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The Banning of Chinua Achebe’s Works during the Nigerian Civil War

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The Nigerian Civil War (1967–1970), often referred to as the Biafran War, represented one of the most traumatic political ruptures in postcolonial Africa. The conflict emerged from the collapse of Nigeria’s fragile federal system following the coups of 1966, escalating ethnic tensions, and the secession of the Eastern Region under the leadership of Lt. Colonel Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu. Within this volatile political environment, intellectuals, writers, and cultural producers became deeply entangled in the ideological battle between the Federal Government of Nigeria and the secessionist Republic of Biafra. Among the most prominent figures drawn into this conflict was the Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe. By the late 1960s Achebe was already one of Africa’s most influential writers. His novels—particularly Things Fall Apart (1958), No Longer at Ease (1960), and Arrow of God (1964)—had established him as a central voice in African literature. These works were not merely literary pr...

The Barbados Slave Code and the Institutionalization of Racial Hierarchy

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The Barbados Slave Code of 1661 stands as one of the most consequential legal instruments in the history of the Atlantic world. It codified the enslavement of Africans in the English Caribbean and established a racialized system of control that would influence slave societies across the Americas. Emerging from the economic and social transformations of seventeenth-century Barbados, the Code formalized the subjugation of Africans and their descendants, embedding racial hierarchy into the legal and moral fabric of colonial governance. This document traces the origins, content, and implications of the Barbados Slave Code, situating it within the broader context of English colonial expansion, plantation capitalism, and the evolution of racial thought in the early modern Atlantic world.   The Context of Seventeenth-Century Barbados Barbados, colonized by the English in 1627, quickly became one of the most profitable colonies in the Caribbean. Initially settled by small farmer...

Black Kingdoms That Pre-Date Rome

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The classical historiographical canon long centered Mediterranean polities such as Athens, Carthage, and Rome. Yet, across Africa, a vibrant constellation of powerful states and kingdoms flourished long before Rome’s meteoric rise in the first millennium BCE. These African polities developed complex governance systems, extensive trade networks, durable cultural traditions, and profound intellectual achievements that challenge reductive notions of ancient “civilization” as exclusively Greco-Roman phenomena. As the historian Toyin Falola has noted, “African societies were not passive backdrops to external influences; they were dynamic agents of historical change long before the Mediterranean world assumed its classical prominence.” This analysis focuses on several key Black kingdoms that pre-date or are contemporaneous with early Rome, analyzing their political structures, economic foundations, cultural legacies, and historical significance.   The Kingdom of Kush (c. 1070 BC...