and the Carmin, and the Revolt of Masamiello,” Past and Present 99: 321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cabral, A. 1969. Revolution in Guinea: Selected Texts. London: Monthly Review (Reprint, Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International).Google Scholar
Callinicos, A. 1976. Althusser' Marxism. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Camhis, M. 1979. Planning Theory and Philosophy. London: Tavistock.Google Scholar
Campbell, B. 1974. “Social Change and Class Formation in a French West Africa,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 8: 285306.Google Scholar
Cardoso, F. H. 1977. “The Consumption of Dependency Theory in the United States,” Latin American Research Review 13: 724.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carr, D. 1986. Time, Narrative, and History. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Carter, G. and O'Meara, P. (eds.) 1985 African Independence: The First Twenty-Five Years. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Cell, J. 1982. The Highest Stage of White Supremacy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
CERM, 1969. Sur le mode de production asiatique. Paris: Editions Sociales.Google Scholar
Certeau, M. de 1969a. L'écriture de l'histoire. Paris: Gallimard.Google Scholar
Certeau, M. de 1969b. L'étronger ou l'union dans la différence. Paris: Desclee de Brower.Google Scholar
Certeau, M. de. 1980. L'invention du quoditien: 1. Arts de faire. Paris: UGE (English translation, 1985).Google Scholar
Cesaire, A. 1955. Discours sur le Colonialisme. Paris: Présence africaine.Google Scholar
Chaliand, G. 1984. Les faubourgs de l'histoire Tiers-mondisme et Tiers-monde, Paris: Calmann-Levy.Google Scholar
Challenor, H. 1969. “No Longer at Ease: Confrontation at the 12th Annual African Studies Association Meeting at Montreal,” Africa Today 16/2: 911.Google Scholar
Charles, M. 1978. “The Changing Vision of the African Working Class: Component of Soviet Strategy in Africa,” Journal of Modern African Studies 16/4: 695700.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chaveau, J.P. and Dozon, J.P. 1985. “Colonisation, économie de plantation et société civile en Côte d'Ivoire, Cahiers ORSTOM, série Sciences humaines 21: 6380.Google Scholar
Chayanov, A.V. [1923] 1966. The Theory of Peasant Economy, in Thomer, D., Kerblay, B., and Smith, R.E.F. (eds.) Sur le mode de production asiatique. Paris: Editions Sociales; Homewood, Ill.: R.C.Irwin.Google Scholar
Chesneaux, J. 1969. “Le mode de production asiatique. Quelques perspectives de recherche,” CERM, Sur le mode de production asiatique. Paris: Editions Sociales, 1345.Google Scholar
Chesneaux, J. 1984. De la modernité. Paris: Seuil.Google Scholar
Chilcote, R.H. 1981. “Issues of Theory, Dependency and Marxism,” Latin American Perspectives 8: 336.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chilcote, R.H. 1982. Dependency and Marxism. Toward a Resolution of the Debate. Boulder: Westview.Google Scholar
Chilcote, R.H., R. H., and Johnson, D.L. 1983. Theories of Development: Mode of Production or Dependency. Beverly Hills and London: Sage.Google Scholar
Chiva, E. 1958. Rural Communities: Problems, Methods and Types of Research, Report and Papers in Social Sciences No. 10. Paris: UNESCO.Google Scholar
Chrétien, J.P. 1986. “Confronting the Unequal Exchange of the Oral and the Written,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 7590.Google Scholar
Churchill, W. 1983. “Marxism and the Native American,” in Marxism and the Native American. Boston: South End Press, 183205.Google Scholar
Churchill, W. and Larson, D.L. 1983. “The Same Old Song in Sad Refrain,” in Marxism and the Native American. Boston: South End Press, 5976.Google Scholar
Clarence-Smith, G. 1977. “A Note on the ‘Ecole des Annales’ and the Historiography of Africa.” History in Africa 4: 275–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarence-Smith, G. 1979. “Slaves, Commoners and Landlords in Bulozi, c. 1875 to 1906,” Journal of African History 20/2: 219–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clarence-Smith, G. 1985. “Thou Shalt Not Articulate Modes of Production,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Letourneau, J. (eds.) Modes of Production: The Challenge of Africa. Quebec: Safi.Google Scholar
Clarke, J. 1969. “Confrontation at Montreal,” African Studies Newsletter 2: 912.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cliffe, L. 1977. “Rural Class Formation in East Africa,” Journal of Peasant Studies 4/2: 195224.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cliffe, L. 1978. “Labor Migration and Peasant Differentiation; Zambian Experiences,” Journal of Peasant Studies 5/1: 326–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cliffe, L. and Moorsom, R. 1979. “Rural Class Formation and Ecological Collapse in Bostwana,” Review of African Political Economy 15/16: 3552.Google Scholar
Clifford, J. 1983. “On Ethnographic Authority,” Representation 1: 118–46.Google Scholar
Coetzee, J.M. 1982. Waiting for the Barbarians. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Cohen, D.W. 1977. Womundfu's Bunafu: A Study of Authority in a Nineteenth Century African Community, Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Cohen, D.W. 1985. “Doing Social History from Pirn's Doorway,” in Zunz, O. (ed.) Reliving the Past: The Worlds of Social History. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Cohen, G. A. 1978. Karl Marx's Theory of History: A Defense. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. 1972. “Class in Africa: Analytical Problems and Perspectives,” in Miliband, R. and Savile, J. (eds.) The Socialist Register. London: Merlin Press, 231–55.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. 1975. “Marxism and Africa: Old, New and Projected,” Working Paper No. 2, Montreal: CDAS.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. 1979. “The Making of a West African Working Class,” in Shaw, T.M. and Heard, K.A. (eds.) The Politics of Africa, Dependence and Development. London: Longman, 521.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. 1980a. “The ‘New’ International Labor Studies: A Definition,” Working Paper No. 27. Montreal: CDAS.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. 1980b. “Resistance and Hidden Forms of Consciousness among African Workers,” Review of African Political Economy 19: 822.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. and Michael, D. n.d. The Revolutionary Potential of the African Lumpen-Proletariat: A Sceptical View. University of Birmingham, Centre of West African Studies (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Cohen, R. Michael, D. n.d. Gutkind, P. and Brazier, P. (eds.) 1979, Peasants and Proletarians: the Struggles of Third World Workers. New York: Monthly Review.Google Scholar
Coleman, J. 1981. “The Development Syndrome: Differentiation - Equality - Capacity,” in Binder, L. (ed.), Crisis and Sequences in Political Development. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Comaroff, J. 1985. Body and Power Spirit of Resistance: The Culture and History of a South African People. Chicago: Chicago University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Comelier, C. 1986. Mythes et espoirs du Tiers-mondisme. Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
Cooper, F. 1977. Plantation Slavery on the East Coast of Africa. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Cooper, F. 1979. “The Problem of Slavery in African Studies,” Journal of African History 20: 103–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, F. 1980. From Slaves to Squatters: Plantation Labor and Agriculture in Zanzibar Coastal Kenya 1890-1925. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Cooper, F. 1981a. “Peasants, Capitalists and Historians,” Journal of Southern African Studies 7: 284314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, F. 1981b. “Africa and the World Economy,” African Studies Review 24: 187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cooper, F. (ed.) 1984. Struggle for the City. Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Cooper, S. and McFarlane, B. 1966. “The Asiatic Mode of Production; An Economic Phoenix,” Australian Quarterly 38/3: 2743.Google Scholar
Copans, J. 1977. “A la recherche de la théorie perdue: marxisme et structuralisme dans l'anthropologie française,” Anthropologie et Sociétés 1: 137–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Copans, J. 1978a. “A chacun sa politique,” Cahiers d'études africaines 69/70: 93113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Copans, J. 1979. “La classe ouvrière d'Afrique noire: aristocratie ouvrière et/ou lumpenproletariat. Quelques recherches et débat anglo-saxon,” in Gibbals, J.M. (ed.), Formation et destructuration des families en milieu urbain. Formation des groupes en ville. Paris: Silex, 175–87.Google Scholar
Copans, J. 1980, “D'un africanisme à 1'autre,” in Schwarz, A. (ed.) Les faux prophètes de l'Afrique ou l'Afr(eu)canisme. Quebec: Presses de l'Université Laval, 5368.Google Scholar
Copans, J. and Seddon, D. 1978. “Marxism and Anthropology: A Preliminary Survey,” in Seddon, D. (ed.) Relations of Production: Marxist Approaches to Economic Anthropology. London: Frank Cass, 146.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1969a. “Anthropologie politique et histoire de l'Afrique Noire,” Annales E.S.C. 24/1: 142–63.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1969b. “Recherches sur un mode de production africain,” La Pensée 144: 6178.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1976a. “La mise en dépendence de L'Afrique noire: essai de periodisation, 1800-1970,” Cahiers d'études Africaines 61/62: 758.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1976b. “Change in African Historical Studies in France,” in Fyfe, C.H. (ed.) African Studies since 1945: A Tribute to Basil Davidson. London: Longman, 200308.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1979. “The Political Economy of the African Peasantry and Modes of Production,” in Gutkind, P., Wallerstein, I., Cohen, D.C. and Daniel, J. (eds.) The Political Economy of Contemporary Africa. Beverly Hills: Sage, 4169.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1980. “Analyse historique et concept de mode de production dans les sociétés précapitalistes,” L'Homme et la Société 55/58: 105–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1981a. “Mode de production, histoire africaine, histoire comparé,” in Le sol, la parole et l'écriture. Mélanges en hommage à Raymond Mauny, Paris: Soctété française d'histoire d'Outre-Mer, 887–94.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1981b. “Les structures du pouvoir et la communauté rural pré-coloniale,” Revue canadienne des études africaines 15/3: 443–49.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1983. “Révoltes et résistance en Afrique Noire: une tradition de résistance paysanne à la colonisation,” Labour, Capital and Society 16/16: 3463.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1985a. “Ou se situe l'Afrique Noire dans l'histoire du système mondial?Review 8: 3759.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. 1985b. “Réflexions d'historienne,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Letourneau, J. (eds.) Modes of Production: The Challenge of Africa. Quebec: Safi, 1316.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. and Jewsiewicki, B. 1986. “Africanist Historiography in France and Belgium: Traditions and Trends,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 139–50.Google Scholar
Coquery-Vidrovitch, C., Jewsiewicki, B., Forest, A. and Weiss, H. (eds.) 1987. Rebellions - Révolutions au Zaire. Paris: L'Harmattan.Google Scholar
Cordell, D. 1985a. “The Labor of Violence: Dar al-Kuti in the Nineteenth Century,” in Lovejoy, P. and Coquery-Vidrovitch, C. (eds.) The Labor of Long-Distance Trade. Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Cordell, D. 1985b. Dar al-Kuty and the Last Years of the Trans Saharan Slave Trade. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Cordell, D. and Gregory, J. 1980. “Historical Demography and Demographic History in Africa,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 14: 389416.Google Scholar
Cordell, D. and Gregory, J. (eds.) 1987. African Population and Capitalism: Historical Perspectives. Boulder: Westview.Google Scholar
