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OverviewComprehensively surveys Ethiopia and Eritrea's rich and dynamic tradition of historical writing, from the ancient Aksumite era to the present day. Ethiopia and Eritrea are home to Africa's oldest written historical tradition, which began in the third century with the monuments and manuscripts of Aksum and has continued to the present day. This study explores the developmentof this rich tradition, focusing in particular on the dramatic lives and original thought of a group of early twentieth-century Ethiopian and Eritrean historians. James De Lorenzi examines how these scholars used historiography tonot only record the past but also grapple with the changes of the modern era. Through their history writings, they made provocative political claims, explored the nature of their communal ties, assessed their inherited institutions and ideas, and critically evaluated the people and cultures of the wider world. Opposing the view that historiography is a uniquely Western intellectual pursuit, Guardians of the Tradition provides new evidence of an African historical consciousness and the vibrancy of history writing outside the West. James De Lorenzi is associate professor of history at John Jay College, City University of New York. Full Product DetailsAuthor: James De Lorenzi (Customer)Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd Imprint: University of Rochester Press Volume: v. 66 Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.478kg ISBN: 9781580465199ISBN 10: 1580465196 Pages: 232 Publication Date: 15 September 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThe century-long study of Ethio-Eritrean tradition has never been crowned with such an objective, scientific definition as in Guardians of the Tradition . . . (It) shows remarkable insight into a complicated and sensitive problem at the very basis of Ethio-Eritrean studies, for which contribution scholars will be grateful. JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORY (Bairu Tafla, University of Hamburg) A crucial reference work for Ethiopian intellectual history . . . Guardians of the Tradition is argued clearly and convincingly, with evidence inferred from a wide array of primary sources. (A)n engaging and informative read. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF AFRICAN STUDIES (Fikru Gebrikidan, St. Thomas University) The creativity and richness of Ethiopian historical writing forcefully challenge the argument that historiography is a product of Western modernity and a Western export -- a point rather obvious for Africanists, but not so obvious in the field of history at large, which De Lorenzi attacks for its parochialism and latent Eurocentrism. AFRICA (Sara Marzagora, School of Oriental and African Studies) Insightful, painstakingly researched, and innovative in its selection and sensitive to changing regional and international contexts . . . (De Lorenzi) has opened up new vistas to readers of the concerns, conventions, and analytical categories of public intellectuals who combined traditional and modern concepts in the construction of Ethiopian historiography. Ruth Iyob, University of Missouri, St. Louis De Lorenzi is a remarkable scholar . . . His latest and most interesting book deals with Ethiopian and Eritrean intellectuals, examined in terms of tradition and cultural change. This topic . . . is rarely treated in such a sweeping geographical-historical framework . . . An ongoing debate, a stimulating topic. AETHIOPICA (Irma Taddia, Universita di Bologna) A major milestone in the growing field of Ethiopian intellectual history . . . This is one of the most important books written to date on the development of historical writing in Africa in the early twentieth century, and it provides an essential historical background to the rivalries and heated debates that have defined regional historiography in Ethiopia and Eritrea since the 1970s. ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW (Jacob Wiebel, University of Durham) The century-long study of Ethio-Eritrean tradition has never been crowned with such an objective, scientific definition as in Guardians of the Tradition . . . [It] shows remarkable insight into a complicated and sensitive problem at the very basis of Ethio-Eritrean studies, for which contribution scholars will be grateful. JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORY (Bairu Tafla, University of Hamburg) A crucial reference work for Ethiopian intellectual history . . . Guardians of the Tradition is argued clearly and convincingly, with evidence inferred from a wide array of primary sources. [A]n engaging and informative read. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF AFRICAN STUDIES (Fikru Gebrekidan, St. Thomas University) The creativity and richness of Ethiopian historical writing forcefully challenge the argument that historiography is a product of Western modernity and a Western export -- a point rather obvious for Africanists, but not so obvious in the field of history at large, which De Lorenzi attacks for its parochialism and latent Eurocentrism. AFRICA (Sara Marzagora, School of Oriental and African Studies) Insightful, painstakingly researched, and innovative in its selection and sensitive to changing regional and international contexts . . . [De Lorenzi] has opened up new vistas to readers of the concerns, conventions, and analytical categories of public intellectuals who combined traditional and modern concepts in the construction of Ethiopian historiography. Ruth Iyob, University of Missouri, St. Louis De Lorenzi is a remarkable scholar . . . His latest and most interesting book deals with Ethiopian and Eritrean intellectuals, examined in terms of tradition and cultural change. This topic . . . is rarely treated in such a sweeping geographical-historical framework . . . An ongoing debate, a stimulating topic. AETHIOPICA (Irma Taddia, Universita di Bologna) A major milestone in the growing field of Ethiopian intellectual history . . . This is one of the most important books written to date on the development of historical writing in Africa in the early twentieth century, and it provides an essential historical background to the rivalries and heated debates that have defined regional historiography in Ethiopia and Eritrea since the 1970s. ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW (Jacob Wiebel, Durham University ) The century-long study of Ethio-Eritrean tradition has never been crowned with such an objective, scientific definition as in Guardians of the Tradition . . . (It) shows remarkable insight into a complicated and sensitive problem at the very basis of Ethio-Eritrean studies, for which contribution scholars will be grateful. JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORY (Bairu Tafla, University of Hamburg) De Lorenzi provides an insightful historiographical taxonomy of centuries of Ethiopian and Eritrean scholarship, revealing the complex, often contested processes by which African intellectuals selectively meshed vernacular approaches to history with foreign concepts and methodologies. Interesting, smart, well organized, and effective. Tim Carmichael, College of Charleston A crucial reference work for Ethiopian intellectual history . . . Guardians of the Tradition is argued clearly and convincingly, with evidence inferred from a wide array of primary sources. (A)n engaging and informative read. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF AFRICAN STUDIES (Fikru Gebrikidan, St. Thomas University) The creativity and richness of Ethiopian historical writing forcefully challenge the argument that historiography is a product of Western modernity and a Western export - a point rather obvious for Africanists, but not so obvious in the field of history at large, which De Lorenzi attacks for its 'parochialism' and 'latent Eurocentrism.' AFRICA (Sara Marzagora, School of Oriental and African Studies) Insightful, painstakingly researched, and innovative in its selection and sensitive to changing regional and international contexts . . . (De Lorenzi) has opened up new vistas to readers of the concerns, conventions, and analytical categories of public intellectuals who combined traditional and modern concepts in the construction of Ethiopian historiography. Ruth Iyob, University of Missouri, St. Louis De Lorenzi is a remarkable scholar . . . His latest and most interesting book deals with Ethiopian and Eritrean intellectuals, examined in terms of tradition and cultural change. This topic . . . is rarely treated in such a sweeping geographical-historical framework . . . An ongoing debate, a stimulating topic. AETHIOPICA (Irma Taddia, Universita di Bologna) The century-long study of Ethio-Eritrean tradition has never been crowned with such an objective, scientific definition as in Guardians of the Tradition . . . [It] shows remarkable insight into a complicated and sensitive problem at the very basis of Ethio-Eritrean studies, for which contribution scholars will be grateful. JOURNAL OF AFRICAN HISTORY (Bairu Tafla, University of Hamburg) A crucial reference work for Ethiopian intellectual history . . . Guardians of the Tradition is argued clearly and convincingly, with evidence inferred from a wide array of primary sources. [A]n engaging and informative read. CANADIAN JOURNAL OF AFRICAN STUDIES (Fikru Gebrekidan, St. Thomas University) The creativity and richness of Ethiopian historical writing forcefully challenge the argument that historiography is a product of Western modernity and a Western export -- a point rather obvious for Africanists, but not so obvious in the field of history at large, which De Lorenzi attacks for its parochialism and latent Eurocentrism. AFRICA (Sara Marzagora, School of Oriental and African Studies) Insightful, painstakingly researched, and innovative in its selection and sensitive to changing regional and international contexts . . . [De Lorenzi] has opened up new vistas to readers of the concerns, conventions, and analytical categories of public intellectuals who combined traditional and modern concepts in the construction of Ethiopian historiography. Ruth Iyob, University of Missouri, St. Louis De Lorenzi is a remarkable scholar . . . His latest and most interesting book deals with Ethiopian and Eritrean intellectuals, examined in terms of tradition and cultural change. This topic . . . is rarely treated in such a sweeping geographical-historical framework . . . An ongoing debate, a stimulating topic. AETHIOPICA (Irma Taddia, Universita di Bologna) A major milestone in the growing field of Ethiopian intellectual history . . . This is one of the most important books written to date on the development of historical writing in Africa in the early twentieth century, and it provides an essential historical background to the rivalries and heated debates that have defined regional historiography in Ethiopia and Eritrea since the 1970s. ENGLISH HISTORICAL REVIEW (Jacob Wiebel, Durham University ) Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |