1 / 85

AFRICA and the ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE(S) A BALANCED APPROACH

AFRICA and the ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE(S) A BALANCED APPROACH. DR. BRUCE M. HAIGHT WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY KRESA TEACHER’S WORKSHOP March 19, 2008. MDE CONTENT EXPECTATIONS. STRENGTHS: * HELPFUL FRAMEWORK * DEVELOPED WITH RECENT INPUT

nasnan
Télécharger la présentation

AFRICA and the ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE(S) A BALANCED APPROACH

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AFRICA and theATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE(S) A BALANCED APPROACH DR. BRUCE M. HAIGHT WESTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY KRESA TEACHER’S WORKSHOP March 19, 2008

  2. MDE CONTENT EXPECTATIONS • STRENGTHS: * HELPFUL FRAMEWORK * DEVELOPED WITH RECENT INPUT • CHALLENGES: * CAN BE ‘TWEAKED’ * CURRENT TEXTS OFTEN DO NOT REFLECT RECENT SCHOLARSHIP

  3. WHAT’S A TEACHER TO DO TO SUPPLEMENT TEXTS? • ATTEND MCSS FOR LECTURES AND WORKSHOPS • PARTICIPATE IN SUMMER WORKSHOPS • TAKE ADDITIONAL COURSES • FIND RELIABLE WEBSITES AND DO WEBSEARCHES • SET UP A READING PROGRAM TO UPDATE LESSON PLANS

  4. OBJECTIVES OF THIS LECTURE • PROVIDE GUIDANCE TO RELEVANT WEBSITES, BOOKS, & ARTICLES THAT DRAW UPON MORE RECENT RESEARCH • IDENTIFY THEMES ON THE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE OFTEN MISSING FROM CURRENT TEXTS • SPECIFIC SUGGESTIONS FOR ‘TWEAKING’ THE MDE CONTENT EXPECTATIONS

  5. WHERE TO BEGIN? • DR. HAIGHT’S WEBSITE THAT GIVES ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON RELIABLE RESOURCES http://www.wmich.edu/library/cg/405 • EMAIL: bruce.haight@wmich.edu • WMU HISTORY DEPARTMENT WEBSITE FOR WORKSHOP INFORMATION http://www.wmich.edu/history/

  6. FABULOUS WEBSITE FREE FOR ALL MICHIGAN RESIDENTSMICHIGAN ELECTRONIC LIBRARYhttp://www.mel.org/ • At their home page look under Mel DatabasesFor books: click on WorldCat Then go to MELCAT to borrow the book For articles (free download full text): click on InfoTrac World History Collection

  7. MISSING THEMES ON THE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE • DETAILED INFORMATION IS NOW AVAILABLE ON DEMAND TO TEACHERS AND YOUR STUDENTS ON NEARLY 27,000 VOYAGES ACROSS THE MIDDLE PASSAGE • SOURCE: THE TRANSATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE: A DATA BASE ON CD-ROM

  8. MISSING THEMES ON THE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE • WHAT MOVED IN THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE WAS MORE THAN SEEDS AND PLANTS; KNOWLEDGE SYSTEMS ALSO MOVED • SOURCEBOOK: JUDITH CARNEY, BLACK RICE

  9. MISSING THEMES ON THE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE • SLAVERY IN NORTH AMERICA CHANGED OVER TIME - CHARTER GENERATIONS - PLANTATION GENERATIONS - REVOLUTIONARY GENERATIONS • SOURCEBOOK: IRA BERLIN, MANY GENERATIONS GONE

  10. SOCIETIES WITH SLAVES:THE CHARTER GENERATIONSSLAVE SOCIETIES: THE PLANTATION GENERATIONSSLAVE AND FREE:THE REVOLUTIONARY GENERATIONS • SOURCEBOOK: IRA BERLIN, MANY GENERATIONS GONE