Cornevin, R. 1961. “L'Histoire des Peuples de l'Afrique noire,” Journal of African History 2: 1524.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cottret, M. 1986. La bastille à prendre. Histoire et mythe de la forteresse royale. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Court, D. and Prewitt, K. 1974. “Nation versus Region in Kenya: A Note on Political Learning,” British Journal of Political Science 4/1: 109–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowan, G. 1972. “Report of the Committee on Change in Intellectual Perspective,” Issue 2/4: 15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cowan, G. 1969. “Ten Years of African Studies,” African Studies Review 12/1: 17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crick, M. 1982. “Anthropology of Knowledge,” Annual Review of Anthropology 11: 287313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cronin, J. 1986. “National Democratic Struggle and the Question of Transformation,” Transformation 2: 38.Google Scholar
Cruise O'Brien, D. 1971. “Cooperation and Bureaucrats: Class Formation in a Senegalese Peasant Society,” Africa 41: 263–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cruise O'Brien, D. 1979. The Political Economy of Underdevelopment: Dependence of Senegal. Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Crummy, D. and Stewart, C.C. (eds.) 1981a. Modes of Production in Africa: The Pre-Colonial Era. Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Cruse, H. 1962. “Revolutionary Nationalism and the Afro-American,” Studies on the Left 2.Google Scholar
Cruse, H. 1964. “Marxism and the Negro,” Liberator 4 (May/June).Google Scholar
CSIRHGA, 1986. “A propos de l'article de Cyril A. Hromnick,” Diogène 135.Google Scholar
Cummings, R.J. 1986. “Africa between the Ages,” African Studies Review 29/3: 126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curtin, H. 1971. “African Studies: A Personal Assessment,” African Studies Review 14: 357–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curtin, H. 1974. “The Black Experience of Colonialism and Imperialism,” in Mintz, S. (ed.) Slavery, Colonialism and Racism. New York: Norton, 1729.Google Scholar
Sperper, Dan, 1982. Le savoir des anthropologues. Paris: Seuil.Google Scholar
Veena, Das (ed.) 1986. The Word and the World. Fantasy, Symbol and Record. Newbury Park: Sage.Google Scholar
Davidson, B. 1961. Black Mother: Africa, The Years of Trial. London: Gollancz.Google Scholar
Davidson, B. 1968. “African Resistance and Rebellion against the Imposition of Colonial Rule,” in Ranger, T.O. (ed.) Emerging Themes in African History. Nairobi: East African Publishing House.Google Scholar
Davidson, B. 1974. “African Peasants and Revolution,” Journal of Peasant Studies 1/3: 269–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davidson, B. 1978. Africa in Modern History. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Davis, B.D. 1975. “Slavery and the Post-World II Historians,” in Mintz, S. (ed.) Slavery, Colonialism and Rascism. New York: Norton, 116.Google Scholar
Davies, R., O'Meara, D. and Dlami, S. 1984. The Struggle for South Africa: A Reference Guide to Movements, Organizations and Institutions. London: Zed Press.Google Scholar
de Bragança, A. and Depelchin, J. 1986, “From the Idealization of Frelimo to the Understanding of the Recent History of Mozambique,” African Journal of Political Economy 1: 168–80.Google Scholar
Degler, C. 1976. “Why Historians Change their Mind,” Pacific Historical Review 45: 4551.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Degler, C. 1980. “Remaking American History,” Journal of American History 67: 120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delius, P. 1984. The Land Belongs to Us: The Pedi Polity, the Boers and the British in the Nineteenth Century Transvaal. Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Deme, K. 1966. “Les classes sociales dans le Senegal précolonial,” La Pensée. 130: 1131.Google Scholar
Deng, F.M. 1978. Africans of Two Worlds. The Dinka in Afro-Arab Sudan. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Denoon, D. and Kuper, A. 1970. “Nationalist Historians in Search of a Nation: The ‘New Historiography’ in Dar es Salaam,” African Affairs 69: 329–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Denoon, D. and Kuper, A. 1971. “The New Historiography in Dar es Salaam: A Rejoinder,” African Affairs 70/280: 287–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Descombes. 1980. Modern French Philosophy. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Dhoquois, G.Le mode de production asiatique,” Cahiers internationaux de sociologie 41: 8392.Google Scholar
Dhoquois, G. 1972. “Sur les modes de production: L'idéologie,” L'Homme et la Société 23: 189–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Diagne, P. 1983. Ethnophilosophie, europhilosophie: pour une approache néo-pharoanique. Dakar: Sankore.Google Scholar
Dialectique. 1977. 21.Google Scholar
Diamond, S. (ed.) 1979. Toward a Marxist Anthropology: Problems and Perspectives. The Hague: Mouton.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dieng, A.A. 1975. Social Classes and Feudal Mode of Production in West Africa. Dakar (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Dieng, A.A. 1978. Hegel, Marx, Engels et les problèmes de l'Afrique Noire. Dakar: Sankore.Google Scholar
Dieng, A.A. 1985. Le marxisme et l'Afrique noire. Paris: Nubia.Google Scholar
Diop, Cheikh Anta. 1955. Anteriorité des civilisations nègres mythe ou verité historique? Paris: Présence africaine.Google Scholar
Diop, Cheikh Anta. 1981. Civilisation ou barbarie. Paris: Présence africaine.Google Scholar
Diop, M. 1956. Contribution a l'étude des problèmes politiques de l'Afrique noire. Paris: Présence africaine.Google Scholar
Diop, M. 19711972. Histoire des classes sociales dans l'Afrique de l'Ouest. 1. Le Mali. 2. Le Sénégal. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Duby, G. and Lardeau, G. 1980. Dialogues. Paris: Seuil.Google Scholar
Duchet, M. 1971. Anthropologic et histoire au siècle des Lumières. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Dumont, L. 1971. Introduction à deux théories d'anthropologie sociale. Paris: Mouton.Google Scholar
Dumont, L. 1977. Homo Aequalis: Genèse et épanouissement de l'édiologie. Paris: Gallimard.Google Scholar
Dumont, L. (1966) 1979. Homo Hierarchicus. Le système des castes et ses implications. Paris: Gallimard.Google Scholar
Dumont, L. 1983. Essai sur l'individualisme. Paris: Gallimard.Google Scholar
Dunn, J. 1979. Western Political Theory in the Face of the Future. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dunn, S.P. 1982. The Fall and Rise of the Asiatic Mode of Production. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Dupré, G. 1982. Un ordre et sa destruction: économie et histoire chez les Nzabi de la Ripublique Populaire du Congo. Paris: ORSTOM.Google Scholar
Dupré, G. 1985. Les naissances d'une société. Espace et historicité chez les Beembe du Congo. Paris: ORSTOM.Google Scholar
Dupré, G. and Rey, P.P. 1969. “Réflection sur la pertinence d'une théorie de l'histoire des échanges,” Cahiers internationaux de sociologie 46: 133-62. English translation in D. Seddon (ed.) Relations of Production: Marxiste Approaches to Economic Anthropology. London: Frank Cass, 171–208.Google Scholar
Dupuy, A. 1983. “Slavery and Underdevelopment in the Caribbean: A Critique of the Plantation Economy Perspective,” Dialectical Anthropology 7: 237–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Echenberg, M. 1975. “Consciousness and African Historiography: Some Suggestions for Future Research,” Working Paper No. 6. Montreal: CDAS.Google Scholar
Eley, G. 1981. “Nationalism and Social History,” Social History 6: 83107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elliou, M. 1977. La formation de la conscience nationale en Répubique du Congo. Paris: Anthropos.Google Scholar
Elster, J. 1982. “Belief, Bias and Ideology,” in Hollis, and Lukes, (eds.) Rationality and Relativism. Boston: MIT Press, 123–48.Google Scholar
Ennew, J., Hirst, P. and Tribe, K. 1977. “Peasantry as an Economic Category,” Journal of Peasant Studies 4/4: 295322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Etherton, M. 1981. “Peasants and Intellectuals,” Africa 51: 863–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fabian, J. 1983. Time and the Other. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Fallers, L. 1961. “Are African Cultivators to be Called ‘Peasants’?Current Anthropology 2: 108–10.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fanon, F. 1961. Les damnés de la terre. Paris: Présence africaine (English edition, 1967).Google Scholar
Fanon, F. 1970. Toward an African Revolution. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Fields, B. 1982. “Ideology and Race in American History,” in Kousser, J. and McPherson, J. (eds.) Region, Race and Reconstuction: Essays in Honor ofC. Vann Woodward. New York: Oxford University Press, 135–56.Google Scholar
Fields, K. 1982a. “Political Contingencies of Witchcraft in Colonial Central Africa: Culture and State in Marxist Theory,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 16: 567–93.Google Scholar
Fields, K. 1982b. “Charismatic Religion as Popular Protest,” Theory and Society 11: 322–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fields, K. 1985. Revival and Rebellion in Colonial Africa. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
First, R. 1970. The Barrel of a Gun: Political Power and the Coup d'Etat. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Firth, R. (1946) 1975. Malay Fishermen: Their Peasant Economy. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Foster-Carter, A. 1973. “The Sounds of Silence: The Class Struggle on Tanzania,” Maji Maji 11: 1224.Google Scholar
Foster-Carter, A. 1978. “The Modes of Production Controversy,” New York Left Review 107: 4777.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. 1972. The Archeology of Knowledge. New York: Pantheon.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. 1980. Power/Knowledge. New York: Pantheon.Google Scholar
Fox, R.; Cramer, W. de, and Ribeaucourt, J.M. 1965. “The ‘Second Independence’: A Case Study of the Kwilu Rebellion in the Congo,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 8: 79109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frank, A.G. 1972. Lumpenbourgeoisie-Lumpendevelopment. New York. Monthly Review.Google Scholar
Fredrickson, G. 1981. White Supremacy: A'Comparative Study in American and South African History. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Fredrickson, G. 1987. “The Feel of Freedom, Review of Freedom: A Documentary History of Emancipation 1861-1867,” The Times Literary Supplement, 9 January: 31.Google Scholar
Freund, W. 1984. “Labor and Labor History in Africa. A Review of the Literature,” African Studies Review 27/12: 158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Freund, W. 1985. “The Modes of Production Debate in African Studies,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Letoumeau, J. (eds.) Modes of Production: The Challenge of Africa. Quebec: Safi, 23–9.Google Scholar
Freund, W. 1988. The African Worker. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Fried, M.H. 1967. The Evolution of Political Society: An Essay in Political Anthropology. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Friedman, J. 1974. “Marxism, Structuralism and Vulgar Materialism,” Man (N.S.) 9/3: 444–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friedman, J. 1984. Nyabingi: The Social History of an African Divinity. Tervuren: MRAC.Google Scholar
Fyfe, C.H. (ed.) 1976. African Studies since 1945: A Tribute to Basil Davidson. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Gallissot, R. 1980a. “Retour à l'histoire,” L'Homme et la Société 55/58: 115–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gallissot, R. 1980b. “Vers un développement des perspectives des modes de production et des sociétés précapitalistes,” L'Homme et la Société 55/58: 93104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gallissot, R. (ed.) 1984. Les aventures du marxisme. Paris: Syros.Google Scholar
Gates, H.L. Jr. (ed.) 1986. Race, Writing and Difference. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Geertz, C. 1963. Agricultural Involution: The Processes of Ecological Change in Indonesia, Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geertz, C. 1980. “Blurred Genres: The Refiguration of Social Thought,” American Scholar 49: 165–79.Google Scholar
