Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T23:22:49.511Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

African Voices on Slavery and the Slave Trade. Ed. by Alice Bellagamba, Sandra E. Greene, [and] Martin A. Klein. With the ass. of Carolyn Brown. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [etc.]2013 xxii, 563 pp. Ill. Maps. £65.00.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2015

Paul Lovejoy*
Affiliation:
Department of History, York University4700 Keele Street, Toronto M3J 1P3, Ontario, Canada E-mail: plovejoy@yorku.ca
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis 2015 

In this volume, thirty-five scholars of slavery highlight the voices of the enslaved in Africa. Without question, this is a major contribution to the study of work, workers, and labor relations in the context of African history in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. While it has been well established that slavery had a profound impact in Africa, not only as a source for the global diaspora of Africans who traveled to the Americas and throughout the Muslim world and the Indian Ocean, it has often been argued that slavery in Africa was somehow different, even more benign, than was the case elsewhere.

These studies elaborate on this complex issue by focusing on sources that have been known almost exclusively to specialists, especially archival documentation and oral sources that enable some understanding of how the enslaved experienced their subjugation and understood their dependency. The collection owes its inspiration to Martin Klein, who has been involved in the organization of a series of conferences, first at Bellagio, then the University of Toronto and finally in Buea, Cameroon. Professor Klein has worked closely with his co-editors, Alice Bellagamba and Sandra Greene, and also Carolyn Brown, who collectively have promoted a wide-ranging discourse on the history of slavery in Africa. Because this is a review, it is also necessary to state that I have sometimes been involved in this ongoing exchange, although clearly I am not a contributor to this volume. Nonetheless, I have endorsed this volume because, in my opinion, this collection has “transformed the study of slavery in a way that will require a revolutionary reassessment of what we think about slavery and how we study enslavement and resistance” (back cover).

The structure of the volume is based on a combination of primary documentation and scholarly analysis of the context for the cases of enslavement that are exposed. There are also questions that are intended to guide the reader and provide a means for students to address the key issues of each chapter. Indeed the volume is visionary in its scope and mode of presentation and hence diverges considerably from the standard form of scholarly analysis. This is the reason for my endorsement. The volume is innovative and creative. It deserves the attention of labor historians and historians of slavery, not only in Africa but globally, and the methodological issues that are addressed will be of interest to many other historians as well.

The emphasis on the variety of source material demonstrates the richness of oral and written documentation. The individual cases that draw on selected court records indicate the wealth of materials that actually exist, while the relatively few stories that draw on oral testimonies are but examples from many collections of oral data that have been collected. Biographical texts, some of them very short but many of substantial length, have been amassed, while the records of the “liberated Africans” taken off slave ships by the British Navy in the nineteenth century often reveal considerable detail on the lives of tens of thousands of individuals. Full-length biographical accounts of Africans during the era of slavery are now appearing with some regularity. Taken together, it is now clear that our knowledge of the slave experience, both in Africa and in diaspora, is far more developed than was thought possible as recently as a decade ago. No longer can it be claimed that the voices of the enslaved are silent.

The book is divided into nine sections. In Part 1, which includes seven chapters, the focus is on remembering slavery and the slave trade. The documents for this section are primarily oral testimonies, historical tales, and interviews that have been gathered by researchers in different situations, including centralized and non-centralized states, as well as Muslim areas from Kano, Nigeria, to Mingoyo, Tanzania. In Part 2, the focus shifts to the verbal arts and material culture, including songs, prayers, and proverbs. The five chapters in this section range from Yoruba proverbs to lyrics from northwestern Côte d'Ivoire. Part 3 includes three accounts that have been written by African authors, such as Etchu Richard Ayuk's manuscript on the slave trade and social segregation in Ejaghamland, early twentieth-century colonial textbooks, and sources from the emirates of Adamawa. Part 4 turns to the observations of European travelers, and draws on accounts from the Nilotic Sudan, Tunisia, the Algerian Sahara, and the manuscript of Jean Godot on Assini, c.1700. The fifth part introduces colonial administrative records and includes chapters on the Gold Coast, Mauritania, the western Indian Ocean, and the western Sudan. Legal records are the focus of the sixth part, which examines court records in Sierra Leone, Gambia, the Gold Coast, Lagos, and connections with Brazil, and Senegal. Missionary records are the subject of the seventh part and include cases from southern Ghana, French West Africa, Calabar, and Madagascar. Although there are twenty studies in the volume that deal with Muslim contexts, there is a separate section of the book specifically on Arabic documentation, including letters from Ghadames in the Sahara, Mauritania, and the Swahili coast. Finally, there is a closing section containing two chapters that deal with the legacy of slavery in contemporary African societies, including two Soninke family biographies and memories of slavery in southern Niger. The editors present each section with a brief introduction.

Despite the considerable praise that I have for this volume, there are some weaknesses that deserve to be discussed. First, several of the maps in the volume could be much better, which is especially important for purposes of teaching. The illustrations, by contrast, are excellent. Second, there are very short bibliographies for each chapter, for reasons that are not really explained and do not seem warranted. There is no collective bibliography for the volume as a whole which thereby reduces its usefulness as a pedagogical tool. It is difficult to understand why this is the case since the book is already very long, and a bibliography would hardly have added to the length but would have increased its usefulness as a resource.

Another factor in assessing the book is the geographical and temporal coverage of the volume. There are parts of Africa that are not covered, which I think is to be expected in a collaborative project of this scope. This is not a weakness, in my opinion, but a challenge. Additional textual material and oral data certainly exist for Angola, South Africa, Mozambique, and many other parts of Africa. It can be expected that these accounts will further expand our understanding of the slave experience. Moreover, accounts of slavery in the contemporary world are also forthcoming and being studied in considerable depth, including sex slavery, child conscription for war, and other forms of slavery that demonstrate that slavery is not a product of the past but extends to the present.

The coverage in this volume includes numerous cases from Muslim areas, which accurately reflects an important division within Africa in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The volume also includes cases that are outside the Muslim sphere, as is certainly appropriate. One great contribution of the volume, nonetheless, is the considerable weight it gives to Islamic contexts, which thereby helps to correct an existing bias in the coverage of African history that often does not give sufficient coverage to this component of the past and thereby distorts our understanding of the influence of Islam in Africa today.