Tuesday, January 29, 2019

Sundiata (and Colonizing Eastern & Southern Africa)

There is no class on Thursday, 1/31, so please take this opportunity to catch up on the readings from the last blog post. We will focus on Sundiata on Tuesday and move on to Eastern and Southern Africa on Thursday.

All students must submit written answers to the reading questions for Sundiata through Moodle before Tuesday's class.


For Thursday's class, we will tackle the first part of Africans, Chapter 6 (pp. 100-126 in the 2nd edition and Kindle; pp. 103-130 in the 3rd edition).

Reading Questions (add ~3 pages if using the 3rd edition):
  • What four central themes does the history of southern and eastern Africa share with western Africa?
  • How does their history differ and why? (record, values, environment, interactions)
  • What role does pastoralism play in the east and south? How does it affect settlement, society, and culture?
  • fissiparation? (p. 103)
  • What complex changes took place in what is now Zimbabwe? (p. 103f)
  • Describe Great Zimbabwe. (pp. 104f. and 121f.)
  • How did the kingdom of Munhumutapa interact with the Portuguese? (p. 105)
  • Why were cattle less important in Central Africa?
  • Describe Luba and the two major political systems it shaped.
  • What could people do to keep their rulers in line?
  • In the East African savanna, what were the Bantu up to, and where did the Maasai come from?
  • What evidence is there for the region being stateless? (p. 109)
  • How did cattle give their owners a demographic advantage? (pp. 109 and 118)
  • In the Great Lakes region of East Africa states like Bunyoro and Buganda developed later. How did those states operate, and how did they reduce succession problems?
  • How does the author say the distinction between Tutsi and Hutu may have evolved? (p. 111)
  • What new crops were adopted in eastern and southern Africa, and where did they come from?
  • "Human mobility was the essence of this empty world" -- list reasons people might move. (p. 114)
  • What precautions were taken against the risk of famine, and what increased mortality in famine years? Who rarely suffered famine? (p. 116)
  • What does the Zulu proverb, "the feud is in the testicle," mean? (p. 118)
  • Did southern African women have a lower or higher status than western African women? Why? What about the women of Central Africa? (p. 119)
  • Why did patriarchal, cattle-owning societies have severe generational tension, and how did they handle it? (p. 120)
  • Was slavery more or less common in eastern and southern Africa than in West Africa? (p. 120)
  • Why was trade more limited in southern and eastern African than in West Africa? (p. 122)
  • How did San and Khoikhoi religion differ from Bantu religion? (pp. 124f.)

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