Geertz, C. 1984. “Anti-anti-relativism,” American Anthropologist 86: 263–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gellner, E. (ed.) 1980. Soviet and Western Anthropology. London: Duckworth.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Genovese, E.D. 1981. From Rebellion to Revolution. New York: Vintage Books.Google Scholar
Gephart, M. 1986. “Preface,” African Studies Review 29:iiiiv.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geschiere, P. 1982. Village Communities and the State. Changing Relations among the Maka of Southeastern Cameroon since the Colonial Conquest. London and Boston: Kegan Paul International.Google Scholar
Geschiere, P. 1984. “Imposing Capitalist Dominance through the State: The Multivarious Role of the Colonial State in Africa,” in Binsbergen, W.M.J. and Gerschiere, P. (eds.) Old Modes of Production and Capitalist Encroachment: Anthropological Explorations in Africa. London and Boston: Kegan Paul International.Google Scholar
Geschiere, P. 1985. “Applications of the Lineage Mode of Production in African Studies,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 8098.Google Scholar
Giddens, A. 1979. Central Problems in Social Theory: Action Structure and Contradiction in Social Analysis, Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Giddens, A. 1981. A Contemporary Critique of Historical Materialism. Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gifford, P. and Louis, W. (eds.) 1982. The Transfer of Power in Africa. Decolonization, 1940-1960. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Glazer, D. 1986. “Behind the Indaba: The Making of the KwaNatal Option,” Transformation 2: 430.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. 1969a. “La notion de ‘mode de production asiatique’ et les schémas marxistes d'évolution des sociétés,” in CERM. Sur le mode de production asiatique. Paris: Editions Sociales, 47100.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. 1969b. Rationalité at irrationalité en économie. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. 1973. Horizons, trajets marxistes en anthropologie. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. 1974. “On the Definition of a Social Formation,” Critique of Anthropology 1: 6373.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Godelier, M. 1977a. “Anthropology and Economics,” in Godelier, M., Perspectives in Marxist Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1562.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. 1977b. “Infrastructure, sociétés, histoire,” Dialectiques (Automne): 4153 (English version in Dialectical Anthropology).Google Scholar
Godelier, M. 1980. “The Emergence and Development of Marxist Anthropology in France,” in Gellner, E. (ed.) Soviet and Western Anthropology. London: Duckworth, 318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Godelier, M. 1982. La production des grands hommes: pouvoir et domination masculine chez les Buraya de Nouvelle-Guinée. Paris: Fayard.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. 1984. L'Idéel et le matérial. Pensées, économies, sociétés. Paris: Fayard.Google Scholar
Goma-Fouton, C. 1985a. “La formation socio-économique de la République Populaire du Congo,” Revue de science sociale 3: 320.Google Scholar
Goma-Fouton, C. 1985b. “La lutte contre les idéologies opposées au Marxisme-leninisme,” Revue de science sociale 4: 4372.Google Scholar
Goody, J. 1971. Technology, Tradition and the State in Africa. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Graf, W. 1983. “African Elite Theories and Nigerian Elite Consolidation: A Political Economy Analysis,” in Barongo, Y. (ed.) Political Science in Africa. A Critical Review. London: Zed Press, 189210.Google Scholar
Greenberg, M. 1977. “The New Economic History and the Understanding of Slavery: A Methodological Critique,” Dialectical Anthropology 2/2: 131–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenberg, S. 1980. Race and State in Capitalist Development. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Gregory, J. 1979. “La démographie africaniste de la recherche d'une technicité qui devient idéologique,” Revue canadienne des études africaines 13/1-2: 195208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gregory, J. 1982. “African Population: Reproduction for Whom,” Daedalus 111: 179210.Google Scholar
Gregory, J. 1983. “African Return Migrations: Past, Present and Future,” Contemporary Marxism 7: 169–83.Google Scholar
Gregory, J. 1985. “Régime démographique et mode de production,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Letoumeau, J. (eds.) Modes of Production: The Challenge of Africa. Quebec: Safi.Google Scholar
Gregory, J. and Piche, V. 1981. “The Demographic Process of Peripheral Capitalism, Illustrated with African Examples,” Working Paper No. 29.Google Scholar
Grundy, K. 1964. “The Class Struggle in Africa,” Journal of Modern African Studies 2: 379–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guitton, J. 1988. Un siècle, une vie. Paris: Laffont.Google Scholar
Gutkind, P.C.W. 1967. “The Energy of Despair: Social Organization of the Unemployed in two African Urban Areas, Lagos and Nairobi. A Preliminary Account,” Civilisations 17: 184219; 380-405.Google Scholar
Gutkind, P.C.W. 1968a. “African Responses to Urban Wage Employment,” International Labour Review 97/2: 135–66.Google Scholar
Gutkind, P.C.W. 1968b. “The Poor in Urban Politics in Africa: A Prologue to Modernization, Conflict and the Unfinished Revolution,” in Bloomert, & Schmandt, H. (eds.) Power, Deprivation and Urban Policy. Beverly Hills: Sage, 355–96.Google Scholar
Gutkind, P.C.W. 1973. “From the Energy of Despair to the Anger of Despair: The Transition from Social Circulation to Political Consciousness among the Urban Poor in Africa,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 1/2: 179–98.Google Scholar
Gutkind, P.C.W. 1974a. The Emergent African Urban Proletariat. Montreal: CDAS.Google Scholar
Gutkind, P.C.W. 1974b. Urban Anthropology: Perspectives on ‘Third World’ Urbanization and Urbanism. New York: Barnes and Noble.Google Scholar
Gutkind, P.C.W. 1978. “Reformism, Populism and Proletarianism in Urban Africa,” Ufahamu 8/3: 2461.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gutkind, P.C.W. and Waterman, P. (eds.) 1977. African Social Studies: A Radical Reader. London: Monthly Review.Google Scholar
Gutkind, P.C.W. and Waterman, P., Cohen, R. and Copans, J. (eds.) 1978. African Labor History. Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Gutkind, P.C.W. and Waterman, P., Cohen, R. and Copans, J., Wallerstein, I., Cohen, D.C. and Daniel, J. (eds.) 1979. The Political Economy of Contemporary Africa, Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Guyer, J. 1981. “Household and Community,” African Studies Review 24/2-3: 87138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halperin, R.H. 1984. “Polanyi, Marx and the Institutional Paradigm,” in Issac, B.L. (ed.) Research in Economic Anthropology: A Research Annual. Greenwich: JAI Press 6, 245–72.Google Scholar
Hansen, A. and McMillan, D. (eds.) 1986. Food in Sub-Saharan Africa. Boulder: Lynne Rienner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harding, V. 1981. There Is a River: The Black Struggle for Freedom in America. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.Google Scholar
Harries, P. 1985. “Modes of Production and Modes of Production Analysis: The South African Case,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Letourneau, J. (eds.) Modes of Production: The Challenge of Africa. Quebec: Safi, 30–7.Google Scholar
Harrison, M. 1977. “The Peasant Mode of Production in the Work of A.V. Chayanov,” Journal of Peasant Studies 4/4: 323–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hazoume, G.L. 1972. Idéologie tribaliste et nation en Afrique (le Cos dahoméen). Paris: Présence africaine.Google Scholar
Heisler, H. 1971. “The Creation of a Stabilized Urban Society: A Turning Point in the History of Northern Rhodesia/Zambia,” African Affairs 70/279: 125–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, P. 1970. Studies in Rural Capitalism in West Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hilton, R. (ed.) 1976. Feudalism or Capitalism. London: New Left.Google Scholar
Hindess, B. and Hirst, P.Q. 1975. Pre-Capitalist Modes of Production. London and Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Hindess, B. and Hirst, P.Q. 1977. Modes of Production and Social Formation: An Auto-Critique of Pre-Capitalist Modes of Production. London: Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hine, D. (ed.) 1986. The State of Afro-American History: Past, Present, and Future. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press.Google Scholar
Hobsbawn, E.J. 1971. “Class Consciousness in History,” in Meszaros, I. (ed.) Aspects of History and Class Consciousness. London: Merlin Press, 521.Google Scholar
Hobsbawn, E.J. 1984. “Marx and History,” New Left Review 143: 3950.Google Scholar
Hobsbawn, E.J. and Ranger, T. (eds.) 1983. The Invention of Tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hochstadt, S. 1982. “Social History and Politics: A Materialist View,” Social History 7: 7583.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodgkin, T. 1972. “Some African and Third World Theories of Imperialism,” in Owen, R. and Sutcliffe, B. (eds.) Studies in the Theory of Imperialism. London: Macmillan, 93116.Google Scholar
Hodgkin, T. 1976. “Where the Paths Began,” in Fyfe, C.H. (ed.) African Studies since 1945: A Tribute to Basil Davidson. London: Longman, 317.Google Scholar
Hollis, M. and Lukes, S. (eds.) 1982. Rationality and Relativism. Boston: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Hoover, K. 1987. “The Rise of Conservative Capitalism: Ideological Tensions within the Reagan and Thatcher Governments,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 29: 245–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Horowitz, L.L. 1987a. “Disenthralling Sociology,” Society 24/2: 4855.Google Scholar
Horowitz, L.L. 1987b. Communicating Ideas. The Crisis of Publishing in Post-Industrial Society. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Hountondji, P. 1985. African Philosophy: Myth and Reality. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Hutton, C. and Cohen, R. 1975. “African Peasants and Resistance to Change: A Reconsideration of Sociological Approaches,” in Oxall, I., Barnett, T. and Booth, D. (eds.) Beyond the Sociology of Development: Economy and Society in Latin America and Africa. London: Routledge Chapman and Hall, 105–30.Google Scholar
Hyden, G. 1980. Beyond Ujamaa in Tanzania: Underdevelopment and an Uncaptured Peasantry. Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hyden, G. 1983. No Shortcuts to Progress: African Development and Management in Perspective. Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Iliffe, J. 1983. The Emergence of African Capitalism. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iliffe, J. 1988. African Poor. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ilunga, K. 1984. “Déroutante Afrique ou la syncope d'un discours,” in Jewsiewicki, B. (ed.) Etat Indépendent du Congo. République Démocratique du Congo. République du Zaire? Quebec: Safi, 1322.Google Scholar
Inikori, J.E. 1978. “The Origin of the Diaspora: The Slave Trade from Africa,” Tarikh 5/4: 119.Google Scholar
Institute for African Alternatives. 1986. Africa Crisis. London: Institute for African Alternatives.Google Scholar
Inyundo, J. 1986. “What Changes in African Rural Societies May Land Shortage Bring?” Historical Association of Kenya. Ad Hoc Annual Conference, Nairobi (January).Google Scholar
Irele, A. 1986. “An African Perspective of Publishing for African Studies,” British Library Occasional Papers 6: 7789.Google Scholar
