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China's Second Continent: How a Million Migrants Are Building a New Empire in Africa Hardcover – Deckle Edge, May 20, 2014

4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 562 ratings

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[ China's Second Continent: How a Million Migrants Are Building a New Empire in Africa French, Howard W. ( Author ) ] Hardcover 2014

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

*Starred Review* Although several recent books have discussed, in variously alarmist fashion, China’s recent incursions into Africa in pursuit of resources and profit, former New York Times journalist French (A Continent for the Taking, 2004) has the advantage of significant personal experience in both Africa and China. He also speaks Mandarin, so he can converse directly with some of the million or so members of the Chinese diaspora in Africa. They are a diverse lot—doctors, engineers, farmers, entrepreneurs, lobbyists, laborers, and prostitutes, among others—and accounts of their experience are often absent from analyses of Chinese-African relations, which typically focus on infrastructure building and resource grabbing. Interacting with Chinese and Africans in Mozambique, Sierra Leone, Namibia, and elsewhere, French capably illustrates that although the Chinese omnipresence in Africa may be a form of soft imperialism, it is also a result of the crushing pressures—lack of space, merciless business competition, pollution—of modern Chinese society. For many Chinese, he suggests, Africa means opportunity and relative freedom that cannot be had at home. If French is sympathetic to the plight of many Chinese immigrants, however, he remains critical of their casual racism and general callousness about their African hosts. And as he laments the seeming inevitability of corruption and environmental degradation, French’s disappointment in his cherished continent is palpable. --Brendan Driscoll

Review

A 2014 New York Times Notable Book

“Extraordinary…French delves into the lives of some of the one million-plus Chinese migrants he says are now building careers in Africa…and the stories [he] tells are fascinating.”
The New York Times Book Review

“Riveting…As a massive transactional process, China’s entry into Africa has been a dramatic success...but as an ideological and cultural undertaking, Mr. French’s masterly account suggests that it is getting nowhere.”
The Economist

“Howard French…let[s] the Africans and Chinese speak for themselves as he travels through fifteen countries. The result is a rich, complex, and satisfying look at this strange marriage.”
The New York Review of Books

“In his important new book, French weaves a rich tapestry of anecdotes, interspersed with numerous interviews with Chinese migrants and Africans alike, offering readers an eminently fair, occasionally humorous and sympathetic, but always engaging account….A searing, trenchant, and entertaining study of how China, in both an individual and collective sense, is shrewdly and opportunistically maximizing its relationships with African nations in an effort to extend its economic influence across the world. ”
The Christian Science Monitor

“China’s trade with Africa has grown dramatically…But China’s investments…are less significant for this rapidly evolving relationship, according to this 15-country survey by veteran African correspondent French, than the significant flow of new Chinese immigrants—often pushed out by the pressure and oppression back home as much as lured by opportunity. In vivid first-person reportage, French explores this momentous phenomenon, while challenging assumptions about China and Chinese immigrants…The book will appeal to students of China and Africa, and anyone interested in the shifting contours of the global economy and its geopolitical consequences.”
Publishers Weekly

“Although several recent books have discussed…China’s recent incursions into Africa in pursuit of resources and profit,…French has the advantage of significant personal experience in both Africa and China….Interacting with Chinese and Africans in Mozambique, Sierra Leone, Namibia, and elsewhere, French capably illustrates that although Chinese omnipresence in Africa may be a form of soft imperialism, it is also a result of the crushing pressures—lack of space, merciless business competition, pollution—of modern Chinese society.”
Booklist

“Accounts of China’s foray into African markets are often made with numbers; French goes beyond the statistics and illuminates the accelerating involvement of Chinese migrants….These candid moments are arresting, delivered via seasoned and sensitive reporting.”
Democracy

“The huge and growing ties between China and the African continent will be one of the most crucial relationships of the 21st century, and you simply could not invent a better guide to it than Howard French. Superbly written, rich in anecdote, insight, and a sense of the immense scale of what is happening,
China’s Second Continent should be mandatory reading for anyone wanting to understand how our world is being reshaped.”
—Adam Hochschild, author,
King Leopold’s Ghost

“We owe tremendous thanks to Howard French for this fascinating and deeply reported book. He is an audacious writer who takes his readers to the far-flung factories, farms and living rooms of the Chinese entrepreneurs who are flooding into countries like Mozambique, Zambia and Senegal. French intrepidly explores the other side of the global coin, giving voice to an array of Africans reacting warily to the new imperialists in their midst. This is an essential book for understanding not just China and Africa but our changing world.”
—Peter Maass, author,
Crude World

