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Mungo Park's ghost: the haunted hubris of British explorers in nineteenth-century Africa

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In 1816 the British sent two large, ambitious expeditions to Africa, one to follow the Niger River to its outlet, the other to trace the Congo River to its source.

Their shared goal was to complete the unfinished mission of Mungo Park, who had disappeared during a journey to determine whether the Niger and the Congo were the same river.

Both quests ended disastrously and were soon forgotten.

Telling the full story of these failed expeditions for the first time, Dane Kennedy argues that they provide fresh insight into British ambitions in Africa.

He places them in the contexts of the imperial rivalry with France, the slave trade and the abolition campaign, and the independent power wielded by African states and peoples.

He also shows that they were haunted by the same sense of hubris that would afflict many of the expeditions that followed.

This hubris was Mungo Park's ghost.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1009393006 / 9781009393003
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
910.92
17/01/2024
United Kingdom
English
270 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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