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Reconstructing Contemporary Africa: A Historiography of Violence, Defiance, Politics, Religious Syncretism and Revivalism

Review products

ReddingSean. Violence in Rural South Africa, 1880–1963. University of Wisconsin Press, 2023. 216 pp. Photographs. Notes. Bibliography. Index. $79.95. Hardcover. ISBN: 9780299341206.

DeetsMark W.. A Country of Defiance: Mapping the Casamance in Senegal. Ohio University Press. 2023. 312 pp. Figures. Maps. Notes. Bibliography. Index. $34.95. Paperback. ISBN: 9780821426012.

BezabehSamson Abebe. Djibouti: A Political History. Lynne Reinner, 2023. 221 pp. Maps. Notes. List of Acronyms. Bibliography. Index. $32.50. Paperback. ISBN: 9798896166757.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 December 2025

Nnanna Onuoha Arukwe*
Affiliation:
Department of Criminology & Security Studies University of Nigeria Faculty of the Social Sciences Nsukka, Nigeria nnanna.arukwe@unn.edu.ng
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African historiography is most persuasive when it refuses to let the state’s archive dictate the story of the nation. Across the last two decades, historians and historical anthropologists have widened the evidentiary field beyond bureaucratic texts—toward oral histories, ritual grammars, sacred ecologies, newspapers, vernacular maps, and the grainy everyday of rumor and reputation. This scholarly review exemplifies that methodological turn while voicing a shared theoretical wager: African political and social life is not best explained by models of institutional consolidation but by moral economies, spatial counter-imaginaries, and religious idioms through which communities fashion accountability and meaning.

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Introduction: From postcolony to moral worlds

African historiography is most persuasive when it refuses to let the state’s archive dictate the story of the nation. Across the last two decades, historians and historical anthropologists have widened the evidentiary field beyond bureaucratic texts—toward oral histories, ritual grammars, sacred ecologies, newspapers, vernacular maps, and the grainy everyday of rumor and reputation. This scholarly review exemplifies that methodological turn while voicing a shared theoretical wager: African political and social life is not best explained by models of institutional consolidation but by moral economies, spatial counter-imaginaries, and religious idioms through which communities fashion accountability and meaning.

In the early twenty-first century, the historiography of Africa is undergoing a reinvention—one driven not by a linear excavation of colonial rupture or a singular recovery of nationalist pride, but by a multiplicity of defiant narratives that illuminate violence, moral negotiation, state fragility, and spiritual reassembly. Four recently published texts—Sean Redding’s Violence in Rural South Africa, 1880–1963 (2023), Mark W. Deets’s A Country of Defiance: Mapping the Casamance in Senegal (2023), Samson Abebe Bezabeh’s Djibouti: A Political History (2023), and Jeffrey Ahlman’s Ghana: A Political and Social History (2024)—offer deeply layered case studies of how ordinary Africans, often operating in violently disrupted political terrains, resist, negotiate, and reinvent the postcolonial moment. These texts not only expand the historical record but also trouble the liberal grammar of modernization and state consolidation, often projected upon the continent from without.

If earlier generations of Africanist historiography were preoccupied with nationalist redemption or colonial critique, this new scholarship advances a more entangled and morally textured reading of Africa and its agency. It invites us to reconstruct contemporary Africa not merely as a geographic entity disrupted by external violence, but as a contested historical project animated by endogenous strategies of survival, refusal, ritual, and reinvention. From the sacred groves of rural South Africa to the insurgent maps of Casamance, from Djibouti’s port-state political finesse to Ghana’s postindependence ideological syncretism, these four books present a historiography grounded in local cosmologies, moral orders, and political refusals.

This scholarly review essay therefore employs a decolonial and postcolonial lens to examine works that together reframe the historiography of modern Africa through lenses of violence, defiance, politics, religious syncretism, and revivalism. For example, Sean Redding’s Violence in Rural South Africa, 1880–1963 interprets witchcraft and communal conflict as moral practices of justice amid colonial and apartheid disruption. Mark W. Deets’s A Country of Defiance: Mapping the Casamance in Senegal highlights insurgent geographies that contest Senegalese state hegemony. Samson Abebe Bezabeh’s Djibouti: A Political History repositions a small port state as a central actor in the Horn of Africa through religious revivalism, clan negotiation, and maritime commerce. Jeffrey Ahlman’s Ghana: A Political and Social History explores ideological and religious pluralism as core to Ghana’s national trajectory. Together, these texts push African historiography beyond state-centered narratives, foregrounding local cosmologies, moral orders, and insurgent geographies as defining features of Africa’s past and present. Their convergence reveals a continent persistently reconstructing itself through moral, spatial, spiritual, and political struggles.

