'This is a good and useful collection presenting much innovative and important work on Atlantic era social and political transformations in a range of West African settings. The contributions clearly articulate the necessity of a perspective that looks beyond single sites and considers regional perspectives diachronically in order to derive appropriate (both culturally and politically) frameworks to explain the archaeological and historical trajectories of the various regions. The contributions shed light on new regions of study, as well as previously explored areas, and thus the volume will be useful to scholars of West Africa. By foregrounding the landscape perspective, the contributions in this book will also be of interest to a wider range of archaeologists and historians.' Journal of African Archaeology
Forward Merrick Posnansky; 1. Introduction: the politics of landscape in Atlantic West Africa J. Cameron Monroe and Akinwumi Ogundiran; Part I. Fragmented Landscapes: 2. Atlantic impacts on inland Senegambia: French penetration and African initiatives in eighteenth and nineteenth-century Gajaaga and Bundu (Upper Senegal River) Ibrahima Thiaw; 3. Political transformations and cultural landscapes in Senegambia during the Atlantic era: an alternative view from the Siin (Senegal)? François Richard; 4. The Eguafo polity: between the traders and raiders Sam Spiers; 5. From the shadow of an Atlantic citadel: an archaeology of the Huedan countryside Neil L. Norman; Part II. State-Generated Landscapes: 6. Segou, slavery, and sifinso Kevin C. MacDonald and Seydou Camara; 7. Building the state in Dahomey: power and landscape on the Bight of Benin J. Cameron Monroe; 8. The formation of an Oyo imperial colonial enclave during the Atlantic Age Akinwumi Ogundiran; Part III. Internal Frontier Landscapes: 9. The rise of the Bassar Chiefdom in the context of Africa's internal frontier Philip de Barros; 10. Fortified towns of the Koinadugu Plateau: northern Sierra Leone in the pre-Atlantic and Atlantic worlds Christopher R. DeCorse; 11. Rethinking the Mandara political landscape: cultural developments, climate, and an entry into history in the second millennium AD Scott MacEachern; Part IV. Conclusion: 12. The local and the global: historiographical reflections on West Africa and the Atlantic Age Ray A. Kea.