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The Kongo Kingdom: The Origins, Dynamics and Cosmopolitan Culture of an African Polity
Cambridge University Press, 3/26/2020
EAN 9781108463928, ISBN10: 1108463924
Paperback, 344 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.1 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English
The Kongo kingdom, which arose in the Atlantic Coast region of West-Central Africa, is a famous emblem of Africa's past yet little is still known of its origins and early history. This book sheds new light on that all important period and goes on to explain the significance of its cosmopolitan culture in the wider world. Bringing together different new strands of historical evidence as well as scholars from disciplines as diverse as anthropology, archaeology, art history, history and linguistics, it is the first book to approach the history of this famous Central African kingdom from a cross-disciplinary perspective. All chapters are written by distinguished and/or upcoming experts of Kongo history with a focus on political space, taking us through processes of centralisation and decentralisation, the historical politics of extraversion and internal dynamics, and the geographical distribution of aspects of material and immaterial Kongo culture.
Introduction
cross-disciplinary approaches to Kongo history Koen Bostoen and Inge Brinkman
Part I. The Origins and Dynamics of the Kongo Kingdom
1. The origins of Kongo
a revised vision John K. Thornton
2. A central African kingdom
Kongo in 1480 Wyatt MacGaffey
3. Seventeenth-century Kikongo is not the ancestor of present-day Kikongo Koen Bostoen and Gilles-Maurice de Schryver
4. Soyo and Kongo
the undoing of the Kingdom's centralisation John K. Thornton
5. The Eastern Border of the Kongo kingdom
on relocating the Hydronym Barbela Igor Matonda
Part II. Kongo's Cosmopolitan Culture and the Wider World
6. From image to grave and back
multidisciplinary inquiries into Kongo Christian visual culture Cécile Fromont
7. Ceramics decorated with woven motifs
an archaeological Kongo kingdom identifier? Els Cranshof, Nicolas Nikis and Pierre de Maret
8. From America to Africa
how Kongo nobility made smoking pipes their own Bernard Clist
9. 'To make book'
a conceptual historical approach to Kongo book cultures (sixteenth–nineteenth c.) Inge Brinkman and Koen Bostoen
10. Kongo cosmopolitans in the nineteenth century Jelmer Vos
11. The making of Kongo identity in the American diaspora
a case study from Brazil Linda Heywood.