As each text situates ordinary Africans as historical agents who navigate violence, reimagine territory, manipulate state power, and reconfigure religious belief, taken together they chart a historiography that foregrounds Africa not as a passive site of external imposition, but as a place of contested sovereignties, moral experiments, and religious innovation. In this scholarly review essay, we review these works individually before drawing thematic connections across them in order to reconstruct a contemporary African historiography attentive to violence, defiance, politics, and spiritual revival.

Redding: Violence and witchcraft as moral order in rural South Africa

Sean Redding’s Violence in Rural South Africa, 1880–1963 delivers a provocative rereading of rural South African life under colonialism, segregation, and apartheid—a rereading enacted not just through state archives alone, but via a carefully curated body of oral histories and cultural interpretations of witchcraft. Redding challenges the notion of “Black-on-Black violence” as senseless or pathological. Instead, she demonstrates how accusations of witchcraft and acts of interpersonal violence were often part of a moral economy used by villagers to manage shifting notions of justice, envy, and authority (18–22).

The book’s central argument is that violence was not a breakdown of order but rather a mode of moral reasoning and accountability in contexts where colonial legal regimes had dislocated older systems of governance. The figure of the witch, far from being an irrational holdover from a “pre-modern” past, becomes a socially potent symbol through which communities reasserted ethical codes amid the rapid erosion of traditional leadership and communal norms.

Redding shows how land dispossession, migrant labor patterns, and the juridical disenfranchisement of Black subjects under segregation and apartheid created a jurisdictional vacuum. In that vacuum, villagers did not passively endure; they adjudicated. Witchcraft accusations expressed the fear that prosperity could be predatory, that success without reciprocity was a theft from the community. Violence, in this framing, is not nihilism but an insistence on redistributive ethics—a last resort when colonial courts could not or would not right the wrong (57–59).

Redding’s book challenges assumptions about violence in African societies. Rather than pathologizing rural conflict as chaotic “black-on-black” aggression, Redding interprets witchcraft accusations and communal killings as embedded in moral economies. In the Herschel District, for instance, accusations of witchcraft often targeted those who accumulated wealth perceived as unjust or antisocial, marking violence as an assertion of communal accountability. Redding’s use of oral testimony from the Herschel District (now part of Eastern Cape) breathes life into her analysis, revealing how villagers contested apartheid modernity not only through formal resistance but through the invocation of ritual and the symbolic. For instance, in one case, a local healer (Inyanga) is accused of enriching himself at the expense of others—his death by mob violence is therefore not random but structured by a logic of redistributive justice that colonial courts fail to comprehend (101–104).

By drawing on oral testimony alongside colonial archives, Redding emphasizes how rural South Africans actively negotiated their moral universes in contexts where state justice was either absent or illegitimate. The invocation of witches, healers, and spirits was less a rejection of modernity than a reworking of it, where violence constituted a moral language. This insight destabilizes colonial, racist, and apartheid depictions of rural Africans as irrational and instead reveals violence as a structured mode of political and ethical reasoning.

Crucially, Redding does not romanticize vigilantism. She notes its tragedies and asymmetries—how rumor can be weaponized, how the accused are often vulnerable, how patriarchy can travel under the cloak of “moral repair” (117–18). But she refuses the colonizer’s epistemic privilege by granting explanatory dignity to rural categories of causation. The witch is not merely superstition; the witch is a theory of social harm. When courts are illegible or illegitimate, fear and envy must be governed somehow. Witchcraft discourse provides that governance, and violence (carefully contextualized) becomes a politics of justice rather than an index of cultural deficit (134–36).

This moral grammar of violence, embedded within the idioms of witchcraft and communal retribution, invites a reconsideration of the archive itself—a reconsideration that is dialogic, fugitive, and embodied rather than bureaucratic. Redding’s intervention is thus both historiographical and methodological: she repositions the rural African subject as a moral actor navigating epistemic violence through rituals of social repair.

Redding’s intervention extends beyond rural South Africa. Her analysis shows how local cosmologies mediate state power and how symbolic repertoires of violence can persist across generations. In this sense, violence is not a breakdown of order but a form of order-making itself.

Redding’s method matters. Oral histories complicate “what happened” by asking “what it meant.” The hermeneutic is ethical: give reasons their due, even when those reasons scandalize liberal sensibilities. The result is a portrait of rural South Africa where moral order is contested, enacted, and sometimes violently enforced—not because villagers reject modernity, but because modernity rejected them.

If Redding offers a moral grammar of violence, the next book that this review turns to provides a spatial grammar of defiance.

Deets: Mapping defiance and spatial plurality in Casamance

Mark W. Deets’s A Country of Defiance: Mapping the Casamance in Senegal shifts attention from violence as moral reasoning to space as political practice. Casamance has long been Senegal’s “south” in a cartographic and political sense: geographically separated from the capital region by The Gambia, ethnolinguistically plural, and marked by a protracted conflict led by the Mouvement des Forces Démocratiques de la Casamance (MFDC). Deets does not rehearse a war chronology. He asks how maps (state maps, missionary maps, insurgent maps, and vernacular mental maps) make territory and thereby make political possibility.

Casamance, long marked as Senegal’s rebellious periphery, is reframed by Deets here as a site where geography itself is contested. Deets argues that state cartographies impose territorial homogeneity while insurgent mappings construct alternative spatial imaginations. Deets’s book thus uses Senegal’s Casamance region to explore how space itself becomes a battleground for political and cultural sovereignty. Deets does not merely narrate the separatist conflict; he reconstructs how Casamance is imagined, remembered, and spatially practiced by those who inhabit it. The book’s central thesis—that Casamance is not simply a rebel territory but a cartographically defiant concept—is delivered through an innovative reading of archival maps, oral geographies, and grassroots memorializations (7–9).

The power of this work lies in its deconstruction of the national imaginary. Deets shows how official cartography enshrines a singular territorial vision of Senegal, while insurgent mappings by MFDC activists, Catholic actors, and Jola communities resist spatial assimilation. The MFDC generally employed maps, oral geographies, and ritual spaces to envision Casamance as distinct from Senegal. Catholic missionary cartographies, local ritual landscapes, and forest sanctuaries all served as spatial markers of identity and resistance. For instance, he examines how locally produced maps in the 1990s positioned the Casamance as a distinct nation—defined not merely by political borders but by forest sanctity, kinship zones, and ritual landscapes (142–47). By excavating these layered geographies, Deets shows that Casamance is not merely a separatist project but a defiant rearticulation of belonging.

Crucially, Deets does not romanticize separatism. Instead, he shows how defiance in Casamance is layered: not always calling for outright independence, but often grounded in claims for dignity, respect, and historical recognition. This reclaims defiance as a political and cultural act, not reducible to secessionist violence. The book is especially compelling in its attention to Catholic missionary maps and their role in shaping both colonial and postcolonial spatial imaginaries (88–92).

Furthermore, defiance here is not uniform. For some communities, autonomy meant complete independence; for others, it meant recognition, dignity, or cultural preservation within Senegal. Deets thus resists reducing Casamance to insurgency, instead portraying it as a plurality of spatial claims. His work challenges scholars to take seriously the cartographic imagination of marginalized groups and to read defiance not necessarily as chaos but as alternative order. Thus, defiance for Deets is graded, not absolute. Many Casamançais do not commit to secession; they insist on recognition, resources, and dignity. The insurgent map’s power lies less in border change than in semantic change: it provincializes Dakar’s cartographic monopoly and authorizes claims from below as forest sanctuaries become archives; footpaths become testimonies; shrines become titles (174–77). If the capital’s map sutures, the insurgent map unseams, showing the stitch.

Deets also insists on the ambivalence of counter-mapping: it can unify but also exclude; it can canonize some histories while silencing others; it can elevate clerical or militant authority (203–206). Yet that ambivalence is precisely what reveals Casamance as more than a rebel periphery. Casamance is thus a pluriversal space where competing cartographies discipline memory and mobilize futures. The lesson is portable: every African nation-state houses alternative maps that exceed it.

