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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. John Thornton's 'Africa And Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World 1400-1800' is instrumental in demonstrating the significant impact Africans had upon the Atlantic world's cultural development as a result of their trek to the Americas during the colonial period. The writer discusses how the abundance of Africans who left their homeland on account of the slave trade made a considerable mark upon how the Americas were ultimately established. It can be argued that their participation -- even though unrecognized by the Africans themselves at the time -- was contributory to the Atlantic world's overall evolvement. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCThorn.doc
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worlds cultural development as a result of their trek to the Americas during the colonial period. The abundance of Africans who left their homeland on account of the slave
trade made a considerable mark upon how the Americas were ultimately established; it can be argued that their participation -- even though unrecognized by the Africans themselves at the time
-- was contributory to the Atlantic worlds overall evolvement. There is no denying the African presence when assessing the growth and development of
the Atlantic world. Myriad historical accounts make a clear connection between African heritage as it relates to the slavery, economics, culture and politics. It has also been noted,
but not readily acknowledged, that the African cultural diversity played a critical role in relation to each areas slave population. Coupled with the fleeting distinction that represented the Africans
cultural development within Latin America and the United States, one can easily understand the importance of such contribution to the Atlantic world. Over the years, historians have suggested that
this is one of the most effective ways of "evaluating African culture influences in the Americas" (Rankin, 1998, p. rankin2.html). Thornton attempts to
go against historical accounts of the African arrival by asserting that they did not come to the Americas as a result of slavery; rather, they ended up here by way
of "the emergence of an amalgamation of European, Euro-American, and separate African elements to form a new Afro-Atlantic culture" (Rankin, 1998, p. rankin2.html). The author is quite readily prepared
to defend his argument by showing that the original cultural division was already separated into three very different regions by tongue, which proved to place significant limitations upon the ultimate
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