Edwin M. Yamauchi, ed., Africa and Africans in Antiquity. East Lansing, Michigan: Michigan State University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-87013-507-4.
Edwin Yamauchi has produced a very telling book with the publication of Africa
and Africans in Antiquity. It is at once the best re-statement of the traditionalist
perspective on ancient Africa and at the same time a symbol of what happens
when Eurocentric scholars talk among themselves. I do not believe that it is
possible to discover a better overview of the traditional view of Africa in
Antiquity than this collection of essays by quite distinguished scholars of
ancient Africa. All of the writers for this volume have credentials that suggest
their work in the field is long and credible in academic circles. To the credit
of Edwin Yamauchi he has collected the papers of this distinguished cadre of
scholars in an attractive volume.
Often a reviewer is able to say that a book is uneven in the strength of its
contributors; this is not really the situation in this case. Africa and Africans
in Antiquity is consistent in both the quality of the writing and the perspective
of the contributors. The book emerged from conference papers delivered March
1-2, 1991 at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, under the auspices of the E.
E. McClellan Lecture Fund and the Departments of Art, Classics, Geography, Sociology
and Anthropology. The nine scholars whose papers were delivered at the conference
and the two additional scholars added to the collection represent a formidable
who's who in the field of African antiquity. In this sense, the book is a remarkable
achievement of consistency.
Of course its beauty as an intellectual project covers a multitude of problems
easily revealed when one scrapes the surface of many of the arguments made in
the book. I am the first to admit that books often arrive long after their time
has come and gone. The fact that the book appears ten years after the papers
were presented, and new information emerges, is not the most compelling issue;
authors and editors often cannot dictate the publication date of their works
and many good publications cannot find a publisher.
However, the most compelling issues for me are in two general categories. In
the first place, the book suffers from a lack of theoretical breadth and in
the second place it lacks any commitment to the serious scholarship done by
African and African American scholars, with the notable exception of the work
by the Eurocentric Frank Snowden. Indeed, even Snowden fails to fully understand
or grasp the paradigm shift in the thinking done about African antiquity by
continental and diasporan Africans.
Snowden is the best example of the African scholar who cannot see beyond the
Eurocentric worldview and thus is not able to disentangle himself from the web
of Europe's suffocating racism toward Africa. Although Snowden has done meticulous
work, unearthing details about Africa's past, he has done so from the standpoint
of Africa as an object and Europe as a subject. Thus, his essay "Attitudes
towards Blacks in the Greek and Roman World" sets us in the wrong direction.
What about attitudes of Greeks in the Nubian and Kemetic World? But alas, this
is much too deep for Snowden whose aim is to suggest that blacks were important
to the Greeks and Romans as if ancient Egyptians and Nubians appeared when they
were recognized in Greek literature. Most contemporary African scholars could
care less about what the attitudes of Greeks and Romans were in regards to Africans.
What they want to know is about the agency of Africans themselves in antiquity.
I don't believe Snowden is able to detach himself from his Eurocentric training
long enough to notice that he is asking the wrong question. When Yamauchi entitled
his book, Africa and Africans in Antiquity, it was
an advance in thinking because he did not consciously tie it to the Greeks and
Romans. Perhaps there is a place for such orientation but it is unfortunate
that Snowden, the only African writer in the group, could not rise to the theoretical
challenge presented by an overwhelming Eurocentric conference. Snowden is not
the only author who has this difficulty.
Frank Yurco, a consultant to the Field Museum in Chicago and an instructor at
the Oriental Institute's Adult Program, makes a robust contribution to the discussion
of Nubia. He is well read in the literature of the day, able to organize it
with some rationality, but he is unfortunately unable to escape whatever training
he has received from Egyptologists. Consequently what could have been a masterful
exploration of the cultural and political agency of an African civilization
in its own right ends up in his essay being the discussion of a marginalized
Nubia, subservient to Egypt in every way. Of course, the idea of Nubia being
peripheral to Egypt grows from the mistaken belief that the Egyptians were not
black-skinned people. The problem with this construction is not simply that
it is untrue, but more it is systemic in Yurco's understanding of the Nile River
valley.
Location is the momentary psychical and cultural space occupied by a critic,
theorist, or practitioner of knowledge. In the case of Yurco one can tell his
location early in his essay. When he writes several times of the "Egypto-Coptic"
style, sense, architecture, language, or whatever, you know to expect a Greco-Germanic
interpretation of African antiquity. On a surface level to say "Copt"
is to say "Egyptian" and thus to speak of "Egypto-Coptic"
style would be nonsense, like saying, "Egyptian-Egyptian" were it
not for the more insidious inclination of such terminology. To say "Coptic"
introduces the Greek presence in ancient Egypt. There was a significant Greek
presence in Kemet only beginning in the 4th century B.C. Therefore, to speak
of ancient Africa and "Egypto-Coptic" is a misnomer. But the Eurocentrist
can almost never see Africa in its own right, definitionally they must take
African ideals and ideas and re-cast them as Greek or European influences. There
is no Kemetic-Coptic relationship when Weni and Harkhuf make their journeys
into Nubia. At the time of Senurset, Ramses, Hatshepsut, Tarharka, and Piye,
the "Copts" do not exist. The word is from "aguptos" from
the Greek language. When the Greek speakers of the Divine Language wrote the
Kemetic language they used Greek characters rather than the ancient glyphs and
called the language "Coptic." This writing system is Greek, not African.
The issue is that Yurco's construction would confuse the reader who does not
understand his collapsing of time from 3500 B.C. to 300 B.C. Until the time
of Alexander of Macedonia there was only a Kemetic, that is, Egyptian heritage;
no Egypto-Coptic anything. In fact, the Coptic language did not exist at the
time of the Macedonian conquest in 333 B.C.