Isaacman, A. 1972. The Africanization of an European Institution: The Zambesi Prazos, 1750-1902. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Isaacman, A. 1973. “Madzi-Manga, Mhondoro and the Use of Oral Traditions, a Chapter in the Barue Religious and Political History,” Journal of African History 14: 395409.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Isaacman, A. 1976. Anti-Colonial Activity in the Zambezi Valley, 1850-1921. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Isaacman, A. 1977. “Social Bandity in Zimbabwe (Rhodesia) and Mozambique, 1894-1907: An Expression of Early Peasant Protest,” Journal of Southern African Studies 4: 130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Isaacman, A. and Isaacman, B. 1976. The Traditon of Resistance in Mozambique: The Zambezi Valley, 1850-1921. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Isaacman, A. and Isaacman, B. 1977. “Resistance and Collaboration in Southern and Central Africa, c. 1850-1920,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 10: 3162.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Isaacman, A. and Isaacman, B. et al 1981. “Cotton is the Mother of Poverty: Peasant Resistance to Forced Cotton Production in Mozambique 1938-1961.” International Journal of African Historical Studies 14: 145.Google Scholar
Ismaguilova, E.R.N. 1985. “L'intégration nationale en Afrique tropical,” Revue de science sociales 3: 5570.Google Scholar
Ismaguilova, E.R.N. 1979. “Le processus ethnique en Afrique tropicale contemporaine,” Revue des sciences sociales 4: 220–37.Google Scholar
Jaarsveld, F.A. van. 1964. The Afrikaner's Interpretation of South African History. Cape Town: Ravan Press.Google Scholar
Jackson, R. and Rosberg, C. 1986. “Sovereignty and Underdevelopment: Juridicial Statehood in the African Crises,” Journal of Modern African Studies 24: 132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jameson, F. 1981. The Political Unconscious. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Jaulin, R. 1970. La paix blanche. Paris: Seuil.Google Scholar
Jeffries, R. 1975. “The Labour Aristocracy? Ghana Case Study,” Review of African Political Economy 3: 5970.Google Scholar
Jeffries, R. 1978. Class, Power and Ideology in Ghana: the Railwaymen of Sekondi. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1977. “L'anthropologie économique et les modes de production,” Culture et développement. 9/2: 195246.Google Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1979. “Le colonat agricole européen au Congo Beige 1910-1960, problèmes politiques et économiques,” Journal of African History 19: 559–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1980a. “Political Consciousness among African Peasants in Belgian Congo,” Review of African Political Economy 19: 2332.Google Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1980b. “African in the Totalitarian Colonial Society of the Belgian Congo,” in Klein, (ed.) Peasants in Africa: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives. Beverly Hills and London: Sage, 4575.Google Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1980c. “Histoire en Afrique ou le commerce des idées usagées,” in Schwarz, A. (ed.) Les faux prophètes de l'Afrique ou l'Afr(eu)canisme. Quebec: Presses de l' Université Laval, 6886.Google Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1981a. “L'état et l'accumulation primitive coloniale; la formation du mode de production colonial au Zaire,” Revue Française d'histoire d'outre-mer 68: 7191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1981b. “The Production of History and Social Conscience or How to ‘Civilize’ The Other,” History in Africa 8: 7587.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1981c. “Histoire monument ou histoire conscience,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 15: 550–56.Google Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1981d. “Lineage Mode of Production: Social Inequalities in Equatorial Africa,” in Crummy, D. and Stewart, C.C. (eds.) Modes of Production in Africa: The Pre-Colonial Era. Beverly Hills: Sage, 93113.Google Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1983. “Raison d'État ou raison du capital: l'accumulation primitive au Congo Belge,” African Economic History 12: 157–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1986. “A Requiem for Africanism,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 919.Google Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. 1987. “The African Prism of Immanuel Wallerstein,” Radical History Review 39: 5068.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. (ed.) 1984. L'Etat Indépendent du Congo beige. République Democratique du Congo. République du Zaire? Quebec: Safi.Google Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. and Létourneau, J. (eds.) 1985. Mode of Production: The Challenge of Africa. Quebec: Safi.Google Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. and Létourneau, J. and Newbury, D. (eds.) 1986. African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Jewsiewicki, B. and Létourneau, J. and Newbury, D. (eds.) Forthcoming. “Présence africaine as Historiography—Historicity of the Societies and Specificity of Black African Culture” in Mudimbe, V.Y. (ed.) The Surreptitious Speech. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Jonas, S. 1980. “La dialectique des modes de production,” L'Homme et la Société 55/58: 131–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnson, D.L. 1978. “Economism and Determinism in Dependency Theory,” Latin American Perspectives 8: 108–17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johnston, F. 1982. “Most Painful to Our Hearts: South Africa Through the Eyes of the New School,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 16: 526.Google Scholar
Jonge, K. de. 1980. Une étude d'une lutte de classe en Casamance (Sud-Sénégal) Leiden: African Studies Center.Google Scholar
Joseph, R. 1983. “Class, State and Prebendal Politics in Nigeria,” Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Political Studies 21: 2138.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Judt, T. 1986. Marxism and the French Left. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Jules-Rosette, B. 1978. “The Politics of Paradigms: Contrasting Theories of Consciousness and Society,” Human Studies 1: 92110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Juszezak, J. 1977. L'anthropologic de Hegel à trovers la pensée moderne. Paris: Anthropos.Google Scholar
Kadima-Nzuji, M. 1985. “Sony Labou Tansi ou la quête de la liberté et de la justice,” Annales de la Faculté des Lettres et des Sciences Humaines 1: 295–99.Google Scholar
Kahn, J. and Llobera, J. 1980. “French Marxist Anthropoloy: Twenty Years After,” Journal of Peasant Studies 8/1: 81100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kalilou, D. 1966. “Les classes sociales dans le Sénégal précolonial,” La Pensée 130: 1131.Google Scholar
Kalurzynska, E. 1980. “Wiping the Floor with Theory,” Feminist Review 6.Google Scholar
Kane, F. 1977. “Femmes prolétaires du Sénégal, à la ville et aux champs,” Cahiers d'études africaines 65: 7794.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaplan, Abraham. 1964. The Coduct of Inquiry. San Francisco: Chandler.Google Scholar
Karp, I. 1978. “New Guinea Models in African Savannah,” Africa 48: 116.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Karp, I. 1980. “Beer Drinking and Social Experience in an African Society: An Essay in Formal Sociology,” in Karp, I. and Bird, C. (eds.) Explorations in African Systems of Thought. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 83119.Google Scholar
Karp, I. and Bird, C. (eds.) 1980. Explorations in African Systems of Thought. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Katz, S. 1980. Marxism, Africa, and Social Class: A Critique of Relevant Theories. Montreal: CDAS.Google Scholar
Kay, G. 1975. Development and Underdevelopment: A Marxist Analysis, New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kayoya, M. 1983. My Father's Footprint. Nairobi: East African Publishing House.Google Scholar
Keegan, T. 1979. “The Restructuring of Agrarian Class Relations in a Colonial Economy: The Orange River Colony, 1902-1910,” Journal of Southern African Studies 5: 234–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keegan, T. 1982. “The Sharecropping Economy, African Class Formation and the 1913 Natives Land Act in the Highveld Maize Belt,” in Marks, S. and Rathbone, R. (eds.) Industrialization and Social Change in South Africa: African Class Formation, Culture and Consciousness, 1870-1930. London: Longman, 195211.Google Scholar
Kelly, M. 1982. Modern French Marxism. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Keyder, C. 1976, “The Dissolution of the Asiatic Mode of Production,” Economy and Society 5: 178–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kimio, S. 1966. “Marx's View of Asian Society and His Asiatic Mode of Production,” The Developing Economies 4/3: 299315.Google Scholar
Rana, Kipkoril Aly Azad. 1977, “Class Formation and Social Conflict: A Case Study of Kenya,” Ufahumu 7: 1772.Google Scholar
Kiros, F. (ed.) 1985. Challenging Rural Poverty: Experience in Institution Building and Popular Participation for Rural Development in Eastern Africa. Trenton: Africa World Press.Google Scholar
Kississou-Boma, J.R. n.d. Classes sociales et idéologies en Afrique centrale. Brazzaville: Ecole Supérieure du Parti.Google Scholar
Kitching, G. 1972. “The Concept of Class and the Study of Africa,” African Review 2: 327–50.Google Scholar
Kitching, G. 1980. Class and Economic Change in Kenya. The Making of an African Petite-Bourgeoisie, 1905-1970, New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Kitching, G. 1982. Development and Underdevelopment in Historical Perspective, London: Routledge, Chapman and Hall.Google Scholar
Kitching, G. 1983. Rethinking Socialism. London: Routledge, Chapman and Hall.Google Scholar
Kitching, G. 1985. “Suggestion for a Fresh Start on an Exhausted Debate,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 116–26.Google Scholar
Ki-Zerbo, J. 1980, “De l'Afrique ustensile à l'Afrique partenaire,” in Mudimbe, V.Y. (ed.) La dépendence de l'Afrique et les moyens d'y remédier. Actes du Congrès International des études africaines de Kinshasa. Paris: ACCT et Berger-Levrault, 4255.Google Scholar
Klein, M. 1986. “The Development of Senegalese Historiography,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Bevely Hills: Sage; 215–23.Google Scholar
Klein, M. (ed.) 1980. Peasant in Africa: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives. Beverly Hills and London: Sage.Google Scholar
Klein, M. and Lovejoy, P. 1979. “Slavery in West Africa,” in Gemery, H.A. and Hogendorn, J.S. (eds.). The Uncommon Market: Essays in the Economic History of the Atlantic Slave Trade. New York: Academic Press, 181212.Google Scholar
Klerk, W.de. 1984. The Second Revolution: Afrikanerdom and the Crisis of Identity. Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball.Google Scholar
Knight, J. and Lenta, G. 1980. “Has Capitalism Underdeveloped the Labour Reserves of South Africa?Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics 42: 193–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Konings, P. 1980. The Political Potential of Ghanaian Miners. A Case Study of the AGC Workers at Abuasi. Leiden: African Studies Center.Google Scholar
Konings, P. 1981. Peasantry and State in Ghana. Leiden: African Studies Center.Google Scholar
Kösler, R. and Biermann, W. 1980. “The Settlers Mode of Production: The Rhodesian Case,” Review of African Political Economy 18: 106–16.Google Scholar
Kouvouama, A. and Dacy, E. 1985. “Conscience ethnique et conscience de class au Congo,” Université Marien Nguabi Annates de la Faculté des Lettres et de Sciences humaines 1: 217–91.Google Scholar
Krader, L. 1975. The Asiatic Mode of Production: Sources, Development and Critique in the Writings of K. Marx. Assen: Van Gorcum.Google Scholar
Krader, L. 1980. “The Asiatic Mode of Production,” International Journal of Politics 10/2–3: 99128.Google Scholar
Kuhn, T.S. [1962] 1970. The Structure of Scientific Revolutions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Kuper, A. [1973] 1983. Anthropology and Anthropolists. London and Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Kuper, A. 1980. “The Man in the Study and the Man in the Field,” European Journal of Sociology 21: 1439.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuper, A. 1981. Genocide. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Kuper, A. 1982a. Wives for Cattle. London: Routledge and Kegan.Google Scholar