Through this spatial historiography, Deets foregrounds the ways in which local cosmologies, cartographic counter-narratives, and defiant rituals constitute a rich political archive. Casamance emerges not as a periphery of Senegal, but as a center of cultural resistance that forces a rethinking of the African nation-state itself, subverting the failed Westphalian and Berlin state models in Africa. This subversion of the failed Westphalian and Berlin state models in Africa (through religious revivalism, clan negotiation, and maritime commerce) is what this review turns to next.

Bezabeh: Port-state politics and religious revivalism in Djibouti

In Djibouti: A Political History, Samson Abebe Bezabeh offers a long-overdue account of a country often dismissed as marginal in African historiography. Djibouti, he argues, is not simply a rentier port-state defined by foreign military bases, but a dynamic political formation shaped by the interplay of maritime trade, religious plurality, and statecraft in the Horn of Africa (3–7). The book recenters a country too often dismissed as a mere rentier state. Bezabeh thus demonstrates that Djibouti’s politics cannot be reduced to foreign military bases or geostrategic rents. Instead, the book traces how Djiboutians negotiate power through clan networks, port economies, and Islamic revivalism.

The book traces Djibouti’s evolution from a colonial enclave under French rule to a post-independent state that leverages its geostrategic location for political autonomy. But Bezabeh complicates the narrative of rentier dependency by highlighting how local actors (Issa and Afar elites, Muslim reformers, and urban traders) negotiate state power through religious and commercial idioms. Bezabeh shows that colonial French authorities manipulated Issa and Afar divisions, but postcolonial leaders such as Hassan Gouled Aptidon and Ismaïl Omar Guelleh reconfigured these divisions into strategies of governance (64–69). Far from passive, Djibouti’s leaders leveraged their location and religious networks to secure autonomy in the Horn of Africa. Djibouti’s leadership under Hassan Gouled Aptidon and later Ismaïl Omar Guelleh is examined here not merely in terms of authoritarian consolidation, but as a strategic balancing act across clan lines, religious networks, and global capital (64–69, 113–17).

Particularly illuminating is Bezabeh’s analysis of the rise of Islamic revivalism in the 1990s and 2000s, which he links not to external Wahhabi influence alone but to internal anxieties over moral decline, inequality, and foreign domination. He shows how the state simultaneously co-opted and suppressed religious movements, thereby embedding spiritual contestation within the apparatus of governance. Bezabeh therefore interprets Djibouti’s Islamic revivalism as locally grounded in moral anxieties rather than merely imported Wahhabi influence. Revivalist movements articulated critiques of inequality, corruption, and foreign domination. The state both repressed and co-opted these movements, embedding religious contestation into the very fabric of governance (143–48).

The chapter on Islamic revivalism is the book’s hinge. Revival is not imported “Wahhabism” laid over a passive populace; it is a local critique of corruption, conspicuous consumption, and foreign tutelage articulated in Qur’anic language and mosque networks. The state’s response (oscillating between patronage and repression) folds religious authority into governmental technique, even as piety offers a horizon of justice that the bureaucracy cannot supply. Revival, in Bezabeh’s reading, is not a retreat from politics but a theory of better politics: cleaner, more reciprocal, more God-fearing, less captured by port bosses and foreigners.

By refusing to treat Djibouti as peripheral, the book recenters how “small states” practice grand strategy domestically. They choreograph clans, contract out sovereignty, rent visibility to empires, and cultivate moral publics. In so doing, Bezabeh provincializes the assumption that scale determines significance. Djibouti is not a footnote to Red Sea geopolitics; it is a commentary on it.

Centering Djibouti’s history within regional circuits of migration, Islam, and port trade enables Bezabeh to resist framing Djibouti as a passive node in global geopolitics. Bezabeh’s analysis challenges Africa’s historiographical blind spots and insists on the centrality of small states, borderlands, and maritime cultures to the continent’s postcolonial political development. This reinvention of the postcolonial moment employing ideology and religion for political development is the theme to which this review turns to next.

Ahlman: Ghanaian postcolonialism, political plurality, and ideological syncretism

If Redding foregrounds moral order, Deets spatial order, and Bezabeh port-state order, Ahlman offers a political–social order where pluralism is not merely tolerated but constitutive. His Ghana is a republic of competing projects: an anti-colonial socialism that centralized too quickly; a neoliberal turn that commodified too widely; and a charismatic resurgence that made the sacred a public idiom. The question is not which project “wins,” but how the mix produces a durable, if restless, polity.

