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Destruction of Black Civilization: Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to 2000 A.D. (Revised)
Destruction of Black Civilization: Great Issues of a Race from 4500 B.C. to 2000 A.D. (Revised) | Chancellor Williams
4 posts | 4 read | 11 to read
A widely read classic exposition of the history of Africans on the continent--and the people of African descent in the United States and in the diaspora--this well researched analysis details the development of civiliza
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TheNextBook
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I only have one book left on my “must read” list for the end of the year!! 🎉🎊

This book is a look at the history of Africa. It forces you to reconsider what you know about the continent and the way colonialism takes place. It looks, chronologically for the most part, at the way in which religion spread through and changed how the country was run. It looks at the mixing of ethnicities and how that created a ruling class and a subservient class..

TheNextBook ...it also looks at the way in which the history of Africa has been taught and why it‘s been taught that way. What Williams focuses on is the depiction of Africans and their successes and how the continent was in many ways conquered. I found this book to be really informative but the author extremely biased. I think his research contradicted a lot of what others were presenting and he felt like racism played a huge part in that. I can‘t explain... 6y
TheNextBook ...it in the way he did but this book is extremely interesting and well worth a read. I didnt agree with all of his opinion but I appreciate the information he provided in this book much of which I was unaware of and more of which was never fully explained. 6y
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TheNextBook
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I‘ve been steadily reading and dissecting this book and it has a lot of information. Tons of information. For the most part I‘m enjoying it. At times Williams narrative comes off very biased towards himself which is interesting because this whole book is focused on the colonization of Africa and how that came about. But sometimes he comes off as if this is a personal affront to himself. It is weird at times. This book though is really fascinating

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TheNextBook
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This is one of the last remaining books on my “must read” list this year and there is no time like the present. Williams states in the preview the reasons why he decided to research and write this book. The basis being that he wanted a Black man to write the history of Black people and Africa. He didnt want anyone else setting the narrative or writing the history so he researched and compiled this. He has very strong views and I‘m interested to...

TheNextBook ...see how they translate since this was published 30 years ago. 6y
Laura317 Sounds fascinating. I look forward to your review. 6y
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TheNextBook

My present to myself for this 4th of July is this book. Just ordered. The irony is not lost on me that while the U.S. fought for it's freedom it was also so hell bent on keeping people enslaved. It also isn't lost on me how systematic and institutionalized racism still exist so prevalently in the U.S. I usually celebrate the 4th because I'm grateful for the rights I'm granted and those who fight. But I'm also aware and wary of what's happening now

TheNextBook My goal in life is to educate myself and my child. I don't want to be ignorant on my history or the history of this country, especially because we do not know what is in store or what battles we may face. So many people are so blissfully unaware of anything beyond what they learn in school. It's truly frightening. I encourage learning. (edited) 7y
Chrissyreadit A friend and I were just discussing this with our kids after watching a video from Teaching Tolerance. Asking our children how we can support a better country for all. I agree reading and genuine conversations are part of one solution. 7y
TheNextBook @Chrissyreadit Absolutely. I'll never credit our public school system with teaching history accurately because they don't. I've taken a very hands on approach to teaching my kid history. When people choose not to educate themselves they choose to accept what they've been told which is omits large chunks of what actually happened. I can't do that. Not with a black child in the U.S. Nope. I refuse. 7y
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Notafraidofwords This is a great goal. I'm in the same boat. I want to learn more. (edited) 7y
Chrissyreadit We homeschool- and work hard to have a diverse approach to history. One reason I love litsy and Goodreads is that it brings attention to resources I would never have learned of otherwise. 7y
TheNextBook @Notafraidofwords exactly I don't see how anyone could not want to learn more. I'm not content with what I've been told and I'm tired of seeing uneducated people reiterate the same falsities over and over again. 7y
TheNextBook @Chrissyreadit Agreed! We have to learn in order to teach and the last few years have taught me how important it is to teach and encourage learning history to my child. 7y
JSW It's conversations like these that give me hope. Thank you. ❤️ 7y
TheNextBook @JSW in this day and age we could all use some hope. Glad I could provide some! 7y
Notafraidofwords @TheNextBook oh boy. I'm so tired of that too. The thing that bothers me the most is that somehow now people want a cookie for not being racist? Ummmm 7y
HippieChickHomeschool We homeschool too and I have not only educated my kids but myself. The story we are told in school is so very different than reality. The narrative that it takes an MLK to change the world, ignoring the mass of people who fought and sacrificed is so damaging. I want my kids to know it takes groups and TIME to change the world. I think people give up so easily because they think Rosa Parks sat down, and "civil rights" happened the next day. 7y
TheNextBook @Notafraidofwords yeah I'm not built that way. No awards for being a decent human being because you should always be a decent human being. If people are looking for praise for that then they are doing "not being racist" wrong... 7y
TheNextBook @HippieChickHomeschool I always wonder why we never talk about or spend anytim on the almost hundred years between the Civil War and the Civil Rights movement! A lot of things happened during that time and it says a lot about how institutionalized racism prevailed! 7y
HippieChickHomeschool @TheNextBook We've found *one* book on reconstruction! It was a picture book, even with that tiny bit of information I was stunned! I went to school in Texas, big metropolitan area, not some small backwoods town, and it was NOT what I was taught at all. I've read more about the era myself now, but I've barely cracked the surface. 7y
TheNextBook @HippieChickHomeschool oh Texas. *sigh* not the best at all for teaching history. I've never heard good things about education in Texas so I'm shocked at all. 7y
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