My Life with Stanley's Rear Guard

My Life with Stanley's Rear Guard
Title My Life with Stanley's Rear Guard PDF eBook
Author Herbert Ward
Publisher
Pages 166
Release 1891
Genre Africa, Central
ISBN

Download My Life with Stanley's Rear Guard Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

My Life with Stanley's Rear-Guard

My Life with Stanley's Rear-Guard
Title My Life with Stanley's Rear-Guard PDF eBook
Author Herbert WARD (Traveller.)
Publisher
Pages 216
Release 1891
Genre
ISBN

Download My Life with Stanley's Rear-Guard Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

A Visit to Stanley's Rearguard

A Visit to Stanley's Rearguard
Title A Visit to Stanley's Rearguard PDF eBook
Author J.R. Werner
Publisher Рипол Классик
Pages 417
Release 1889
Genre History
ISBN 5878567075

Download A Visit to Stanley's Rearguard Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

A Visit to Stanley's Rearguard at Major Barttelot's Camp On the Aruhwimi: With an Account of the River-Life On the Congo

The Literary World

The Literary World
Title The Literary World PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 526
Release 1891
Genre Literature
ISBN

Download The Literary World Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Stanley

Stanley
Title Stanley PDF eBook
Author Tim Jeal
Publisher Faber & Faber
Pages 557
Release 2011-10-06
Genre Biography & Autobiography
ISBN 0571265642

Download Stanley Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Henry Morton Stanley was a cruel imperialist - a bad man of Africa. Or so we think: but as Tim Jeal brilliantly shows, the reality of Stanley's life is yet more extraordinary. Few people know of his dazzling trans-Africa journey, a heart-breaking epic of human endurance which solved virtually every one of the continent's remaining geographical puzzles. With new documentary evidence, Jeal explores the very nature of exploration and reappraises a reputation, in a way that is both moving and truly majestic.

Land of Tears

Land of Tears
Title Land of Tears PDF eBook
Author Robert Harms
Publisher Basic Books
Pages 510
Release 2019-12-03
Genre History
ISBN 1541699661

Download Land of Tears Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

A prizewinning historian's epic account of the scramble to control equatorial Africa In just three decades at the end of the nineteenth century, the heart of Africa was utterly transformed. Virtually closed to outsiders for centuries, by the early 1900s the rainforest of the Congo River basin was one of the most brutally exploited places on earth. In Land of Tears, historian Robert Harms reconstructs the chaotic process by which this happened. Beginning in the 1870s, traders, explorers, and empire builders from Arabia, Europe, and America moved rapidly into the region, where they pioneered a deadly trade in ivory and rubber for Western markets and in enslaved labor for the Indian Ocean rim. Imperial conquest followed close behind. Ranging from remote African villages to European diplomatic meetings to Connecticut piano-key factories, Land of Tears reveals how equatorial Africa became fully, fatefully, and tragically enmeshed within our global world.

Travellers in Africa

Travellers in Africa
Title Travellers in Africa PDF eBook
Author Timothy Youngs
Publisher Manchester University Press
Pages 250
Release 2017-03-01
Genre History
ISBN 152612372X

Download Travellers in Africa Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Works of travel have been the subject of increasingly sophisticated studies in recent years. This book undermines the conviction with which nineteenth-century British writers talked about darkest Africa. It places the works of travel within the rapidly developing dynamic of Victorian imperialism. Images of Abyssinia and the means of communicating those images changed in response to social developments in Britain. As bourgeois values became increasingly important in the nineteenth century and technology advanced, the distance between the consumer and the product were justified by the scorn of African ways of eating. The book argues that the ambiguities and ambivalence of the travellers are revealed in their relation to a range of objects and commodities mentioned in narratives. For instance, beads occupy the dual role of currency and commodity. The book deals with Henry Morton Stanley's expedition to relieve Emin Pasha, and attempts to prove that racial representations are in large part determined by the cultural conditions of the traveller's society. By looking at Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, it argues that the text is best read as what it purports to be: a kind of travel narrative. Only when it is seen as such and is regarded in the context of the fin de siecle can one begin to appreciate both the extent and the limitations of Conrad's innovativeness.