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Black Athena Resources on Questia |
| | Search over 400,000 online books & journals! | | | |
| | | Questia Online Journal Papers: Keita, Maghan (2000) 'The Politics of Criticism: Not Out of Africa and "Black Athena" Revisited', Journal of World History, Vol. 11 Bunnens, Guy (1999) 'Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea: International trade and the Late Bronze Age Aegean', The Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 119. Cobb, William Jr (1997) 'Out of Africa: the Dilemmas of Afrocentricity', The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 82 | | Questia Online Books: Lefkowitz, Mary R. & Rogers, G. M. (editors) (1996) Black Athena Revisited, University of North Carolina Press: Chapel Hill and London. Cartledge, Paul (1993) The Greeks: A Portrait of Self and Others, Oxford University Press: Oxford and New York | | Questia Online Newspaper Articles: When Men Could Be Gods: Life, Culture in Ancient Egypt, The Washington Times, April 7, 2002 'Wellesley Historian Calls Afrocentrism Mythology in Book: She Rejects White-Racism Charges', article by Carol Innerst; The Washington Times, March 6, 1996 | | |
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Site's Featured Book: Planet of the Greeks |
 | | The World Ages Archive was inspired by the book "Planet of the Greeks: The Great Time-Warp of history" (2000) by Meres J. Weche. |  | Book Review Info:
C&C (2002:1)
SIS Internet Digest (2002:1)
"... a massive tome and well organized. ... an incredible amount of scholarship."
Vine Deloria, Jr., Professor of History, Law and Religious Studies, University of Colorado, Boulder | CLICK HERE to buy softcover copy | CLICK HERE to buy hardcover copy
| About the book: Amid the continuing raging debate over the origins of Western civilization, Planet of the Greeks interjects some vital new perspectives into this ever-expanding controversy. The author inaugurates a brand new era of archaeological detective work characterized by an uncommonly daring, and breathtakingly multi-disciplinarian, approach to ancient history. Inspired by the epoch-making revision of ancient history presented in Dr Immanuel Velikovsky’s “Ages in Chaos” book series, Planet of the Greeks’ main thesis is that the accepted chronological framework for the history of the ancient world is gravely flawed and that a revised model must be offered.
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