Jeffrey Ahlman’s Ghana: A Political and Social History is a masterful synthesis of Ghana’s colonial and postcolonial evolution. It traverses nationalist movements, party politics, economic planning, and the entanglements of religion and statecraft. Ahlman’s book offers a sweeping but nuanced account of Ghana’s modern trajectory. He explores the ideological ferment of the independence era, the contradictions of Kwame Nkrumah’s socialist experiment, and the pluralist politics that followed. Ahlman avoids triumphalist narratives and instead presents Ghana as a site of ideological experimentation, spiritual pluralism, and contested nationhood (11–17).

The book’s treatment of Kwame Nkrumah is especially nuanced. While acknowledging Nkrumah’s Pan-African vision and his role in decolonization, Ahlman also explores the contradictions of his rule—the personalization of power, suppression of dissent, and eventual fragmentation of his socialist project. He juxtaposes these contradictions with the rise of competing ideologies, including neoliberalism, Pentecostalism, and ethno-regional politics, which have reshaped Ghanaian society since the 1980s. Nkrumah’s vision of Pan-African unity and state-led development collided with authoritarian tendencies and economic fragility (141–47). His overthrow ushered in cycles of military rule, liberalization, and democratic revival. Yet Ahlman avoids teleological narratives of progress. Instead, he shows Ghana as a laboratory of competing ideologies—nationalist, socialist, neoliberal, and religious.

Ahlman is at his best when discussing religion—not merely as a cultural backdrop but as a force shaping political discourse. His examination of the charismatic and Pentecostal revivalist movements of the 1990s and 2000s reveals how religious leaders began to function as alternative power brokers and moral authorities. From the 1990s, Pentecostal churches emerged as powerful political actors, offering visions of prosperity and moral order amid neoliberal precarity. These churches provided alternative spaces of belonging and critique, positioning pastors as both spiritual and political authorities. Churches become social safety nets, career networks, and political sanctuaries; pastors become commentators, lobbyists, and conscience. Rather than lament “religion in politics,” Ahlman shows how religious idioms compose political imagination: they legislate hope; they define corruption; they renarrate national destiny. Far from being reactionary, therefore, these movements are shown by Ahlman as articulating visions of prosperity, justice, and moral rectitude amid state retreat and economic precarity (175–81). The point is not that churches capture the state, but that citizens import the sacred to do work the state cannot—heal, discipline, and dream.

By refusing teleologies of modernization, Ahlman renders Ghana as neither success story nor failure case but workshop—where democratic forms are ceaselessly tinkered with by institutions and spirits, experts and prophets. In this workshop, political stability is less the absence of conflict than the presence of many negotiating tables.

Similarly, by foregrounding religion, Ahlman demonstrates that Ghanaian politics cannot be understood through party competition alone. Spiritual revivalism operates as a form of political imagination, shaping ideas of justice, prosperity, and national destiny.

Ahlman’s text draws heavily on Ghanaian newspapers, archival sources, and interviews, offering a textured narrative that resists overgeneralization. Ahlman’s careful attention to gender, class, and urban–rural divides makes this work an exemplary model of contemporary African historiography—rich, critical, and locally grounded.

Thematic synthesis: Violence, defiance, politics, and religious revivalism

Together, these four books construct a vibrant and morally complex historiography of contemporary Africa. Though grounded in distinct national contexts, they share several thematic convergences. Bringing the four books into conversation clarifies a set of propositions about contemporary Africa.

Violence can be order-making

Far from being an aberration, violence is presented as a social grammar. In Redding’s South Africa, violence via witchcraft accusations restores communal ethics. Redding’s rural scenes teach that communal harm may be morally motivated—an idiom for regulating envy and punishing predation when courts are absent or mistrusted. That is not a defense of brutality; rather it is a demand for analytic humility. In Casamance, violence is spatialized through defiant mapping. Deets shows a different register of violence (less bodily than cartographic) where counter-mapping knocks symbols off their pedestals. When a forest becomes a boundary and a shrine a courthouse, the map is both archive and weapon. Djibouti’s violence is embedded in state–religion negotiations, while Ghana’s “violence” lies more ideologically in the suppression of pluralism.

