The Fate of Africa: A History of the Continent Since Independence
Autor Martin Meredithen Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 sep 2011
The
definitive
story
of
African
nations
after
they
emerged
from
colonialism
--
from
Mugabe's
doomed
kleptocracy
to
Mandela's
inspiring
defeat
of
apartheid.
The Fate of Africahas been hailed by reviewers as "A masterpiece....The nonfiction book of the year" (The New York Post); "a magnificent achievement" (Weekly Standard); "a joy," (Wall Street Journal) and "one of the decade's most important works on Africa" (Publishers Weekly, starred review). Spanning the full breadth of the continent, from the bloody revolt in Algiers against the French to Zimbabwe's civil war, Martin Meredith's classic history focuses on the key personalities, events and themes of the independence era, and explains the myriad problems that Africa has faced in the past half-century. It covers recent events like the ongoing conflict in Sudan, the controversy over Western aid, the exploitation of Africa's resources, and the growing importance and influence of China.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781610390712
ISBN-10: 1610390717
Pagini: 816
Ilustrații: Including three 8-pp. B/W photo inserts on text
Dimensiuni: 152 x 232 x 51 mm
Greutate: 0.84 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
ISBN-10: 1610390717
Pagini: 816
Ilustrații: Including three 8-pp. B/W photo inserts on text
Dimensiuni: 152 x 232 x 51 mm
Greutate: 0.84 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
Notă biografică
Martin
Meredithis
a
journalist,
biographer,
and
historian
who
has
written
extensively
on
Africa.
His
books
includeMandela:
A
Biography;Mugabe;Diamonds,
Gold
and
War;Born
in
Africa;
and,
most
recently,Fortunes
of
Africa.
He
lives
near
Oxford,
England.
Recenzii
"Though
today
an
independent
scholar,
Meredith
was
one
of
those
now-too-rare
journalists
who
knew
his
beat
intimately,
having
lived
on
and
off
(mostly
on)
in
Africa
for
40
years,
informing
a
keen
and
humane
mind
with
all
things
African.
It
shows
here
in
the
depth
and
fluid
familiarity
of
his
narrative,
light
on
its
feet
for
so
wildly
complex
a
picture.
Meredith
isn't
afraid
of
venturing
an
opinion,
but
what
he
dines
on
are
basic
realities:
who
did
what
when,
and
the
consequences.
These
he
spreads
before
his
readers,
for
them
to
draw
their
own,
now
also
informed,
conclusions."
—San Francisco Chronicle
"For the author, even organizing this information is a hugely daunting job. How can such vast amounts of information be analyzed for the reader? One way was to follow parallel developments in different places-which is more or less how Mr. Meredith works, with attention to the hair-trigger ways in which one coup or crisis could set off subsequent disasters. He is able to steer the book firmly without compromising its hard-won clarity."
—New York Times
"The Fate of Africa is a comprehensive, wonderfully readable survey of the entire continent's recent past. . . . Blessed with a strong, clean prose style, the author has delivered a work that offers an education in one volume and, despite its length, the book maintains the pace of an artful novel. . . ."—New York Post
"Meredith first traveled up the Nile from Cairo in 1964 as a 21-year-old and claims that, in many ways, his 'African journey has continued ever since.' His careful, detailed analysis, his dispassionate but not detached writing, and his evident wit mean that we might all hope his journey continues for much longer."
—Weekly Standard
"Meredith's exhaustive study appears just as world leaders are finally trying to come to grips with Africa's needs. It starkly underlines the urgency of that task."
—Providence Journal
"In this book [Meredith] provides the most comprehensive description of the causes and consequences of failure in quite a while."—Boston Globe
"The book is elegantly written as well as unerringly accurate, and despite its considerable length it holds the attention of the reader to the end."—Financial Times
—San Francisco Chronicle
"For the author, even organizing this information is a hugely daunting job. How can such vast amounts of information be analyzed for the reader? One way was to follow parallel developments in different places-which is more or less how Mr. Meredith works, with attention to the hair-trigger ways in which one coup or crisis could set off subsequent disasters. He is able to steer the book firmly without compromising its hard-won clarity."
—New York Times
"The Fate of Africa is a comprehensive, wonderfully readable survey of the entire continent's recent past. . . . Blessed with a strong, clean prose style, the author has delivered a work that offers an education in one volume and, despite its length, the book maintains the pace of an artful novel. . . ."—New York Post
"Meredith first traveled up the Nile from Cairo in 1964 as a 21-year-old and claims that, in many ways, his 'African journey has continued ever since.' His careful, detailed analysis, his dispassionate but not detached writing, and his evident wit mean that we might all hope his journey continues for much longer."
—Weekly Standard
"Meredith's exhaustive study appears just as world leaders are finally trying to come to grips with Africa's needs. It starkly underlines the urgency of that task."
—Providence Journal
"In this book [Meredith] provides the most comprehensive description of the causes and consequences of failure in quite a while."—Boston Globe
"The book is elegantly written as well as unerringly accurate, and despite its considerable length it holds the attention of the reader to the end."—Financial Times