“Almost no other writer would have dared the reportorial and story-telling challenge Howard French has set for himself in
China’s Second Continent, and absolutely none could have pulled it off as well. This is foreign reportage and analysis presented as compelling human drama.”
—James Fallows, author,
China Airborne


“In Howard French’s wonderfully engaging new book, he draws on his journalistic experience covering both China and Africa to weave together a series of vivid portraits which limn the country’s global rise in this remote and unlikely part of the world. What is so surprising about the stories he tells is that they chronicle everything from the constriction of massive stadiums, hospitals, universities, highways and mineral and energy extraction operations to small-scale shops, farms and family businesses.
China’s Second Continent is a grand tale of the world’s newest diaspora, one that promises to change a previously largely forgotten continent.”
—Orville Schell, Director, The Center on US-China Relations, Asia Society

“Howard French has given us the most lush, fair, and expansive look yet at China’s role in Africa. This is a tale not strictly about China or Africa; it is about the encounter of civilizations and the energy produced in the collision. Infused with thought and sympathy, this is a book with no agenda other than fidelity to facts that were so difficult to gather on the ground.”
—Evan Osnos, staff writer,
The New Yorker
 
“Is China’s burgeoning empire in Africa a ‘win-win’ for both parties? For the most comprehensive, closely-reported answer to this question, read this book. It’s full of surprises, from hard-driving frontiersmen looking for (and finding) countries with less corruption than they faced at home in China to healthy democracies constraining the more rapacious practices of extractive industry. I cannot imagine a better, more-qualified guide to this vast, fascinating subject than Howard French.” 
—William Finnegan, author, 
A Complicated War: The Harrowing of Mozambique

“Howard French magisterially holds up both ends of his transcontinental bargain: fluent in the idioms of the two worlds, China and Africa, he reveals the variegated diaspora of the one million or so Chinese in Africa yet also drives home that Africa is awakening in turn. His pages are teeming with human beings of flesh and blood, and often outlandish characters, at the new frontier explored in this fascinating book.”
—Stephen W. Smith, former Africa editor of
Le Monde and professor at Duke University

“An important contribution to a critical debate on China’s rapidly changing relationship with Africa. Howard French goes beyond official statistics to weave stories of new wave Chinese immigrants and the Africans whose lives they impact. Unlike ideologues who focus on motives, French seeks to discern the impact of this relationship on all drawn into its vortex.”
—Mahmood Mamdani, Executive Director, Makerere Institute of Social Research, Kampala, Uganda and Herbert Lehman Professor of Government, Columbia University

 
“Howard French is one of the most insightful American journalists to have covered Africa in the past twenty years. In this riveting and rich new book, he powerfully juxtaposes two worlds he is uniquely positioned to observe, namely China and Africa. Anyone who has recently spent time in Africa knows how important China is becoming on the continent. Yet French tells a nuanced story about the Chinese few will have previously understood. His storytelling is sharp and wise, the characters we meet are vivid and unforgettable, and the implications are profound and at times disturbing. Anyone interested in Africa and China, or more generally in migration and globalization, will find a wealth of material in this terrific book.”
—Scott Straus, professor of political science at University of Wisconsin, Madison

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 0307956989
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Knopf; First Edition (May 20, 2014)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 304 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780307956989
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0307956989
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.35 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1 x 8 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars 562 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
562 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the book's content eye-opening and credible. They also describe it as a great book with strong credentials and a well-written style that flows like fiction.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

46 customers mention "Content"43 positive3 negative

Customers find the book has eye-opening information, compelling story, and engrossing. They also say it's balanced in its interview perspectives, individual anecdotes from various parts of Africa, candid, and well-written. Customers also say the conclusions are credible.

"...book is a serious piece of professional journalism and rich contribution to the discussion...." Read more

"...I very good book, broadly balanced in its interview perspectives." Read more

"Glad I purchased this book for my collection. Great information. Knowledge is power." Read more

"This is an excellent overview of the increasing role China is playing in Africa...." Read more

36 customers mention "Readability"36 positive0 negative

Customers find the book easy to read and enlightening. They also describe it as a lively account of French's travels. Readers also say the book is a serious piece of professional journalism and a rich contribution to the field.

