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Historical Origins of Technology in Africa
Abstract
This chapter chronicles Africa’s rich yet overlooked history of science and technology to overturn dominant stereotypes of pre-colonial primitiveness and postcolonial backwardness. It documents how diverse African civilisations independently developed sophisticated innovations and knowledge systems before colonialism, including advanced metallurgy, architecture, textiles, tools, medicine, and trade networks adapted to indigenous needs. This disproves dismissals of pre-colonial African capabilities. However, colonialism violently imposed foreign paradigms to serve imperial resource extraction, not develop local capacities. Actively suppressing traditional knowledge and education systematically stifled capabilities and entrenched dependence. While post-independence policies blended some endogenous and exogenous technologies, external reliance persists due to institutional legacies constraining self-driven advancement. Uneven diffusion of imported systems continues. The chapter argues that Africa’s current dependence stems from extractive colonial policies and ongoing Eurocentric biases rather than ancient backwardness. Recognising Africa’s overlooked technical achievements and communal philosophies is vital to overturn limiting assumptions stifling progress. Transforming cognitive frameworks to appreciate the continent’s remarkable ingenuity and complex knowledge developed pre-colonially is indispensable for building technological self-determination today. Although generalised, this historically contextualised account illustrates Africa’s undeniable capabilities.
| Original language | en |
| Pages (from-to) | 17-36 |
| Publication status | Published - 2024 |
UN SDGs
This research output contributes to the following United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
UN SDGs
This research output contributes to the following United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
UN SDGs
This research output contributes to the following United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)