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Hardcover African Kings: Portraits of a Disappearing Era Book

ISBN: 1580082246

ISBN13: 9781580082242

African Kings: Portraits of a Disappearing Era

Even today there are close to 100 tribal kings in Africa, vestiges of a former age?their ancient traditions preserved, their wisdom and power still honored. A portal into these worlds of mysterious... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A wonderful book

This book is excellent, although the audience who would be interested in it is probably limited. African Kings is an excellent photo essay which portrays tribal chiefs from throughout Africa, some wearing traditional attire, others wearing modern dress but many wearing kind of a mix of the two. Some countries are more heavily portrayed than others but this would have to do with access to their respective countries and the social structure reflected in the emphasis. Overall the quality of the photography is first-rate and it makes this a fascinating study.

The most fascinating picture book on Africa I've found

There are many picture books on British royalty, but when it comes to African royalty, a book like this is a rare find. The kings on these pages range from tired figures playing out rituals in dusty backwaters, to wealthy and influential figures who advise presidents and have homes around the world. This book spectacularly documents their regalia. The costumes, thrones, whisks, wives, lovers, ministers, furs, appliances, statues, crowns, and beads range from the ridiculous to the sublime to the menacing, as do the brief descriptions of each dynasty. This book is a treasure for costume designers, cultural historians, and royalists, and will be a fun coffee table book for anyone with even a little curiosity about Africa or clothing.

The most amazing chronicle

I adore this book. I do historical research, and originally ordered it from the library; I loved it so much I had to buy my own copy. Then my brother-in-law (from Nigeria) started reading it to our 8 month old niece, so I bought him a copy. I just cannot believe one dude got access to all these kings, and they agreed to pose for him. I look upon it alternately with reverence and with hilarity. There's a hilarious juxtaposition of the old and new, as with the king riding in a "car," and you can gaze forever and still not see all the strange modern objects in the background such as the fridge one king displays so proudly. It's historically accurate that kings would take any European woman's flowered dressing gown and convert it into a robe, and incongruous hats given to them by colonial powers were always revered.The one thing they all have in common is they are all men with pride.

Royal Africa

This book with its beautiful photographs chronicles the surviving African royalty. The introduction by Pierre Alexandre, Origins Of The African Kingdoms, deals with the early history of Africa, the influence of the colonial occupation on traditional institutions, post-independence Africa and takes a closer look at the Fulani, Yoruba, Akan, Luba and Zulu peoples. The text is enlivened by historical black and white illustrations. Following this, the next section deals with current royalty in the form of full colour portraits of the monarchs in full royal regalia plus brief biographies and historical notes on the tribes concerned. The kings and queens come from countries and tribes like Nigeria, Benin, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, Zambia, Cameroon, Congo, Rwanda, and Uganda. South Africa is represented by amongst others, King Goodwill Zwelethini of the Zulu (a descendant of the warrior king Shaka) and the famous Rain Queen, Modjadji IV of the Lobedu tribe. It is an interesting and valuable study of the traditions and personalities of a disappearing African culture. This book will be of great value to historians and ethnologists.

Gripping sense of cultural stamina

I was blown away by this book. Having just returned from a trip to West Africa (Mali) I was on the lookout for something that did not play out cliches, and I found it here. The intense variety of self-presentation seemed to me both to reflect different tribal histories as well as different individuals, chiefs and kings often with refrigerators in the background or flourescent lights overhead, and yet, to my mind, glowing with cultural vitality---even when tired or, on occasion the text tells us, dying. A previous reviewer noted the stiffness, and yet I felt good about that sense of decorum, presentation, bearing, sometimes with a bit of fun along the way. The cover picture, I might say, doesn't offer the best sense of what is inside, for it offers few surprises. The African photos of the great West African photographer Seydou Keita are, I guess, more works of art, but this book gives me a greater sense of something sometimes wild and frequently noble in African culture, and a glorious and unsettling sense of an undeniable aristocracy: I'm glad to have both books.
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