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Africa in Urban History
This Element contains succinct discussions of African human settlements from historical, spatial, cultural, and contemporary perspectives.
Ambe J. Njoh (Author)
9781009446846, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 30 January 2025
90 pages
23 x 15.1 x 0.5 cm, 0.139 kg
This Element in Global Urban History seeks to promote understanding of the urban history of Africa. It does so by undertaking four main tasks. Firstly, it employs race, ethnicity, class, and conflict theory as conceptual frameworks to analyze the spatial structures, social, and political-economic dynamics of African cities from global, comparative, and transnational perspectives. Secondly, it proposes a new typology of the continent's cities. Thirdly, it identifies and draws into focus an important but oft-ignored part of Africa's urban history, namely Indigenous cities. It focuses more intensely on the few that still exist to date. Fourthly, it employs conflict, functional, and symbolic interactionist theories as well as elements of the race ideology to explain the articulation of racism, ethnicity, and classism in the continent's urban space. This is done mainly but not exclusively from historical perspectives.
1. Background and foundational matter
2. Cities of African antiquity
3. Urban centers of early African civilization
4. The era of discovery towns
5. Colonial cities
6. Colonial company towns
7. Post-colonial cities
References.
Subject Areas: General & world history [HBG]
