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AFRICA AND ARCHAEOLOGY
Empowering an Expatriate Life
Merrick Posnansky
Availability: Now In Stock
From Radcliffe Press
Pub date: May 2009
288 pages
16 b/w illus., 2 maps
Size 5 1/2 x 8 1/2
$58.00 - Hardcover (1-84511-994-0)

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Description

In this stimulating account of his life’s experiences, renowned scholar and pioneer Africanist archaeologist Merrick Posnansky takes his readers on an unusual journey across the world, from his origins in a small Jewish community in Manchester to his adventures on archaeological sites in the villages of Africa before finally settling down to teach in Los Angeles.

A Jewish British expatriate in an African social world, Posnansky struggled to establish his racial identity in the British colonial world where Jewish communities were rare. He crossed racial and religious boundaries by marrying a Christian woman from Uganda, a highly unusual step at that time.

Written in a refreshing, candid style, these memoirs provide a fascinating glimpse into the changes taking place in modern Africa. Africa and Archaeology is a first hand account of the racial and religious prejudices of the twentieth century.


Author Bio

Merrick Posnansky is Senior Fulbright Professor at the University of Makerere, Uganda and Professor Emeritus at the Departments of History and Anthropology, University of California where he has been a faculty member since 1977. After completing his PhD in Archaeology at Nottingham University, Posnansky taught in Africa for twenty years, where he worked as Curator of the Uganda Museum, Director of African Studies at the University of Makerere and Professor of Archaeology at the University of Ghana.


Table of contents

* List of plates * Dedication * Preface * Introduction * Family * Education - England and Uganda, a mind unfolding * Education - Ghana and the United States * Religion and Race in three continents * Career - preparations, excavations, museums and universities * Career- Coming to America, new directions * Hani * Africa - Kenya and Uganda * Africa – Ghana * Bibliography * Appendix – Fieldwork *