Description
Description
About the Author
About the Author
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
"Encompassing Africana studies, medieval scholarship, historiography, and philosophy, this book surveys centuries of literature, history, and theology to argue for Africa's influence on Europe's self-conception. Hegel's fantasy that Africa 'is no historical place in the world' guides Smith as he leaps from ancient civilizations, such as those of Alexandria and Carthage, to close readings of Virgil, Frantz Fanon, and Erich Auerbach. Smith's synthesis of a wide range of sources, from antiquity to the modern era, strengthens his central claim: that "Africa was not only known to Europeans but played a profound role in how Europeans imagined both the world and themselves."
-- "The New Yorker" "Smith finds that medieval European literature relies on knowledge of a real (not just a mythic) Africa and writings by Africans, and his invitation to reorient our understanding of the relationship between continents is both provocative and persuasive. His compelling challenge to the use of a false 'medieval' to support racial hierarchies and conquest is important for historians, literary scholars, and everyone seeking to better understand the world as it was and as it is."--David M. Perry, coauthor of 'The Bright Ages: A New History of Medieval Europe' "We live in an exciting historical moment in medievalist scholarship. While two decades ago Euromedievalists hardly noticed the vast world outside Latin Christendom, an increasing number of scholarly studies today are unearthing the crucial debts that Euromedieval literature, history, and thought owe to Afro-Asian worlds. Atlas's Bones, in particular, treating literary history, philosophy, and medievalism through nine expansive chapters, will surely be one of the new studies that will be read for a long time."--Geraldine Heng, author of 'The Invention of Race in the European Middle Ages' "A fascinating exploration of the place of Africa and Africans in the intellectual life of classical Europe, its later erasure, and some of the consequences in the making of the cultures of Empire."--Kwame Anthony Appiah, author of 'The Lies That Bind: Rethinking Identity ' "This brilliant book affirms that Africa has never been alien to Europe. European self-understanding has always depended upon its southern neighbor, and yet Europe has regarded Africa as a place perennially medieval, in need of neo-feudal law, and incapable of comprehending modernity. Smith expertly guides us through this tangled web of mutual indebtedness and pseudo-feudal mystification. A landmark achievement."--David Wallace, author of 'Europe: A Literary History, 1348-1418'
Publishing Information
Publishing Information

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