42 pages • 1 hour read
Trevor R. Getz, Illustr. Liz ClarkeA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
This section contextualizes the previous sections as secondary sources (Part 1’s graphic novel) and primary sources (Part 2’s court transcript). It then poses questions of how historians interpret historical documents and how readers can discern the credibility of different interpretations—the focus of the next three parts of the novel. This section in particular provides specific historical context for the story.
This section includes two subsections: “Early History” and “Societal and Political Changes: Asante and the Europeans.” In the “Early History” subsection, the Twi-speaking Akan people, based on female lineage and organized by extended family, is framed as a prominent agricultural society in which slavery was vital. The “Societal and Political Changes: Asante and the Europeans” subsection details the rise of Asante through gold, koalas, and a slave trade as well as the colonization of Europeans (from England, France, Denmark, Switzerland, and Germany) who initially came as traders and merchants. By the 1850s, England used its military to drive out other European powers in the region to take control of the palm oil industry (which was valuable for soap and machine lubrication). The Asante kings, who controlled much of the palm oil industry, posed a challenge to the British.
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