“Do Pygmies Have a History?” Revisited: The Autochthonous Tradition in the History of Equatorial Africa 1

2017 ◽  
pp. 85-116
Author(s):  
Robert E. Moïse
Keyword(s):  
1992 ◽  
Vol 97 (2) ◽  
pp. 592
Author(s):  
Christopher Ehret ◽  
Jan Vansina

2005 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 139-143
Author(s):  
FLORENCE BERNAULT

THE Anglophone literature has conceptualized the history of the African ‘space’ through two major approaches. Fine-grained reconstructions of land disputes have helped to illuminate colonial changes in the political and economic control over residential and productive units, and to assess the local (im)possibilities for Africans of accumulating landed property and/or penetrating the new plantation and market economy. More recently, environmental studies have encouraged historians to uncover how fundamental alterations in the relationships between communities and their physical environment have been shaping ancient and recent struggles for identities and socio-political resources. Meanwhile, renewed attention to cognitive notions of space by anthropologists on the one hand, and literary critics on the other, has delineated deep structuring principles in the ideological construction of space among Africans and colonizers. Few historians have followed through, however, and historicized such imaginaries. Among those who have done so, and have traced people's conceptual, commemorative and moral visions of land, fewer still have ventured beyond the boundaries of specific locales and societies. By reconstructing a longue durée history of the disruptions in both the physical and cognitive spaces of the Gabonese rainforest, Chris Gray's book stands as a major attempt to bridge these gaps.


1989 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 712
Author(s):  
Wyatt MacGaffey ◽  
Robert Harms

Ethnohistory ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 510
Author(s):  
Jane Guyer ◽  
Jan Vansina

2009 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 647-659 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Ngomanda ◽  
A. Chepstow-Lusty ◽  
M. Makaya ◽  
C. Favier ◽  
P. Schevin ◽  
...  

Abstract. Past vegetation and climate changes reconstructed using two pollen records from Lakes Maridor and Nguène, located in the coastal savannas and inland rainforest of Gabon, respectively, provide new insights into the environmental history of western equatorial African rainforests during the last 4500 cal yr BP. These pollen records indicate that the coastal savannas of western equatorial Africa did not exist during the mid-Holocene and instead the region was covered by evergreen rainforests. From ca. 4000 cal yr BP a progressive decline of inland evergreen rainforest, accompanied by the expansion of semi-deciduous rainforest, occurred synchronously with grassland colonisation in the coastal region of Gabon. The contraction of moist evergreen rainforest and the establishment of coastal savannas in Gabon suggest decreasing humidity from ca. 4000 cal yr BP. The marked reduction in evergreen rainforest and subsequent savanna expansion was followed from 2700 cal yr BP by the colonization of secondary forests dominated by the palm, Elaeis guineensis, and the shrub, Alchornea cordifolia (Euphorbiaceae). A return to wetter climatic conditions from about 1400 cal yr BP led to the renewed spread of evergreen rainforest inland, whereas a forest-savanna mosaic still persists in the coastal region. There is no evidence to suggest that the major environmental changes observed were driven by human impact.


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