  11. MISSING THEMES ON THE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE • THERE WAS MORE THAN ONE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE - BLACK SLAVES FROM SUBSAHARAN AFRICA TO THE NEW WORLD - WHITE SLAVES FROM EUROPE AND NORTH AMERICA TO NORTH AFRICA • SOURCEBOOK: ROBERT DAVIS, CHRISTIAN SLAVES, MUSLIM MASTERS

  12. FOR A PERSPECTIVE THAT TAKES INTO ACCOUNT AFRICAN AMERICAN VIEWS FROM SLAVE TIMES ONWARD SEE MICHAEL A. GOMEZ, REVERSING SAIL

  13. HOW DO WE ATTAIN THEMATIC BALANCE? • IDENTIFY MAJOR THEMES FROM THE MDE CONTENT EXPECTATIONS, e.g. slavery and the slave trade. • ASK: THIS THEME IS CHARACTERISTIC OF WHICH AREAS OF THE WORLD DURING WHICH TIME PERIODS? • ASK: DO OUR CONTENT EXPECTATIONS REFLECT THIS?

  14. WHAT WOULD BALANCE LOOK LIKE IN RELATION TO THE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE(S)? • WHERE & WHEN HAS SLAVERY EXISTED? • WHERE & WHEN HAS THERE BEEN A SLAVE TRADE? • DO OUR CONTENT EXPECTATIONS REFLECT THIS?

  15. WHERE & WHEN HAS SLAVERY EXISTED? • FOR BLACKS IN AFRICA: UNTIL THE 19TH CENTURY • FOR BLACKS IN THE NEW WORLD: 16TH - 19TH CENTURY • FOR WHITES IN NORTH AFRICA: 16TH - EARLY 19TH CENTURY

  16. WHERE & WHEN HAS THERE BEEN A SLAVE TRADE? • SLAVE TRADE IN BLACK SLAVES - WITHIN AFRICA - ACROSS THE SAHARA DESERT TO NORTH AFRICA - ACROSS THE ATLANTIC TO EUROPE & THE NEW WORLD VIA THE ATLANTIC & THE CARRIBEAN • SLAVE TRADE IN WHITE SLAVES TO N. AFRICA - CAPTURED IN THE MEDITERRANEAN & THE ATLANTIC FROM SHIPS - CAPTURED FROM COASTAL TOWNS IN EUROPE, ENGLAND, IRELAND, ICELAND

  17. DO OUR CONTENT EXPECTATIONS REFLECT THATFROM THE 16TH THROUGH THE 19TH CENTURY THERE WERE TWO ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADES? • 12 MILLION AFRICANS LEFT AFRICA FOR THE NEW WORLD AS SLAVES • 1.25 MILLION EUROPEANS WERE CAPTURED AND TAKEN TO NORTH AFRICA AS SLAVES

  18. CAN & SHOULD WE ‘TWEAK’ THE MDE CONTENT EXPECTATIONS AND SUPPLEMENT WHAT APPEARS IN U.S. HISTORY & WORLD HISTORY TEXTS TO TEACH MORE ACCURATELY ABOUT WHAT HAPPENED IN THE PAST?

  19. ARE OUR CONTENT EXPECTATIONS BALANCED? • With regard to all types of slavery in the same time period & changes over time? • In that they acknowledge the impact of slavery when it was significant? • With reference to coverage of Africa and peoples from Africa in the U.S. as compared to other areas and peoples? • Within materials covered at each grade level? • As students progress from Grade 5 to Middle and to High School?

  20. CONTENT EXPECTATIONS

  21. INTEGRATED UNITED STATES HISTORYGRADE FIVE • ERA 1 -BEGINNINGS TO 1620

  22. GRADE 5 U1.3.1The Five Major Regions of Africa • NORTH AFRICA • WEST AFRICA • CENTRAL AFRICA • EAST AFRICA • SOUTH AFRICA

  23. HOW DO THESE REGIONS RELATE TO THE THEME: THE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE(S)? • WEST AFRICA NORTH AFRICA • CENTRAL AFRICA • EAST AFRICA • SOUTH AFRICA