The one author whose work seems to appear without ideological content is that
of Edna Russman, curator of Egyptian Art at the Brooklyn Museum. I found her
article on "Egypt and the Kushites: Dynasty XXV" without pomp, bombast,
or hyperbole. The writing is careful, scholarly, direct, and does not overstretch
the evidence with the Egyptological speculation found in most other pieces in
the book. Such speculation I have dubbed the leaning tower of probability because
the speculation always leans toward a Eurocentric interpretation and away from
an African agency interpretation.
Perhaps of equal seriousness is the fact that no African or African American
scholar is cited by any of the writers other than Orlando Patterson cited by
Frank Snowden. There are two problems with this lack of citation. In the first
place it smacks of racism in scholarship because what is assumed is that nothing
written by African scholars on African antiquity is meaningful, even when what
they are writing about is Africa and Africans in antiquity. How would it look
for a collection of writers to discuss Europe and Europeans in Antiquity and
not cite any European descended authors as authorities? Part of the problem
the Afrocentrists have addressed is this assumption that Africans cannot teach
Europeans anything, not even about their own continent. The second problem with
this lack of citation is that it suggests the writers are not familiar with
all of the evidence. This is even a more critical fault because it also means
they are presenting their data and evidences without an eye toward what African
Americans or continental Africans have written in the many African journals
as well as the Journal of African Civilization, the Journal of Black Studies,
or the Journal of Negro History, as an example. Ancient Africa is not, and cannot
be, some special preserve of white authors, particularly since we know that
white authors have historically distorted the face of Africa in the interest
of service to Europe. While it may be considered radical, the Afrocentric impetus
to correct this wrong emerges in a work like the recently edited book by Ama
Mazama and myself, Egypt vs. Greece in the American Academy. Another work that
has clearly demonstrated a much more enlightened approach to ancient Africa
is Christos Evangeliou's When Greece Met Africa: The Genesis of Hellenic Philosophy.
In his 1994 work Evangeliou, a scholar of Greek descent, made the brilliant
observation "if it appears that the picture, which the Greeks had of themselves
and the people around them, especially the Egyptians, does not cohere with the
picture which is presented by Northern Europeans" (Evangeliou, 1994, p.
4). One could say that the ancient Africans probably had a different view of
themselves than that promoted by books such as Africa and Africans in Antiquity.
It should be noted that several chapters are particularly outstanding in providing
the reader with strong overviews of some lesser known discussions in African
history. Reuben G.Bullard's "The Berbers of the Maghreb and Ancient Carthage"
is one of the best portraits of the general field of Imazighen studies. Bullard
covers most of the theories of origin and development of the people of the Maghreb.
In addition, Kathryn A. Bard and Rodolfo Fattovich's "Some Remarks on the
Processes of State Formation in Egypt and Ethiopia" is a good comparative
analysis of state formation in two ancient African societies. Taken together,
however, this book is handicapped by the editor's own lack of vision as stated
in the introduction when he writes that the "Afrocentric scholars, in seeking
to reclaim the achievements of the continent for African Americans have gone
to the other extreme in claiming that they are the rightful heirs to the glories
of Egypt, as though the Egyptians were black Africans. This is rather ironic
in that the Egyptians were among the most ethnocentric of all peoples and generally
regarded black Africans of Nubia, as well as all other non-Egyptians, with contempt"
(Yamauchi, 2001, p. 1). In the end this is not just Yamauchi's opening line,
it is his closing point as well; perhaps this is the point of the book. Unfortunately,
Yamauchi repeats the propagandistic mantra of reactionary scholars against Afrocentricty
by stating a falsehood as if it is truth. Vehemence is never a replacement for
reason in discourse. Afrocentrists argue that Egypt is an African civilization.
African people are largely black but some are brown; the ancient Egyptians,
from all ancient sources, were "black skinned with wooly hair" (Herodotus,
Histories, Bk. II). This is the issue that is apparently at the core of this
book. It creates, inter alia, many distortions and mistakes. For example, Yamauchi
arguing that the Egyptians were not black claims that the Egyptians regarded
so-called "black Africans of Nubia" with contempt. This is a spurious
argument. The Germans regarded the Russians with contempt during World War II
and they remained Europeans with similar appearances. The Hutu regarded the
Tutsi with contempt and they were all Africans. During the last great Asian
war, the Japanese regarded the Chinese and Koreans with contempt and they were
all Asians. One cannot argue that because the Egyptian nation hated the Nubian
nation that it was an indication that the Egyptians were not black. Such circuitous
logic is what complicates the reading of what would have been an otherwise valuable
contribution to the discourse on ancient Africa, but as it stands the work is
fraught with political and cultural bias.
Probably the central issue to the enterprise represented by the works in Africa
and Africans in Antiquity is the impact of Africa on Europe, that is, Egypt
on Greece. An underlying concern in the writing of this volume is that the Afrocentrists
have positioned African culture at the fountainhead, not only to Africa but
to many of the ideas found in Greece. This is unacceptable to the votarists
of a pure white theology of rationalism. How could this be when Africans were
enslaved by Europeans? But clearly the classical Greeks believed that a lot
of their civilization was derived from African sources. Those who have argued
the notion of a Greek autochthonous culture have muddied the waters in order
to obscure the ancient truth. In the Odyssey it is reported that Helen learned
medical arts in Egypt. There are numerous such examples in the mythological
and historical texts, in the pre-philosophical and philosophical literatures
of Greece. The fact is a book like Africa and Africans in Antiquity could have
been a singular contribution to the advancement of truth and science had so
many of the authors not written from a Eurocentric perspective with an eye toward
intellectual hegemony. Nevertheless, I applaud any effort that seeks to engage
the very complex issue of African, hence, human antiquity.
Molefi Kete Asante
Temple University