Kuper, A. 1982b. “Lineage Theory: A Critical Retrospect,” Annual Review of Anthropology 11: 7195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuzminski, A. 1986. “Archetypes and Paradigms: History, Politics, and Persons,” History and Theory 25: 225–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lakatos, I. and Musgrave, A. (eds.) 1970. Criticism and the Growth of Knowledge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamar, H. and Thompson, L. (eds.) 1982. The Frontier in History: North America and Southern Africa Compared, New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Latouche, S. 1982. “L'impérialisme précède le développement du capitalisme,” Les Temps Modernes 434: 515–38.Google Scholar
Law, R. 1981a. “For Marx but with Reservations about Althusser: A Comment on Bernstein and Depelchin,” History in Africa 8: 247–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Law, R. 1981b. “How not to be a Marxist Historian: The Althusser Threat to African History,” in Samuel, R. (ed.) People's History and Social Theory, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 313–19.Google Scholar
Law, R. 1981c. “In Search of Marxist Perspective on Pre-Colonial Tropical Africa,” Journal of African History 19/3: 441–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Le Bris, E., Le Roy, E., and Leimdorfer, F. (eds.) 1982. Enjeux fanciers en Afrique noire. Paris: ORSTOM.Google Scholar
Leclerc, G. 1972. Anthropologic et colonialisme; essai sur l'histoire de l'Africanisme, Paris: Fayard.Google Scholar
Lee, F. 1983. “Dependency and Revolutionary Theory in the African Situation,” in Barongo, (ed.) Political Science in Africa: A Critical Review. London: Zed Press; 178–88.Google Scholar
Legassick, M. 1978. “The Concept of Pluralism: A Critique,” in Gutkind, P. and Waterman, P., African Social Studies: 4450 Google Scholar
Lehman, D. 1980. “Ni Chayanov ni Lenin: Apunter sobre la théoria de la economia campesina,” Estudios Rurales Latinoamericanos 3: 523.Google Scholar
Lemelle, S. 1970, “Class Struggles in Pre-Colonial Africa,” Maji-Maji, 37: 518.Google Scholar
Lerner, G. 1986. The Creation of Patriarchy. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Levich, M. 1985. “Interpretation in History: or What Historians Do and Philosophers Say,” History and Theory 24: 4461.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levine, L. 1977. Black Culture and Black Consciousness. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Levi-Strauss, C. 1949. Les structures élémentaires de la parenté, Paris: Plon.Google Scholar
Levi-Strauss, C. 1955. Tristes tropiques, Paris: Plon.Google Scholar
Levi-Strauss, C. 1962. Lapensie sauvage, Paris: Plon.Google Scholar
Levi-Strauss, C. 1973. “Race ethistoire,” in UNESCO. Le racisme devant la science. Paris: UNESCO; 3045.Google Scholar
Lewis, L. 1984. “The Rise and Fall of the South African Peasantry: A Critique and Reassessment,” Journal of Southern African Studies 11: 286301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leys, C. 1971. “Politics in Kenya: The Development of Peasant Society,” British Journal of Political Science 1/3:307–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leys, C. 1975a. “Studies in the Political Consciousness of Workers and Peasants in the Third World: The Problems of Theory and Practice,” Working Paper, No. 10. Montreal: CDAS.Google Scholar
Leys, C. 1975b. Underdevelopment in Kenya: The Political Economy of Neo-Colonialism, London: Heineman.Google Scholar
Leys, C. 1977. “Underdevelopment and Dependency: Critical Notes,” Journal of Contemporary Asia 7/1: 92107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leys, C. 1978. “Capital Accumulation, Class Formation and Dependency: The Significance of the Kenyan Case,” in The Socialist Register. London: Merlin Press, 241–66.Google Scholar
Leys, C. 1980. “What Does ‘Dependency’ Explain?Review of African Political Economy 17: 108–13.Google Scholar
Leys, C. 1982, “African Economic Development in Theory and Practice,” Daedalus 111: 99123.Google Scholar
Liebman, R. and Wuthnow, R. (eds.) 1983. The New Christian Right. New York: Aldine.Google Scholar
Lincoln, B. 1983. “The Earth Becomes Flat—A Study of Apocalyptic Imagery,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 25: 136–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lissouba, P. 1976. Conscience du développement et démocratie. Abidjan: Nouvelles éditions africaines.Google Scholar
Lloyd, P.C. 1975. Power and Interdependence: Urban Africa's Perception of Social Inequality. London: Unwin Hyman.Google Scholar
Lonsdale, J. 1981. “The State and the Social Processes in Africa,” African Studies Review 24/2–3: 187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lonsdale, J. 1987. “La pensée politique kikuyu et les idéologies du mouvement mau-mau.” Cahiers d'études africaines 107–8: 329–58 (to be published in English in Berman, B. and Lonsdale, J.Unhappy Valley. London: Currey).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Louis, R. and Robinson, R. 1982. “The United States and the Liquidation of British Empire in Tropical Africa,” in Gifford, P. and Louis, W. (eds.) The Transfer of Power in Africa. Decolonization, 1940-1960. New Haven: Yale University Press, 3155.Google Scholar
Lovejoy, P. 1979. “The Characteristics of Plantations Slavery in the Nineteenth Century Sokoto Caliphate (Islamic West Africa),” American Historical Review 84: 1267–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lovejoy, P. 1983. Transformation in Slavery. A History of Slavery in Africa. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lovejoy, P. (ed.) 1981. The Ideology of Slavery in Africa. Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Lowe, D. 1982. History of Bourgeois Perceptions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Lowith, K. 1982. Max Weber and Karl Marx. London: Allen and Unwin.Google Scholar
Lubeck, P. 1979. “The Value of Multiple Methods in Researching Third World Strikes: A Nigerian Example,” Development and Change 10/2: 301–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lubeck, P. 1981. “Islamic Networks and Urban Capitalism: An Instance of Articulation from Northern Nigeria,” Cahiers d'études africaines 21/81–3: 6878.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lubeck, P. (ed.) 1987. The African Bourgeoisie: Capitalist Development in Nigeria, Kenya and the Ivory Coast. Boulder: Lynne Rienner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Luhman, N. 1976. “The Future Cannot Begin: Temporary Structures in Modern Society,” Social Research 43: 130–52.Google Scholar
Ly, A. 1958. La Compagnie du Sénégal. Paris: Présence africaine.Google Scholar
MacFerlane, N. 1985. Superpower Rivalry and 3rd World Radicalism: The Idea of National Liberation. London: Croom Helm.Google Scholar
MacGaffey, W. 1980. “African Religions: Types and Generalizations,” in Karp, I. and Bird, C. (eds.) Explorations in African Systems of Thought. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 301–28.Google Scholar
MacGaffey, W. 1981. “African Ideology and Belief: A Survey,” African Studies Review 24/2–3: 139227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacGaffey, W. 1983. “Lineage Structure, Marriage and the Family Amongst the Central Bantu,” Journal of African History 24: 173–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacRae, P. 1974. “Race and Class in Southern Africa,” African Review 4/2: 237–57.Google Scholar
Mafeje, A. 1976. “The Problem of Anthropology in Historical Perspective: An Inquiry into the Growth of the Social Sciences,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 10/2: 307–33.Google Scholar
Manning, P. 1981. “The Enslavement of Africans: A Demographic Model,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 15: 499526.Google Scholar
Marie, A. 1976. “Rapports de parenté et rapport de production dans les sociétés lignagères,” in Pouillon, F. (ed.) L'anthropologie économique. Paris: Maspero, 80110.Google Scholar
Markovitz, I. 1977. Power and Class in Africa. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
Marks, S. 1982. “Scrambling for South Africa,” Journal of African History 21: 98–9.Google Scholar
Marks, S. 1986. “The Historiography of South Africa: Recent Developments,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What Africa for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 165–78.Google Scholar
Marks, S. and Atmore, A. (eds.) 1980. Economy and Society in Pre-Industrial South Africa. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Marks, S. and Rathbone, R. (eds.) 1982. Industrialization and Social Change in South Africa: African Class Formation, Culture and Consciousness, 1870-1930. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Martin, D. 1986. “Par delà le boubou et la cravate: pour une sociologie de l'innovation politique en Afrique noire,” Revue canadienne des études africaines 20: 435.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, J. 1977, “A Reply to Banaji on the Feudal Mode of Production,” The Journal of Peasant Studies 4/4:390–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mason, M. 1981. “Production, Penetration and Political Formation: The Bida State, 1867-1901,” in Crummy, D. and Stewart, C.C. (eds.) Modes of Production in Africa: The Precolonial Era. Beverly Hills: Sage, 205–26.Google Scholar
Masterman, M. 1970. “The Nature of A Paradigm,” in Lakatos, I. and Musgrave, A. (eds.) Criticism and the Growth of Knowledge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Mazrui, A. 1974. World Culture and the Black Experience. Seattle: University of Washington Press.Google Scholar
Mazrui, A. 1978. Political Values and the Educated Class in Africa. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Mazrui, A. 1980. “How Can We Decolonize African Studies?” in Mudimbe, V.Y. (ed.) La dépendence de l'Afrique et les moyens d'y remédier. Actes du Congrès International des études africaines de Kinshasa. Paris: ACCT et Berger-Levrault, 24–5.Google Scholar
Mdembe, A. 1985. “La palabre de l'indépendance: les ordres du discours nationaliste au Cameroun (1948-58),” Bulletin de liaison du CERI 4: 99129.Google Scholar
Mbengue, M. 1984. “Castes et classes sociales au Sénégal,” Revue de science sociale 3: 7190.Google Scholar
McCaskie, T.C. 1981. “Anti-Witchcraft Cults in Ashante: An Essay in the Social History of an African People,” History in Africa 8.Google Scholar
Meek, R.L. 1976. Social Science and the Ignoble Savage. Cambridge: Cambrdge University Press.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1960. “Essai d'interprétation du phénomène économique dans les sociétés traditionnelles d'auto-subsistance,” Cahiers d'études africaines 4: 3867.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1964a. Anthropologie économique des Gouro de la Côte d'lvoire: de l'économie de subsistance à l'agriculture commerciale, Paris: Mouton.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1964b. “Elaboration d'un modèle socio-économique en ethnologie,” Epistemologie sociologique 1/5: 283-90, 291307.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1964c. Projet de recherche sur les systèmes économiques africains,” Journal de la Société des Africanistes 34/2: 292–98.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1967, “Recherche d'un niveau de détermination dans la société cynégétique,” L'Homme et la Société 6: 95107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1968. “Ostentation, destruction, reproduction,” Economies et Sociétés 2/4: 759–72.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. (ed.) [1969] 1971. The Development of Indigenous Trade and Markets in West Africa. London: International African Institute and Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1972. “From Reproduction to Production: A Marxist Approach to Economic Anthropology,” Economy and Society 1: 93105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1973. “The Social Organization of the Peasantry: The Economic Basis of Kinship,” Journal of Peasant Studies 1/1: 8190.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meillassoux, C. (ed.) 1975a. L'esclavage en Afrique précoloniale: dix-sept études. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1975b. Femmes, Greniers et capitaux, Paris: Maspero (English translation, Cambridge University Press, 1980).Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1977a. “Lettre sur l'esclavage.” Dialectiques 21: 144–54.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1986. L'anthropologie de l'esclavage: ventre de fer et ventre d'argent. Paris: PUF.Google Scholar
Meier, A. and Rudwick, E. 1986. Black History and the Historical Profession 1915-1980. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Mendes, J. 1971. La révolution en Afrique: problèmes et perspectives. Paris: Présence africaine.Google Scholar
