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Why Europe Ran Roughshod Over Africa

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A 20th Century European explorer with African pygmies.
Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=137028

Europeans had traded with parts of Africa for centuries, rarely getting beyond the coastal regions.  That changed in the 1870s, when the search for riches and empire led European countries to stake claims to the so-called "dark continent." 

It is not a pretty story, but one told in great detail by Robert Harm in the book Land of Tears: The Exploration and Exploitation of Equatorial Africa

The author, who teaches history and Africa studies at Yale, follows the trail of Africa's incorporation into the modern world, a process not often beneficial to Africans.  We welcome the author to the Exchange.   
 

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The Jefferson Exchange is Jefferson Public Radio's daily news program focused on issues, people and events across Southern Oregon and Northern California. Angela Decker is the program's senior producer, Charlie Zimmermann is the assistant producer, and Geoffrey Riley hosts the show.