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Marxist Analysis Of Africa

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The historiography of Africa has been a complex matter from the start such that it took some time for some historians to acknowledge that Africa even had a history, when they would much rather believe that Africa was a timeless state with little to no past. This thinking was the result of history only being considered a written account of past events, and since Africans did not develop a widespread form of writing their history the general belief was that African historiography has no place in the world. This lack of African history in the eyes of the Westerners resulted in Africa being labeled as a land of primitive people, with homogenous states and tribes. This paper argues that until the Marxist analysis of Africa, the West’s idea of Africa was implemented, but later Marxist emphasis on social struggles opened the way for development of a broader based social history that was not of high politics, but rather of ordinary men and women (Parker, J. and Rathbone, R., 2007:142). The analysis of archeological remains in Africa, and the impact of colonialism are concepts that can be better understood when employing Marxism, as it allows us to look past the West’s previous identity of Africa and looks towards the new and much more accurate picture of Africa and its people.

Marxism is a method of analysis that focuses on class struggles in the examination of social change. While the varieties of Marxist analysis that attempted to apply more universal concepts to Africa faded

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