"...Regardless of the above, French's book is a serious piece of professional journalism and rich contribution to the discussion...." Read more

"...I very good book, broadly balanced in its interview perspectives." Read more

"A real pleasure and enlightenment to read. The author's proseflows easily, making the book a real page turner. I come out of..." Read more

"...Many thanks to the author for such a fascinating read...." Read more

27 customers mention "Writing style"26 positive1 negative

Customers find the book very well written, easy to understand, and good reading for policy makers and entrepreneurs in China and Africa. They also describe the author as a clear, thoughtful storyteller.

"...His book makes good reading for policy makers and entrepreneurs in China, Africa, and the West alike...." Read more

"A real pleasure and enlightenment to read. The author's proseflows easily, making the book a real page turner. I come out of..." Read more

"...Well worth reading for anyone interested in the subject." Read more

"...I think is the language. This, is real command of a language!..." Read more

Sino Scramble for Africa
5 out of 5 stars

Sino Scramble for Africa

Howard W. French’s China’s Second Continent: How a Million Migrants are Building a New Empire in Africa is a tale of opportunism, spoliation, misappropriation and dispossession. The arrival of Chinese in Africa in drones lately is arguably the latest chapter in a very long narrative of empire building through emigration. Each of China’s new immigrants to Africa is an architect helping to shape this grand design of empire construction. China’s strides thus far have unquestionably been peaceful, and for the most part welcomed by those at the helm in Africa, even though here and there, there are growing signs that the honeymoon is over. China’s Second Continent: How a Million Migrants are Building a New Empire in Africa is a great read for Africanists as well as friends of Africa interested in learning something new about Africa’ political economy. Howard writes in impeccable journalese that is within the reach of an average reader. His book is a treasure-trove of insightful information about Africa in the twenty-first century. It should be read by students and professors of African studies the world over.About the authorPeter Vakunta is Assistant Professor of French and Francophone Studies, and Chair of the Department of Modern Languages at the University of Indianapolis. He is a prolific writer with several fictional and non-fictional books to his credit.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on July 19, 2014
I know very little about Africa except for our media's portrayal of it. I know a lot about China, having lived there for many years and speaking the language. But China is a civilization posing as a nation-state, and its venerable history and dizzying pace of modernization constantly defy easy understanding. Putting China and Africa together, oddly enough, turns out to be a formula to better understand both. And that is what Howard French accomplishes in his latest book, China's Second Continent: How a Million Migrants Are Building a New Empire in Africa.

A well-traveled, well-educated, and multi-lingual American journalist, French presents a rare, if not unique, perspective on the Chinese experience in Africa and the African experience of China. The author for the most part steers clear of the ideological grand posturing too often found in Western coverage of China's involvement in Africa. Rather, his reporting reads refreshingly like a travelogue sprinkled with the almost reflexive musings of the traveler along his journey.

Yet through those musings, along with the abundance of "as is" observations, emerges a much more serious and thought-provoking sense of a complex reality. French's unique contribution is that he writes not so much about "China" as a polity but more about the experience of individual Chinese emigrants and their African hosts at the personal level. And as individuals, we are each and every one different and cannot be reduced to simple statistics or generalization. Hence the richness of those personal stories creates space for the reader to interpret and come to his / her own conclusions.

A blemish of the book is French's seeming lack of awareness that his identity as a Western journalist inevitably affects his interviewees' answers. This is known as "anticipation" in the field of scientific survey, where interviewees try to anticipate the biases of the interviewer and then feed the interviewer answers that they think the interviewer will find agreeable. Psychologically, this behavior seems to arise from a desire to please or to seek approval. Conversely, some interviewees, having established hostility towards the interviewer, may intentionally provide untruthful or exaggerated answers in an attempt to unsettle or provoke. A potential solution to this problem with French's book would be the plethora of social media postings by younger, technologically-savvy Chinese migrants who document and comment on their lives in Africa, primarily to an audience of their own friends and family (rather than a Western journalist). A summary presentation, or even just a sample, of those postings by Chinese migrants for their Chinese readers would have rounded out French's otherwise excellent and invaluable body of first-hand research.

Regardless of the above, French's book is a serious piece of professional journalism and rich contribution to the discussion. His book makes good reading for policy makers and entrepreneurs in China, Africa, and the West alike. We are all part of this story, some more directly than others. And we have an opportunity to learn from the tragedies of history and collectively strive for a better outcome this time around.
55 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on October 26, 2014
Mr. French is to be congratulated for taking the time to write this book, it's a necessary read for anyone interested in Africa and/or the modern day emerging Chinese diaspora. Mr. French grapples with the perennial problem of the (usually) unfair terms on which foreign investment is made in developing countries, and does on many occasions give in to critical observations of Chinese business practices in Africa, this is understandable, though the root cause, with the greatest of respect to Mr. French, is and can only ever be attributed to weak governance, institutions and corruption for which the various African countries, their peoples and their elected governments bear full responsibility; the Chinese are only (as was mentioned in many of the candid interviews contained in the book) engaged in business in the prevailing business environment; no doubt there will in due course be a backlash if the worst excesses continue, as happened in many Southeast Asian countries confronted with Chinese business domination. I very good book, broadly balanced in its interview perspectives.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 24, 2014
A real pleasure and enlightenment to read. The author's prose
flows easily, making the book a real page turner. I come out of
the reading with an exasperation that the people of Africa do not
have anything like a sufficiently creative and forceful leadership
with a moral sense of their responsibility to advantage their own people.
Stupidity and cupidity!

While China is investing tremendous amounts of money in African
countries, they are basically bullying and tricking the local people
with the connivance of the local leaders, treating the former as children.
It is still another case of the rape of Africa.

I just finished reading Re-imagining India by the McKinsey Company.
It is not a case there of another country coming in to rape them,
but of endemic corruption, lack of useful goals and a vastly diffuse government
which keeps impoverished the main masses of people.

I am struck by the enormous richness of resources in the Indian and African nations,
but disastrously few strong-enough, ethical leaders to leaven the lives of their
people with the richness of their nations' great natural resources.

It is bad living for most of the people in all of those countries now.
It is hard to imagine how awful it will be in 50 years or so when the
populations have grown greatly and the resources have been
depleted. Very sad. But the book is a "must-read."
6 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
Valerio Pastore
5.0 out of 5 stars L'invasione morbida cinese
Reviewed in Italy on December 18, 2023
Era inevitabile che nel suo nuovo corso, la Cina voltasse gli occhi all'Africa -un intero continente devastato da guerre, corruzione, divisioni, povertà, malattie, colonialismo guerriero... Un mondo ricco di risorse e di terra, ignorato dall'occidente, perfetto per un paese con ambiziose mire di espansione che hanno un grande bisogno di terreni da coltivare e miniere da depredare. E, soprattutto, di un posto dove mandare i numerosi connazionali che ormai non reggono più le costrizioni di una patria sovrappopolata, inquinata e paranoica.
Questo libro-reportage. però, mette in chiaro una cosa: il governo cinese è presente e combatte con l'arma dei finanziamenti, con la trappola dei debiti, infiltrando la propria gente a tutti i livelli, dalla vita quotidiana, rubando posti di lavoro, alla politica locale, ottenendo ricche concessioni per un pugno di riso ad interessi stratosferici, costruendo preziose infrastrutture, ma senza addestrare la gente del posto per la loro gestione.
L'Africa tutta sta ora subendo una nuova era colonialista, che forse ha qualche promessa in più per il futuro, ma che per ora gioca solo a proprio favore...
R. Wenzl
5.0 out of 5 stars China in Afrika
Reviewed in Germany on January 19, 2021
Während Europa moralisiert nimmt China seine wirtschaftlichen Interessen wahr.
Das ist zwar nichts neues. Es wird aber in diesem Buch sehr anschaulich was das konkret heisst.
Das Buch beantwortet mehrere Fragen:
Welche Projekte werden wie und mit welchen Mitteln verfolgt? Welche Taktiken setzt China ein?
und vor allem: Wie ist der Lebensalltag von Chinesen in Afrika? Ihre Einstellung, ihre Motive etc.

Der Schreibstil ist sehr gut-wie bei guten angelsächsischen Autoren üblich.
Es wird nie langweilig und bleibt immer unterhaltsam.
2 people found this helpful
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Danielle Zandvliet
5.0 out of 5 stars 7 out 5 stars
Reviewed in Canada on January 12, 2019
This was a birthday present for someone, and that was their rating.
Conor
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read, highly recommended
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 3, 2020
Great insights into such an interesting subject. The author has written something that made me want to continue the journey with him into every corner of the continent. If you've come so far as to read this review then you definitely should buy this book!
One person found this helpful
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Anurag Kumar Agarwal
4.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Reviewed in India on March 28, 2015
Overall good