Defiance is a technique of citizenship

In Casamance, the claim is not always secession; it is often respect, resources, cultural continuities—citizenship with dignity. Defiance emerges as both symbolic and material. From the MFDC’s remapping of Senegalese territory (Deets), to the ritual rejection of colonial authority in South Africa (Redding), to Djibouti’s balancing of foreign influence and internal autonomy (Bezabeh), to Ghanaian revivalism’s spiritual critique of liberal politics (Ahlman), each work centers defiance as a generative political act.

In South Africa’s countryside, witchcraft trials “defied” the liberal monopoly on justice by keeping redistribution in view (Redding). In Djibouti, revivalism defies elite impunity by articulating a moral audit of the port state (Bezabeh). In Ghana, pastors and congregants defy austerity’s inevitability by narrating a providential economy (Ahlman). Defiance, across these contexts, is not chaos but counter-institution.

Politics exceeds parliaments

Politics is shown not as a formal arena of parties and elections, but as a dispersed field of moral negotiation—from shrine to port to church to forest. State formation is always partial and negotiated, with plural moral orders coexisting uneasily under the surface of sovereignty.

Overall, courts, ministries, and parties matter; so do shrines, mosques, churches, markets, and forests. The works collectively insist that African politics is distributed across infrastructures of meaning. Redding’s “village court,” Deets’s “forest title,” Bezabeh’s “mosque caucus,” and Ahlman’s “altar manifesto” are not mere metaphors; rather they are institutions that adjudicate, allocate, and authorize.

Religion is political imagination

Witchcraft discourse is an ethics of reciprocity; Catholic and Islamic mappings are territorial liturgies; revivalism is a theory of reform. Treating religion as epiphenomenal misses how Africans design futures with sacred tools. Ahlman’s Ghana shows revivalism crafting prosperity ethics; Bezabeh’s Djibouti shows piety disciplining rentier temptation; Deets shows liturgical cartographies; Redding shows metaphysical accountability.

Religious syncretism and revivalism animate all four works. While Redding and Ahlman highlight Indigenous and Pentecostal spiritualities respectively, Bezabeh and Deets show how Islam and Catholicism become entwined with regional resistance and governance. Religion here is not the opium of the people, but a domain of political and moral imagination.

The archive is plural

All four books practice archival expansion—treating oral testimony, rumor, ritual, and maps as primary texts. This is not antiquarianism; rather it is analytic strategy. When domination is routinized in bureaucracy, the truth of politics often survives elsewhere—in whispered genealogies, in carved sticks and river crossings, in deliverance testimonies and Friday sermons. A decolonial historiography attends to those places.

Methodological and historiographical contributions

Beyond the state’s script

Each author provincializes the state’s claim to narrate. For Redding, the colonial dossier is necessary but insufficient; it records transgression but misreads meaning. Deets subverts the map’s evidentiary sovereignty by stacking counter-maps beside it, showing that seeing is a political act. Bezabeh plumbs the seams where clan obligation, Islamic ethics, and rent management collide, demonstrating that sovereignty is a composite craft. Ahlman tracks how official politics is continuously translated into sermons, songs, and rituals—a circulation rather than a separation.

Recentering moral economies

All four books return us to moral economy, but not as paternalist nostalgia. In rural South Africa, jealousy is not a vice but a sign that reciprocity has broken. In Casamance, the demand for dignity asks the capital to stop misnaming the periphery. In Djibouti, the mosque sermon surveys what the auditor does not—greed as sin, not just inefficiency. In Ghana, prosperity preaching is not crass; it is an ethics of hope under uncertainty. These are not exotic beliefs; they are rather normative theories responding to scarcity and predation.

Rethinking scale

Bezabeh’s Djibouti punctures the idea that “small” states are derivative. Deets shows that “regional” grievances are constitutional questions. Redding and Ahlman provincialize “national” justice by showing local categories’ national effects. Scale, in these accounts, is constructed: villages legislate, forests adjudicate, ports govern, pulpits rule. The historiographical upshot is that analysis should follow practices, not borders.