Miers, S. and Kopytoff, I. (eds.) 1977. Slavery in Africa. Madison: University of Wisconson Press.Google Scholar
Millar, J.R. 1970. “A Reformulation of A.V. Chayanov's Theory of the Peasant Economy,” Economic Development and Cultural Change 18: 219–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, C. 1985. Black Darkness: Africanist Discourse in French. Chicago: Chicago University Press.Google Scholar
Miller, C. 1986. “Theories of Africans: The Question of Literary Anthropology,” in Gates, L.H.L. Jr. (ed.) Race, Writing and Difference. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 281300.Google Scholar
Miller, J.C. 1981. “Linages, Ideology and the History of Slavery in Western Central Africa,” in Lovejoy, P. (ed.) The Ideology of Slavery in Africa. Beverly Hills: Sage.Google Scholar
Miller, J.C. 1982. “The Significance of Drought, Disease and Famine in the Agricultural Marginal Zones of West-Central Africa,” Journal of African History 23/1: 1761.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Miner, E. 1976. “The Objective Fallacy,” Poetics and Theory of Literature 1: 1131.Google Scholar
Mintz, S. (ed.) 1975. Slavery, Colonialism and Racism. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Mishambi, G.T. 1977. “The Mystification of African History: A Critique of Rodney's How Europe Underdeveloped Africa” Utafiti 2: 718.Google Scholar
Molapo, B. 1976. “On the National Question,” The African Communist 66: 8293.Google Scholar
Monteil, V. 1966. “The Decolonization of the Writing of African History,” in Wallerstein, I. (ed.), Social Change: The Colonial Situation. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Mudimbe, V.Y. 1981. “La culture,” in Vanderlinden, J. (ed.) Du Congo au Zaire 1860-1980. Brussels: CRISP, 309–98.Google Scholar
Mudimbe, V.Y. 1984. “African Gnosis. Philosophy and the Order of Knowledge,” African Studies Review 28:149233.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mudimbe, V.Y. 1986. “Preface,” in Jewsiewicki, B. Marx, Afrique et Occident: Les pratiques africanistes de l'histoire marxiste. Montreal: McGill CDAS, ivii.Google Scholar
Mudimbe, V.Y. 1987. “Where is the Real Thing? Psychoanalysis and African Mythical Narratives,” Cahiersd'études Africaines 107/108: 311–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mudimbe, V.Y. 1988. The Invention of Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Mudimbe, V.Y. (ed.) 1980. La dépendence de l'Afrique et les moyens d'y remédier. Actes du Congrès International des études africaines de Kinshasa. Paris: ACCT et Berger-Levrault.Google Scholar
Naipaul, V.S. [1975] 1980. “A New King for the Congo,” in The Return of Eva Peron. Harmonds-worth: Penguin; 165–96.Google Scholar
Neale, C. 1985. Writing “Independent” History: African Historiography, 1960-1980. Westport: Greenwood Press.Google Scholar
Newbury, D. 1986. “Africanist Historical Studies in the United States: Metamorphosis or Metastasis?” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 151–64.Google Scholar
Nguabi, M. 1975. “Le socialisme scientifique et l'experience congolaise, vers la construction d'une société socialiste en Afrique,” Présence africaine 27: 3076.Google Scholar
Thiongo, Ngugi wa. 1983. Barrel of a Pen. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Nkrumah, K. 1970. Class Struggle in Africa, New York: Interantional Publishing.Google Scholar
Nuri El Amin, M. 1984. The Emergence and Development of the Leftist Movement in the Sudan During the 1930s and 1940s. Khartum: Institute of African and Asian Studies.Google Scholar
Nurnberger, K. (ed.) 1979. Ideology and Change in South Africa and the Power of the Gospel. Durban: Luthern Publishing House.Google Scholar
Nzula, A.T., Patekhin, I.I., and Zusmnovitch, A.Z. 1979. Forced Labour in Colonial Africa. London: Zed Press.Google Scholar
Nzongola-Ntalaja, . 1970. “The Bourgeoisie and Revolution in the Congo,” Journal of Modern African Studies 8: 511–30.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nzongola-Ntalaja, . 1974. “Peasants and Nationalism: An African Overview,” Pan-African Journal 7: 264–71.Google Scholar
Nzongola-Ntalaja, . 19771978. “The Authenticity of Neo-Colonialism: Ideology and Class Struggle in Zaire,” Berkeley Journal of Sociology 22: 115–30.Google Scholar
Nzongola-Ntalaja, . 1984. “Bureaucracy, Elite, New Class: Who Serves Whom and Why in Mobutu's Zaire?” in Jiewsiewicki, B. (ed.) Etat indépendent du Congo beige, République Démocratique du Congo République du Zaïre? Québec: Safi, 99103.Google Scholar
Nzongola-Ntalaja, . (ed.) 1986. The Crisis in Zaire: Myths and Realities. Trenton: Africa World Press.Google Scholar
Nzongola-Ntalaja, . 1987. “The Crisis in Zaire,” in 1987 Institute for African Alternatives. Africa's Crisis. London: Institute for African Alternatives, 726.Google Scholar
Obenga, I. 1985. Les Bantu: langues, peuples, civilisations Paris: Présence africaine.Google Scholar
O'Boyle, L. 1983. “Learning for its Own Sake: The German University as Nineteenth-Century Model,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 25: 325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Odera-Oruko, . 1973. “Marxism and African History,” Kenya Historical Review 2: 139–50.Google Scholar
Ojiaku, M.O. 1974. “Traditional African Social Thought and Western Scholarship,” Présence africaine 90: 204–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Okihiro, G. (ed.) 1986. In Resistance. Studies in African, Caribbean and Afro-American History. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.Google Scholar
O'Laughlin, B. 1975. “Marxist Approaches in Anthropology,” Annual Review of Anthropology 4: 341–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliver, R.A. and Fage, J.D. 1970. “Introduction,” in Papers in African Prehistory. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
O'Meara, P. 1986. “Review of Race, Power and Resistance ,” International Journal of African Historical Studies 19: 764–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ortner, S.B. 1984. “Theory in Anthropology since the Sixties,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 26/1: 126–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ory, P. and Sirenelli, J.F. 1986. Les intellectuels en France de l'Affaire Dreyfus à nos jours. Paris: Colin.Google Scholar
Ottaway, M. 1980. “The Theory and Practice of Marxism-Leninism in Mozambique and Ethiopia,” in Albright, D. (ed.) Communism in Africa. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Owusu, M. 1978. “The Ethnography of Africa: The Usefulness of Useless,” American Anthropologist 80/1: 310–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oyovbaire, S.E. 1983, “The Tyranny of Borrowed Paradigms and the Responsibility of Political Science: The Nigerian Experience,” in Barongo, Y. (ed.) Political Science in Africa: A Critical Review. London: Zed Press, 233–54.Google Scholar
Oxaal, I., Barnett, T., and Booth, D. (eds.) 1975. Beyond the Sociology of Development: Economy and Society in Africa and Latin America. London: Routledge, Chapman and Hall.Google Scholar
Packard, R. 1980. “Social Change and the History of Misfortune among the Bashu of Eastern Zaire,” in Karp, I. and Booth, C. (eds.) Explorations in African Systems of Thought. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 237–67.Google Scholar
Painter, N. 1981. “Who Decides What is History?Nation 234 (6 March).Google Scholar
Palmer, R. and Parsons, N. (eds.) 1978. Roots of Rural Poverty in Central and Southern Africa. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Panoff, M. 1980. “Clan de Meillassoux et le mode de production domestique,” Revue francaise de sociologie 8: 133–43.Google Scholar
Parpart, J. 1983. Labor and Capital on the African Copperbelt. Philadelphia: Temple Univeristy Press.Google Scholar
Pasquinelli, C. 1983. “The History of a Relationship: Contemporary Cultural Anthropology and Marxism in France and Italy,” Dialectical Anthropology 7: 192207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patterson, O. 1977. “The Structural Origin of Slavery,” in Rubin, V. and Tuden, A. (eds.) Comparative Perspectives on Slavery in New World Plantation Societies. New York: New York Academy of Science, 12–34.Google Scholar
Patterson, O. 1979. “On Slavery and Slave Formations,” New Left Review 117: 3168.Google Scholar
Peace, A. 1979. Choice, Class and Conflict: A Study of Southern Nigerian Factory Workers. Brighton: Harvester.Google Scholar
Peel, J.D.Y. 1980. “Inequality and Action: The Forms of Ijesha Social Conflict,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 14: 473502.Google Scholar
Peel, J.D.Y. 1984. “Making Hisory: The Past in Ijesha Present,” Man (NS) 19: 111–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pelikan, J. 1985. “King Lear or Uncle Tom's Cabin,” The Teaching of Values in Higher Education. Washington, DC: Woodrow Wilson Center, 919.Google Scholar
Perinbam, M.B. 1973. “Fanon and the Revolutionary Peasantry,” Journal of Modern African Studies 11:425–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peritore, P. 1987. “Feudalism—Critique of a Model of Society and Political Economy,” Alternatives 12: 6181.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perrings, C. 1977. “Consciousness, Conflict and Proletarianization: An Assessment of the 1935 Mineworkers’ Strikes on the Northern Rhodesian Copperbelt,” Journal of Southern African Studies 4: 3151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perrings, C. 1979. Black Mineworkers in Central Africa: Industrial Strategies and the Evolution of an African Proletariat in the Copperbelt, 1911-1941. London: Henneman.Google Scholar
Perrot, M. (ed.) 1980. L' impossible prison. Paris: Seuil.Google Scholar
Person, Y. 1971. “Sur les origines celtiques de l'lrlande,” Annales ESC 36: 263–79.Google Scholar
Person, Y. 1976. “Le socialisme en afrique noire et les socialismes africains,” Mois en Afrique 27: 1568.Google Scholar
Petras, J. 1981. “Dependency and World System Theory: A Critique and New Directions,” Latin America Perspectives 8: 148–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pfordresher, K. 1984, “South African History Workshop,” Radical Historian Newsletter 43: 13.Google Scholar
Phimister, I.R. 1977. “White Miners in Historical Perspective: Southern Rhodesia, 1890-1953,” Journal of Southern African Studies 4/2: 187206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Phimister, I.R. and van Onselen, C. 1979. Studies in the History of Afican Miner Labour in Colonial Zimbabwe, Salisbury: Gwelo.Google Scholar
Pirsig, R. 1984. Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. An Inquiry Into Values. New York: William Morrow.Google Scholar
Porter, R. and Teich, M. (eds.) 1986. Revolution in History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Post, K. 1972. “‘Peasantization’ and rural political movements in Western Africa,” Archives européenes de sociologie 3: 223–54.Google Scholar
Pouillon, F. (ed.) 1976. L'anthropologie économique: courants et problèmes. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Preston-Whyte, E. and Argyle, W.J. (eds.) 1978. Social System and Tradition in Southern Africa. Cape Town: Simondium.Google Scholar
Quarles, B. 1974. “Black History Unbound,” in Mintz, S. (ed.) Slavery, Colonialism and Racism. New York: Norton, 163–78.Google Scholar
Ranger, T.O. 1971. “The New Historiography in Dar es Salaam; An Answer,” African Affairs 70/278: 5061.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ranger, T.O. 1976a. “Toward a Usable African Past,” in Fyfe, C.H. (ed.) African Studies since 1945: A Tribute to Basil Davidson. London: Longman, 2839.Google Scholar
Ranger, T.O. 1976b. “From Humanism to the Science of Man: Colonialism in Africa and the Understanding of Alien Societies,” Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 5th series, 26: 115–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ranger, T.O. 1978. “Growing from the Roots on Peasant Research in Central and Southern Africa,” Journal of Southern African Studies 5: 99133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ranger, T.O. 1986a. “Resistance in Africa: From Nationalist Revolt to Agrarian Protest,” in Okihiru, G. (ed.) In Resistance. Studies in African, Caribbean and Afro-American History. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 3252.Google Scholar