  24. GRADE 5 U1.3.2 WEST AFRICA BEFORE 1500

  25. THE ECONOMY IN WEST AFRICA BEFORE 1500 MOST WEST AFRICANS EARNED THEIR LIVING * FARMING * AS PASTORALISTS * FISHING

  26. DESERTIFICATION AND INNOVATION 300 BC - 300 CE • THE AREA OF THE SAHARA DESERT BECAME MUCH DRYER • GLABERRIMA RICE DOMESTICATED ALONG THE NIGER RIVER BY 300 CE • STATES AND THE THREE MAJOR EMPIRES EMERGED IN THIS AREA

  27. THE ECONOMY IN WEST AFRICA BEFORE 1500 SOME WEST AFRICANS EARNED THEIR LIVING IN: • TRADE - AS MERCHANTS • IRON MAKING & BLACKSMITHING • POLITICS • MILITARY SERVICE

  28. FAMILY STRUCTURESIN WEST AFRICABEFORE 1500 • PATRILINEAL / MATRILINEAL • HOUSEHOLDS OFTEN INCLUDED FREE & SLAVE MEMBERS • THE FAMILY AND HOUSEHOLD WERE FOUNDATIONAL FOR ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL LIFE

  29. WHICH WEST AFRICAN PEOPLES CAN WE USE TO REPRESENT OUR THEMES? • FARMERS - BAMBARA, BAGA, YORUBA, & IGBO • PASTORALISTS - FULANI • FISHERMEN - DO & KRU

  30. WHICH WEST AFRICAN PEOPLES CAN WE USE TO REPRESENT OUR THEMES? • FARMERS - MALINKE • TRADERS - MALINKE • IRONWORKERS - MALINKE • POLITICIANS - MALINKE • MILITARY - MALINKE

  31. THE GROWTH OF TRADEIN WEST AFRICABEFORE 1500 • WITHIN WEST AFRICA • FROM WEST AFRICA ACROSS THE SAHARA DESERT TO NORTH AFRICA

  32. THE GROWTH OFVILLAGES, TOWNS & CITIES IN WEST AFRICABEFORE 1500 • LARGER CITIES IN THE INTERIOR • VILLAGES NEARER THE COAST

  33. THE GROWTH OF STATESIN WEST AFRICABEFORE 1500 • THE GREAT EMPIRES OF GHANA (800-1200), MALI (1200-1500), AND SONGHAI (1500-1600) WERE IN THE INTERIOR ALONG THE NIGER RIVER • SMALLER STATES WERE ON THE FRINGES OF THE EMPIRES • ACEPHALOUS GROUPS WERE IN OUTLYING AND DEFENSIBLE REGIONS • THE MOST DENSELY POPULATED AREA OF WEST AFRICA WAS THEN IN THE INTERIOR, NOT ALONG THE COAST. THIS WOULD REVERSE LATER BY THE END OF THE SLAVE TRADE.

  34. GRADE 5 U1.4THREE WORLD INTERACTIONS FROM THE LATE-15TH THROUGH THE 17TH CENTURY

  35. GRADE 5 U1.4.1 THE CONVERGENCE OF EUROPEANS, AMERICAN INDIANS AND AFRICANS IN NORTH AMERICA FROM THE PERSPECTIVE OF THE AFRICANS FROM 1492 TO 1700

  36. GRADE 5 U1.4.4 THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE AND ITS IMPACT ON EUROPEANS, AMERICAN INDIANS AND AFRICANS 1492-1700

  37. THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE: ITS IMPACT ON AFRICA • STAPLE CROPS FROM THE NEW WORLD THAT WERE ADOPTED ALONG THE WEST AFRICAN COAST • CASSAVA / MANIOC (TAPIOCA) • MAIZE • OKRA • GROUNDNUTS (PEANUTS) • CAPISCUM PEPPERS

  38. THE COLUMBIAN EXCHANGE: ITS IMPACT ON AFRICA • STAPLE CROPS FROM THE NEW WORLD THAT WEST AFRICANS BROUGHT TO NORTH AMERICA • OKRA • GROUNDNUTS (PEANUTS) • CAPISCUM PEPPERS

More Related