Comparative case studies: Cross-grain readings

Envy, extraction, and accountability

Let us consider envy. In Redding, envy indexes anxiety about extraction—who eats at whose expense? Violence is the penal code of a community without enforceable contracts. In Djibouti, envy is channeled into sermons that discipline elites; in Ghana, into prophetic denunciations and “deliverance” that promise freedom from elite sorcery—economic or spiritual (Ahlman; Bezabeh). In Casamance, envy is redirected as territorial claim, recoding deprivation as misallocation by a distant capital (Deets). Across cases, envy becomes a diagnostic, not a pathology.

Sacred ecologies and territorial ethics

Deets’s forests, Redding’s homesteads, Bezabeh’s mosques, and Ahlman’s churches are ecologies that encode ethics. Forest sanctuaries legislate what can be cut, who can cross; homesteads adjudicate rumor; mosques bind rulers to God-fearing stewardship; churches script prosperity as a collective covenant. Territory, then, is ethical and ecological. The nation-state’s cadastral map is just one layer; underneath stand cosmologies spatialized in groves, compounds, harbors, and altars.

Time, memory, and repetition

All four works read political time nonlinearly. The “problem” does not simply move from colonial injustice to postcolonial repair. Instead, injustices repeat under new names: labor migration becomes unemployment; forced cultivation becomes structural adjustment; missionary cartography becomes technocratic master planning; “native courts” become politicized public prosecutors. The historiographical task is to track repetitions with a difference, not to perform triumphal processions.

Limits, tensions, and productive disagreements

It is obvious that no book can do everything. Payoffs, however, become clearer when limitations are considered.

Redding risks overmoralizing violence; future work might more fully integrate gendered asymmetries in accusation and punishment. Yet her refusal to pathologize rural reasoning is a salutary correction to colonial epistemology.

Deets powerfully provincializes state cartography, though the MFDC’s internal fractures and the everyday economies of fear could be even more granular. Still, his redefinition of mapping as insurgent ritual is a field-shaping move.

Bezabeh recenters Djibouti with elegance; one could ask for more extended treatment of labor on the docks and how workers convert grievance into moral claim. His revivalism chapter, however, already shows how piety articulates class without flattening it.

Ahlman might provoke debate by refusing to dismiss prosperity gospels as neoliberalization of faith; some readers will want a sharper critique. But his wager—to read charisma as public ethics—opens richer explanations of Ghanaian political affect.

Conclusion: Reconstructing the contemporary

“Contemporary Africa” is too often the name given to a time after colonialism and before the next development plan. These four books ask us to reconstruct the term as a practice rather than a period: contemporary Africa is the ongoing work by which communities negotiate harm, inscribe belonging, rework sovereignty, and summon futures. Violence is one such practice when it adjudicates moral breach; defiance, when it counters cartographic or bureaucratic erasures; politics, when it is carried in ports and forests, not just parliaments; religion, when it imagines justice in idioms that travel more swiftly than policy.

What emerges from these four works is not a single story of Africa’s contemporary condition, but a multi-vocal archive of refusal, creativity, and moral struggle. Redding, Deets, Bezabeh, and Ahlman each offer powerful correctives to state-centered, top-down histories by foregrounding the ways ordinary people (rural healers, insurgent cartographers, revivalist preachers, port-state negotiators) construct meaning in fractured landscapes.

This new historiography is defiantly African in its grounding, anti-imperialist in its framing, and morally attuned in its method. It does not look for salvation in institutions or abstractions, but in the lived archives of spiritual negotiation, violent repair, and spatial reimagination. In doing so, it brings us closer to the complexity of African life as it is experienced, contested, and reassembled across epochs. The historiographical result is decolonial without dogma, because each book allows African categories to speak for themselves and do explanatory work. Witches, maps, mosques, and altar calls are not merely “context;” they are concepts. Treating them as such revises explanatory hierarchies that too often privilege formal institutions over living archives. It also renews a comparative agenda attentive to repetition, ambivalence, and repair.

To read Redding, Deets, Bezabeh, and Ahlman together is to witness a field maturing into analytic generosity—skeptical of imported, teleologies, alert to small sovereignties, and committed to the ethics of listening. That commitment is itself a kind of defiance: a refusal to explain Africa without Africa’s languages of meaning. This is why I highly recommend the four works equally to students and scholars as well as the general reader alike in the specialty areas.