Ranger, T.O. 1986b. Peasant Consciousness and Guerrilla War in Zimbabwe, Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Ranger, T.O. 1986c. “Religious Movements and Politics in Sub-Saharan Africa,” African Studies Review 29: 170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ratcliffe, B. 1981, “The Economics of Partition of Africa: Methods and Recent Research Trends,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 15: 332.Google Scholar
Raymond, P. 1984. La résistible fatalité de l'histoire. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Redfield, R. 1956. Peasant Society and Culture: An Anthropological Approach to Civilization. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Resnik, I. 1969. “Dialog: The Future of African Studies After Montreal,” Africa Report 2: 610.Google Scholar
Review of African Political Economy. 1975. “Class in Africa,” ROAPE 3: 19.Google Scholar
Rey, P.P. 1969. “Articulation des modes de dépendance et des modes de production dans deux sociétés lignagères (Punu et Kunyi de Congo Brazzaville),” Cahiers d'études africaines 35: 415–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rey, P.P. 1971. Colonialisme, néo-colonialisme et transition au capitalisme. Exemple de la “Comilog” au Congo-Brazzaville. Paris: Mapero.Google Scholar
Rey, P.P. 1973. Les alliances de classes. Paris: Mapero.Google Scholar
Rey, P.P. 1975a. “The Lineage Mode of Production,” Critique of Anthropology 3: 2779.Google Scholar
Rey, P.P. 1975b. “L'esclavage lignager chez les Tsangui, les Punu et les Kunyi du Congo-Brazzaville,” in Meillassoux, C. (ed.) L'esclavage en Afrique précolonial: dix-sept études. Paris: Maspero, 509–28.Google Scholar
Rey, P.P. 1976. Capitalisme négrier. La marche des paysans vers le prolétariat. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Rey, P.P. 1977. “Contradictions de classe dans les sociétés lignagères,” Dialectiques 21: 116–33. (English translation, Critique of Anthropology, 1979).Google Scholar
Rey, P.P. 1978. “Les concepts de l'anthropologic économique marxiste: critique et mise à l'épreuve,” Thèse d'Etat, Université Paris V.Google Scholar
Rey, P.P. 1982. “Guerres et politiques lignagères,” in Bazin, J. et Terray, E. (eds.) Guerres de lignages et guerres d'Etat en Afrique. Paris: Archives contemporaines, 3371.Google Scholar
Rey, P.P. 1985. “Production et contre-révolution,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Letorneau, J. (eds.) Modes of Production: The Challenge of Africa. Quebec: Safi, 127–40.Google Scholar
Richards, P. 1983. “Ecological Change: The Politics of African Land Use,” African Studies Review 26/2: 172.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Riesz, J. et al 1985. Towards African Authenticity: Language and Literary Form. Bayreuth: Breitinger and Sander.Google Scholar
Rioux, J.L. 1981. “La transition au mode de production capitaliste au départ de l'atelier corporatif. Reprise de quelques concepts chez Maurice Godelier,” Recherches sociologiques 12: 195213.Google Scholar
Robertson, C. and Klein, M. 1983. “Women's Importance in African Slave System,” in Robertson, C. and Klein, M. (eds.) Women and Slavery in Africa. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 327.Google Scholar
Robinson, C. 1983. Black Marxism. The Making of the Black Radical Tradition. London: Zed Press.Google Scholar
Robinson, P. and Skinner, E. (eds.) 1983. Transformation and Resiliency in Africa as Seen by Afro-American Scholars. Washington, DC: Howard University Press.Google Scholar
Rodinson, M. 1972. Marxisme et monde musulman. Paris: Maspero.Google Scholar
Rodinson, M. 1981. Islam and Capitalism. Austin: Universtiy of Texas.Google Scholar
Rodney, W. [1971] 1972. How Europe Underdeveloped Africa. London: New Left.Google Scholar
Rodney, W. 1975. “Class Contradictions in Tanzania,” Pan-Africanist 6: 1529.Google Scholar
Rosberg, C. and Callaghy, T. (eds.) 1979. Socialism in Sub-Saharan Africa: A New Assessment. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Rottchild, D. and Olorunsola, V. (eds.) 1983. State Versus Ethnic Claims: African Policy Dilemmas. Boulder: Westview Press.Google Scholar
Roux, E. and Roux, W. 1970. Rebel Pity: The Life of Eddie Roux. London: Rex Collings.Google Scholar
Rubin, D. 1973. “Godelier's Marxism,” Crititque 1: 5563.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sahli, M. 1965. Décoloniser l'histoire. Paris: Anthropos.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M. 1972. Stone Age Economics. New York: Aldin-Atherton.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M. 1976. Culture and Practical Reason. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Said, E. 1978. “The Problem of Textuality: Two Exemplary Positions,” Critical Inquiry 4: 673714.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Said, E. 1979. Orientalism. New York: Random.Google Scholar
Said, E. 1986. “The Burden of Interpretation and the Question of Palestine,” Journal of Palestine Studies 61: 2937.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sandbrook, R. 1975. Proletarians and African Capitalism: The Kenyan Case, 1960-1972. London: MacMillan.Google Scholar
Sandbrook, R. 1977a. “The Study of African ‘Sub-Proletariat’: Review Article,” Manpower and Unemployment Research 10: 91105.Google Scholar
Sandbrook, R. 1977b. “The Political Potential of African Urban Workers,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 11:411–33.Google Scholar
Sandbrook, R. and Arn, J. 1977. The Labouring Poor and Urban Class Formation: The Case of Greater Accra. Montreal: McGill University Centre for Developing Area Studies, Occasional Paper 12.Google Scholar
Sandbrook, R. and Cohen, R. (eds.) 1975. The Development of an African Working Class. London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Sang-Mpam, S.N. 1986. “The State-Society Relationship in Peripheral Countries: Critical Notes on the Dominant Paradigms,” Review of Politics 48: 596619.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saul, J. 1974, “African Peasants and Revolution,” Review of African Political Economy 1: 4168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sandbrook, R. 1979. The State and Revolution in Eastern Africa. New York: Monthly Review.Google Scholar
Sandbrook, R. 1979. “The Dialectics of Class and Tribe,” Studies in Political Economy: A Socialist Review 1: 142.Google Scholar
Sandbrook, R. 1986. “Ideology in Africa,” in Carter, G. and O'Meara, P. (eds.) African Independence: The First Twenty-Five Years. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press, 319–35.Google Scholar
Sawer, M. 1978. Marxism and the Question of the Asiatic Mode of Production. The Hague: Nijhoff.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sawer, M. 19781979. “The Politics of Historiography: Russian Socialism and the Question of the Asiatic Mode of Production, 1906-1931,” Critique 10–11: 1535.Google Scholar
Scheffler, T. 1981. “The Ideology of Binary Opposition,” Dialectical Anthropology 6: 165–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schoffeleers, M. 1977. “Cult Idioms and the Dialectics of a Region,” in Werbner, R. (ed.) Regional Cults. Atlantic Highlands: Academic Press, 219–41.Google Scholar
Schwarz, A. (ed.) 1980. Les faux prophètes de l'Afrique ou l'Afr(eu)canisme. Quebec: Presses de l'Université Laval.Google Scholar
Seddon, D. (ed.) 1978. Relations of Production: Marxist Approaches to Economic Anthropology. London: Frank Cass.Google Scholar
Shenton, R.W. and Lennihan, L. 1981. “Capital and Class: Peasant Differentiation in Northern Nigeria,” Journal of Peasant Studies 9: 4770.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shivji, I.G. 1973. Two Essays on Tanzania. Tanzania: The Silent Class Struggle. Tanzania: The Class Struggle Continues. Dar es Salaam: Tanzania Publishing House.Google Scholar
Shivji, I.G. 1975a. “Peasants and Class Alliances,” Review of African Political Economy 3: 1018.Google Scholar
Shivji, I.G. 1975b. Class Struggles in Tanzania. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Shivji, I.G. 1986. Law, State and Working Class in Tanzania. London: Currey.Google Scholar
Sik, E. 19611965. Histoire de l'Afrique noire. Budapest: Académiai Kiadó.Google Scholar
Simons, H. and Simons, R. 1969. Class and Colour in South Africa 1850-1950. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Siskind, J. 1978. “Kinship and Mode of Production,” American Anthropologist 80: 860–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skinner, E. 1965. “African, Afro-American, White American: A Case of Pride and Prejudice,” Freedomways 3: 380–95.Google Scholar
Skinner, E. 1973. Americans and Africa: The Continuing Dialectic. New York: Columbia University Urban Center.Google Scholar
Skinner, E. 1976. “African Studies, 1955-1975: An Afro-American Perspective,” Issue 6: 5765.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skinner, Q. (ed.) 1985. The Return of Grand Theory in the Human Sciences. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Sklar, R.The Nature of Class Domination in Africa,” Journal of Modern African Studies 17: 531–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sklar, R. 1985. “The Colonial Imprint on African Political Thought,” Carter, G. and O'Meara, P. (eds.) African Independence: The First Twenty-Five Years. Bloomington: University of Indiana Press, 427.Google Scholar
Skocpol, T. 1977. “Wallerstein's World Capitalist System: A Theoretical and Historical Critique,” American Journal of Sociology 82: 1072–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slater, H. 1986. “The Dar-es-Salaam and the Postnationalist Historiography of Africa,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 249–60.Google Scholar
Slovo, J. 1974. “A Critical Appraisal of the Non-Capitalist Path and the National Democratic State in Africa,” Marxism Today 18/6: 175–88.Google Scholar
Smaldone, J. (ed.) 1977. Explorations in Quantitative African History. Syracuse: Maxwell School.Google Scholar
Staniland, M. 1985. What is Political Economy? A Study of Social Theory and Underdevelopment. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Staniszkis, J. 19851986. “Forms of Reasoning as Ideology,” Telos 66: 6780.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stuever, N. 1980. “Topics in History,” History and Theory 19: 6679.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suleiman, S. and Crosman, I. (eds.) 1980. The Reader in the Text. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Suret-Canale, J. 1964. “Les sociétés traditionnelles en Afrique tropicale et le concept de mode de production asiatique,” La Pensée 117: 2143.Google Scholar
Suret-Canale, J. 1967. “Structuralisme et anthropologie économique,” La Pensée 135: 151–76.Google Scholar
Suret-Canale, J. 1969a. “Les sociétés traditionnelles en Afrique tropicale et le concept de mode de production asiatique,” in CERM Sur le mode de production asiatique. Paris: Editions Sociales, 101133.Google Scholar
Suret-Canale, J. 1969b, “Tribes, Classes and Nations in Tropical Africa,” World Marxist Review 12/11: 7581.Google Scholar
Suret-Canale, J. 1980. Essais d'histoire africaine. Paris: Editions Sociales.Google Scholar
Tandon, Y. 1984. “Argument within African Marxism: The Dar es Salaam Debates,” Journal of African Marxists 5: 3143.Google Scholar
Taussig, M. 1980. The Devil and Commodity Fetishism in America. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Tcherkezoff, S. 1983. Le roi Nyamwezi, la Droite et la Gauche: Révision Comparative des Classifications dualistes. Paris: MSH.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Temperley, H. 1977. “Capitalism, Slavery and Ideology,” Past and Present 75: 94118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Temu, A. and Swai, B. 1981. Historians and Africanist History: A Critique. London: Zed Press.Google Scholar
Terray, E. 1969. Le marxisme devant les “sociétés primitives”: deux études. Paris: Maspero (English Translation, New York: Monthly Review Press).Google Scholar
Terray, E. 1974. “Long-Distance Exchange and the Formation of the State: The Case of the Abron Kingdom of Gyaman,” Economy and Society 3/3: 315–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Terray, E. 1975. “Classes and Class Consciousness in the Abron Kingdom of Gyaman,” in Bloch, M. (ed.) Marxist Analyses and Social Anthropology. London: Malaby Press, 85135.Google Scholar
Terray, E. 1977. “De l'exploration. Eléments d'un bilan auto-critique,” Dialectiques 21: 134–43.Google Scholar
