Foreign Affairs - 11.2019 - 12.2019

(Michael S) #1
Recent Books

November/December 2019 221

inequality is one o‘ the motivations for
young Africans to undertake the very
dangerous trip to Europe but suggests
that a “sense o‘ adventure” spurs their
journeys, as well. Although he laments
the region’s poverty, he views sharp
increases in the number o‘ African
immigrants to Europe as inevitable, even
i‘ African economies continue their
recent acceleration. Greater access to
funds and closer links with Europe will
strengthen both the ability and the
desire o‘ would-be immigrants to make
the trip. The book ends on a sour note,
arguing that this scramble for Europe
will only sap Africa o‘ the energy it
needs to confront its own challenges and
will increase unemployment and under-
mine welfare states in Europe.

Amílcar Cabral: A Nationalist and
Pan-Africanist Revolutionary
BY PETER KARIBE MENDY. Ohio
University Press, 2019, 238 pp.

This accessible biography o‘ Amílcar
Cabral will not satisfy readers wanting to
better understand why some consider
him one o‘ the most thoughtful left-wing
rebels o‘ the twentieth century, rivaling
Lenin and Mao in his analyses o‘ state
power and revolutionary struggle. Mendy
often draws such grandiose comparisons
but fails to substantiate them. But he
does succeed in following the fascinating
arc o‘ Cabral’s life. Cabral went from an
impoverished youth in the Portuguese
colonies o‘ Cape Verde and Guinea-
Bissau to a university scholarship in
Lisbon. He had a brie– but illustrious
career as an agricultural engineer for the
Portuguese colonial government before
he became a revolutionary advocate o‘
independence and the leader o‘ an

identity through the writings and lives
o– black intellectuals, ranging from the
eighteenth-century ex-slave and poet
Phillis Wheatley to later Ägures such as
the historian and activist W. E. B. Du
Bois and the author Richard Wright. A
recurring theme o‘ the book is that
African Americans have looked to Africa
when their prospects in the United
States have seemed particularly bleak
and unpromising. Blyden also notes the
ambiguity o‘ that longing for Africa; for
many African Americans, engagement
with the continent has sparked a recogni-
tion o‘ their distinctly American identity
as much as it has engendered a sense o‘
solidarity with Africans. Over a million
Africans have immigrated to the United
States in the last 30 years, a trend that
may again remake black America.


The Scramble for Europe: Young Africa on
Its Way to the Old Continent
BY STEPHEN SMITH. Polity, 2019,
200 pp.


In this sometimes rambling but always
interesting long essay, Smith directly
tackles the issue o‘ African immigration
to Europe only in the last couple o‘
chapters. The preceding sections focus
on recent socioeconomic trends in
Africa, with a particular emphasis on
the continent’s demographics. Smith
makes the familiar idea o‘ an African
“youth bulge” (in which high fertility
results in a very young population)
more compelling by documenting a new
dividing line when it comes to inequality
in the region: age. Today, in countries
across the continent, a minority o‘ older
people is trying to retain its political
and economic privileges at the expense
o‘ a younger cohort. Smith argues that

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