Home
Modern Industry and the African: An Enquiry into Effect of Copper Mines Central Africa upon Native Society Work Christian Missions
Barnes and Noble
Loading Inventory...
Modern Industry and the African: An Enquiry into Effect of Copper Mines Central Africa upon Native Society Work Christian Missions in Franklin, TN
Current price: $170.00

Barnes and Noble
Modern Industry and the African: An Enquiry into Effect of Copper Mines Central Africa upon Native Society Work Christian Missions in Franklin, TN
Current price: $170.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
Originally published in 1933, at the time of its publication,
Modern Industry and the African
represented a progressive, essentially liberal approach to the development of the Copperbelt of Northern Rhodesia and the response thereto of the Christian Church. It expressed the authors' very real fears that urbanization would irreparably damage the foundations of indigenous life and demonstrated their implicit faith in the virtues of a past 'golden age' of rural stability. In many respects the study was a landmark, beginning a new trend of investigation into 'sociological' aspects of African administration.
Modern Industry and the African
represented a progressive, essentially liberal approach to the development of the Copperbelt of Northern Rhodesia and the response thereto of the Christian Church. It expressed the authors' very real fears that urbanization would irreparably damage the foundations of indigenous life and demonstrated their implicit faith in the virtues of a past 'golden age' of rural stability. In many respects the study was a landmark, beginning a new trend of investigation into 'sociological' aspects of African administration.
Originally published in 1933, at the time of its publication,
Modern Industry and the African
represented a progressive, essentially liberal approach to the development of the Copperbelt of Northern Rhodesia and the response thereto of the Christian Church. It expressed the authors' very real fears that urbanization would irreparably damage the foundations of indigenous life and demonstrated their implicit faith in the virtues of a past 'golden age' of rural stability. In many respects the study was a landmark, beginning a new trend of investigation into 'sociological' aspects of African administration.
Modern Industry and the African
represented a progressive, essentially liberal approach to the development of the Copperbelt of Northern Rhodesia and the response thereto of the Christian Church. It expressed the authors' very real fears that urbanization would irreparably damage the foundations of indigenous life and demonstrated their implicit faith in the virtues of a past 'golden age' of rural stability. In many respects the study was a landmark, beginning a new trend of investigation into 'sociological' aspects of African administration.