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Guy Arnold

Author of Africa: A Modern History

41 Works 230 Members 2 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Guy Arnold is a freelance writer and the author of fifty books. These include Wars in the Third World since 1945 (1995), The New South Africa (2000), Africa: A Modern History (2005) and The New Scramble for Africa (2009).

Includes the name: Guy Arnold

Works by Guy Arnold

Africa: A Modern History (2005) 79 copies, 1 review
Datelines of World History (1983) 16 copies, 1 review
Wars in the Third World (1991) 10 copies
Gas (Energy Today) (1985) 6 copies
The Third World Handbook (1994) 4 copies
Nuclear Energy (Facts on) (1990) 4 copies
Coal (Energy Today) (1985) 4 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1932-05-06
Gender
male
Occupations
lecturer
consultant
author
Nationality
UK
Associated Place (for map)
UK

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
A truly monumental work, this is the history of post-colonial Africa.
Arnold is very sympathetic towards Africa. He analyses various
influences on newly-independent African states, including the Cold War,
and neo-colonialism - the unwillingness of the former colonial powers
to give up economic power even though they had surrendered political
control. His analysis of the emergence of the one-party state is very
good. He is critical of the aid industry, a position I agree with
wholeheartedly.

He makes show more some errors in his treatment of Sudan, which is my own
area of specialist expertise. On p649 he refers to the 1985 overthrow
of Numayri as a "coup", whereas it is generally regarded as an intifada
(popular uprising). More seriously, on p650 he attributes the 1989 coup
(which was a coup) to "army officers who had been pressing for peace in
the South". This was erroneously believed by many during the first few
days after the coup, particularly as army officers had issued an
ultimatum to the government shortly beforehand demanding peace in the
south. However it quickly became clear that this was an Islamist coup
by a different group of officers, deliberately intended to pre-empt
moves towards peace which resulted from the earlier ultimatum. I was in
Sudan during all these events and witnessed all of this first hand.
Spelling mistakes such as "Rumbuk" for Rumbek (p840) and "Hegliz" for
Heglig (p841) should not have passed the proof-readers. "Western aid
agencies... pulled their operations..." (p841) during the infamous
Memorandum of Understanding dispute in 2000 is a gross
over-simplification and reproduces the propaganda of those same
agencies. In fact, as I documented at the time, only around six out of
forty or so agencies actually withdrew. The section on Sudan on
pp838-843 is actually one of the weakest in the whole book. It reads
like a list of short facts with no real attempt at analysis.

A more general criticism is that the book could have benefited from
a little more editing for continuity. In many instances successive
paragraphs seem to have been researched separately and put together
without regard for repetition of some facts and phrases.

But for all this, it remains an excellent book.
show less
I bought a copy of this to keep as reference after checking out at the local library. Excellent overviews and timelines. Cultures around the world are decomposed and events including climactic change, cultural empires, wars, spiritual movements, and biographies of key figures. There are maps and timelines to clarify.

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Statistics

Works
41
Members
230
Popularity
#97,993
Rating
½ 4.5
Reviews
2
ISBNs
95
Languages
2
Favorited
1

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