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7 Cultural Encounters: Britain and Africa in the Nineteenth Century
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Published:June 2006
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Abstract
This chapter discusses the cultural encounters between Britain and Africa in the nineteenth century. It shows that early nineteenth-century British sojourners in African cultures were supplicants of one kind or another. They asked for audience, consideration, protection, information, trade, diplomatic relations, converts, and the rest. By corollary, African cultures maintained the capacity not only to accede to or deny such requests but also to control or expel British visitors. A vital element in the same configuration was that African cultures had considerable powers of arbitration in rejecting or accepting British ideas and artefacts. The record overall shows African cultures to have been aware of the notion of caveat emptor. These conditions shifted after mid-century, and from the 1870s on African cultures found themselves increasingly unable to resist British penetration.
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