Terray, E. 1978. “L'idéologie et la contradiction,” L'Homme 18/3–4: 123–38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Terray, E. 1982. “Nature et fonctions de la guerre dans le mode Akan,” in Bazin, J. et Terray, E. (eds.) Guerres de lignages et guerres d'état en Afrique. Paris: Archives contemporaines: 375422.Google Scholar
Terray, E. 1984a. “L'anthropologie marxiste en France entre 1960 et 1980: essai de bilan,” in Gallissot, R. (ed.) Les aventures du marxisme. Paris: Syros.Google Scholar
Terray, E. 1984b. “Une histoire du Royaume Abron du Gyaman. Des origines à la conquête coloniale,” Thèse d'Etat, Université de Paris 1.Google Scholar
Terray, E. 1985. “Société segmentaire, chefferies, états: acquis et problémes,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Létourneau, J. (eds.) Mode of Production: The Challenge of Africa. Quebec: Safi, 106–15.Google Scholar
Therborn, G. 1980. The Ideology of Power and the Power of Ideology. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Thiam, I. der. 1976. “Recherches sur les premières manifestations de la conscience syndicale au Sénégal (l'année 1938),” Annales de la Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines de Dakar 6: 187–16.Google Scholar
Thiam, I. der. 1977. “Les origines du mouvement syndical sénégalais: la grève des cheminots du Dakar-St-Louis du 13 au 15 avril 1919,” Annales de la Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines de Dakar 7: 209–40.Google Scholar
Thonden, Van Velzen H.U.E. 1970. Staff, Kulaks and Peasants: A Study of a Political Field. Leiden: African Studies Center.Google Scholar
Thomas, J. 1985. “Ideology and Elective Affinity,” Sociology 19: 3954.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thompson, E.P. 1978. The Poverty of Theory and Other Essays. New York: Monthly Review Press.Google Scholar
Thornton, R. 1983. “Narrative Ethnography in Africa 1850-1920: The Creation and Capture of an Appropriate Domain for Anthropology,” Man 18.Google ScholarPubMed
Thorton, J.K. 1982. “The Kingdom of Kongo, ca. 1390-1678. The Development of an African Social Formation,” Cahiers d'études africaines. 87/88: 325–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toit, A. du. 1983. “No Chosen People: The Myth of the Calvinist Origins of Afrikaner Nationalism and Racial Ideology,” American Historical Review 88: 920–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Touré, Sekou 1959. “L'Afrique et la révolution,” Présence Africaine 13: 62–9.Google Scholar
Tuden, A. and Plotnicov, L. 1970. Social Stratification in Africa. New York: Free Press.Google Scholar
Turok, B. 1983. “Ruth First—Formidable African Marxist,” Journal of African Marxists 3: 109.Google Scholar
Usman, Y.B. 1979. For the Liberation of Nigeria. London: New Beacon.Google Scholar
Vail, L. and White, L. 1978. “Plantation Protest: The History of a Mozambican Song,” Journal of African History 15: 2135.Google Scholar
Vail, L. and White, L. 1980. Capitalism and Colonization in Mozambique. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Vail, L. and White, L. 1983. “Forms of Resistance: Songs and Perceptions of Power in Colonial Mozambique,” American Historical Review 88: 883919.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Valensi, L. 1979. “Histoire et anthropologie des pays d'Islam,” in Situation actuelle et avenir de l'anthropologie en France. Paris: Collogue international du CNRS.Google Scholar
van Binsbergen, W.M.J. 1982. Religious Change in Zambia. Exploratory Studies. London and Boston: Kegan Paul International.Google Scholar
van Binsbergen, W.M.J. and Geschiere, P. (eds.) 1984. Old Modes of Production and Capitalist Encroachment. Anthropological Explorations in Africa. London and Boston: Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
van Jaarsveld, F.A. 1964. The Afrikaners' Interpretation of South African History. Cape Town: Simondium.Google Scholar
van Onselen, C. 1976. Chibaro. African Mine Labour in Southern Rhodesia 1900-1933. London: Longman.Google Scholar
van Onselen, C. 1982. Studies in the Social and Economic History of Witwatersrand 1880-1914. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Vansina, J. 1962. “Long distance trade routes in Central Africa,” Journal of African History 3: 375–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vansina, J. 1978. “For Oral Tradition (But Not Against Braudel),” History in Africa 5: 351–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vansina, J. 1982a. “Lignage, idélogie et histoire en Afrique équatoriale,” Enquêtes et documents d'histoire africaine 4: 133–55.Google Scholar
Vansina, J. 1982b. “Mwasi's Trials,” Daedalus 111: 6070.Google Scholar
Vansina, J. 1982c. “Quand l'événement est rare,” Eudes africaines offertes à Henri Brunschwig. Paris: Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales 516.Google Scholar
Vansina, J. 1983. “Is Elegance a Proof? Structuralism and African History,” History in Africa 10: 307–48.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vansina, J. 1986. “Knowledge and perceptions of African past,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 2841.Google Scholar
Vellut, J.L. 1980. “Développement et sous-développement au Zäire. Notes préliminaires pour une perspective historique,” in Mudimbe, V.Y. (ed.) La dépendance de l'Afrique et les moyens d'y remédier. Actes du Congrès International des études africaines de Kinshasa. Paris: ACCT et Berger-Levrault, 161–67.Google Scholar
Veltmeyer, H. 1980. “A Central Issue in Dependency Theory,” Canadian Review of Sociology and Anthropology 17: 198213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Verdon, M. 1980. “Descent: An Operational View,” Man 15: 129–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vercuijsse, E. 1979. Transitional Modes of Production. A Case Study from West Africa. London: Zed Press.Google Scholar
Vilar, P. 1974. “Histoire marxiste, histoire en construction,” in Goff, J. Le and Nora, P. (eds.) Faire de l'histoire. Paris: Gallimard, 169209.Google Scholar
Vilar, P. 1979. “On Nations and Nationalism,” Marxist Perspectives 5: 317.Google Scholar
Vincke, J. 1988. “Linguistique africaine: de la science exacte à la science morale,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 22: 310–16.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1969. “What is Revolutionary Action in Africa Today?Africa Today 16: 45.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1971. “The State and Social Transformation,” Politics and Society 1: 359–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1973. “Africa in a Capitalist World,” Issue 3/3: 111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1974a. The Modern World System. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1974b. “The Rise and Future Demise of the World Capitalist System: Concepts for Comparative Analysis,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 165/4: 387415.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1978. “Civilization and Mode of Production: Conflicts and Convergence,” Theory and Society 5: 110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1983. “The Evolving Role of the Africa Scholars in African Studies,” Canadian Journal of African Studies 17: 916.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1986. Africa and the Modern World. Trenton: Africa World Press.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, I. and Martin, W.G. 1979. “Peripherilization of Southern Africa: Changes in Household Structures and Labor Force Formation,” Review 3: 193207.Google Scholar
Walvin, J. and Eltis, D. (eds.) 1982. The Slave Trade and Abolition Impacts on Africa, Europe and the Americas. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Wamba-Dia-Wamba, E. 1984. History of Neo-Colonialism or Neo-Colonialism History? Self-Determination and History in Africa, Africa Research and Publication Project, Working Paper 5.Google Scholar
Wanjohi, G. 1981. “La recherche historique en Afrique de l'Est,” Revue internationale des sciences sociales 33: 727–36.Google Scholar
Wansbrough, J. 1968. “The Decolonization of North African History,” Journal of African History 9: 643–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warren, B. 1980. Imperialism: Pioneer of Capitalism. London: New Left Books.Google Scholar
Waterman, P. 1975. “The Labour Aristocracy in Africa; Introduction to a Debate,” Development and Change 6: 5773.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Waterman, P. 1979. Can We Make African Labour History Relevant to African Labour History Makers? Notes on and Elements from an Attempt to Do So. The Hague: Institute of Social Studies.Google Scholar
Watts, M. 1983. Silent Violence, Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Weiss, H. 1967. Political Protest in the Congo. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Wessman, J.W. 1979. “Concept of Mode of Production,” Current Anthropology 20/2: 462–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitaker, C.S. Jr. 1983. “Foreword,” in Robinson, P. and Skinner, E. (eds.) Transformation and Resiliency in Africa as Seen by Afro-American Scholars. Washington D.C.: Howard University Press, viiix.Google Scholar
White, H. 1973. Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in the Nineteenth Century. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Wiles, P. (ed.) 1982. The New Communist Third World: An Essay in Political Economy. New York: St. Martin's Press.Google Scholar
Williams, G. 1974. “Political Consciousness among the Ibadan Poor,” in Kadt, E. De and Williams, G. (eds.) Sociology and Development, London: Macmillan, 109–39.Google Scholar
Williams, G. 1976. “There is no theory of petit-bourgeois politics,” Review of African Political Economy 6: 84–9.Google Scholar
Wittfogel, K.A. 1956. Oriental Despotism, New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Wolf, E. 1981, “The Mills of Inequality: A Marxian Approach,” in Berreman, G.D. (ed.) Social Inequality: Comparative and Developmentalist Approaches. New York.Google Scholar
Wolf, E. 1982. Europe and the People without History. Berkeley and London: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Wolpe, H. 1972. “Capitalism and Cheap Labour Power in South-Africa: From Segregation to Apartheid,” Economy and Society 1/4: 425–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolpe, H. 1975. “The Theory of Internal Colonialism: The South African Case,” in Oxall, I., Bamett, T., and Boot, D. (eds.) Beyond the Sociology of Development: Economy and Society in Latin America and Africa. London: Routledge, Chapman and Hall, 229–52.Google Scholar
Wolpe, H. (ed.) 1980. The Articulation of Modes of Production, London: Routledge and Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Wolpe, H. (ed.) 1986. “National and Class Struggle in South Africa,” in Institute for African Alternatives. Africa's Crisis. London: Institute for African Alternatives, 5968.Google Scholar
Wondji, C. 1986. “Toward a responsible African historiography,” in Jewsiewicki, B. and Newbury, D. (eds.) African Historiography: What History for Which Africa? Beverly Hills: Sage, 269–78.Google Scholar
Wood, E. M. 1986. The Retreat from Class. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Worsley, P.M. 1972. “Frantz Fanon and the 'Lumpenproletariat',” The Socialist Register. London: Merlin Press, 193230.Google Scholar
Worsley, P.M. 1980. “One world or three? a critique of the world-system theory of Immanuel Wallerstein,” The Socialist Register. London: Merlin Press, 298338.Google Scholar
Wright, C. 1983. “Gidden's Critique of Marxism,” New Left Review. 138: 1136.Google Scholar
Wright, H.M. 1977. The Burden of the Present: Liberal-Radical Controversey over Southern African History. Cape Town: David Philip.Google Scholar
Wright, M. 1988. “Autobiographies, histoires de vie et biographies de femmes africaines: des textes militants,” Cahiers d'études africaines 109: 4558.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wright, R.E. 1961. “The Transfer of Power in Practice,” Journal of African History 2: 170–1.Google Scholar
Wrigley, C.C. 1971. “Historicism in Africa: Slavery and State Formation,” African Affairs 70: 113–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, C. 1982a. “Patterns of Social Conflict State, Class and Ethnicity,” Daedalus 3: 7197.Google Scholar
Young, C. 1982b. Ideology and Development in Africa. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar