Posts by Paul

The Britain Zimbabwe Society’s Annual Research Day 2012 ‘Zimbabwe and the Region’

The Britain Zimbabwe Society’s annual research day will be held on the 16th June at St. Antony’s College, Oxford

This year participants will explore the historical and contemporary connections between Zimbabwe and her neighbours.

We are pleased to announce our keynote speakers this year will be Professor Jack Spence, OBE (King’s College London) and Professor Welshman Ncube (Zimbabwe Minister for Commerce and Trade – tbc). Other speakers include: Timothy Scarnecchia; Joseph Mujere; Francis Musoni; Maxim Bolt; Miles Tendi; Andrew Mutandwa; Jocelyn Alexander; Hugh Macmillan; JoAnn McGregor; Tinashe Nyamunda and Ushehwedu Kufakurinani. Publishers Zed Books (Africa Now, African Arguments and Africa in the New Millennium Series) and James Currey will be selling a selection of their books throughout the day and the event will conclude with a book launch and drinks reception.

see    http://britainzimbabwesociety.wordpress.com/events/

Registration fees (for attendance only): £30 standard; £20 BZS members; £15 students and unwaged.

To register in advance please contact Marieke Clarke: mariekefclarke@pop3.poptel.org.uk

Special issue:116 – Africa, Sport and the Archive : Table of contents

Michelle Guittar & David L. Easterbrook  
Materials relating to sport in Africa in the collection of the Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies, Northwestern University: an overview
Karl Magee 
Boycotts and Bailouts: the archives of the Commonwealth Games Council of Scotland
Pascal Charitas
Anglophone Africa in the Olympic Movement: the confirmation of a British wager? (1948- 1962)
Holly Collison
A Game for the Good?: Football, youths and the Liberian civil conflict
Michelle Sikes
The Standard: a repository of African sports history
Dean Allen
South African Sports History and the Archive
Jonty Winch
Cricket and War in Early Rhodesia,1890- 99

 

SOAS – School of Oriental and African Studies

 

The Africa collection at SOAS Library encompasses the whole of Africa and broadly covers the humanities and social sciences.

The collection includes rare books and manuscripts in addition to recent and current publications, both in print and other formats (for example audio-visual and electronic formats) from around the world.

SOAS Library is a research and teaching collection supporting the needs of the School’s staff and students as well as being a national collection. The School was founded as the School of Oriental Studies in 1916. Although Africa was not included in the name, material on and from Africa has been collected since this time. Some African material pre-dates the School’s foundation as a result of donations or through subsequent purchase of material.

A particular strength of the collection is the Library’s collection of African vernacular languages which is unique within the UK and Europe.  Material is acquired in, and on all African languages rather than just those taught/researched at SOAS.

The Library has a number of special collections including the Hardyman Madagascar Collection, Society of Libyan Studies Library, Onitsha Market Literature Collection,  Hausa Popular Fiction: Furniss Collection and African Christianity: Gifford Collection.

Most African materials are on open access, however some types of material (for example rare books, manuscripts, special collections, pamphlets and DVDs ) have to be ordered – collections of these types of materials are made through the day.

The SOAS Library catalogue is available online.

Whilst most items can be found in the online catalogue some older material can be found in the older Card catalogue.

SOAS Archives

SOAS Library holds important collections of archives and manuscripts relating to Africa. There are significant archives and papers documenting the activities of major British missionary societies, and of individual missionaries.

The Archive Catalogue provides descriptions for archive collections in the Library, in addition to more detailed catalogue records for particular collections.

There are significant holdings of African manuscripts including the Swahili Manuscripts Collection. Papers of scholars, writers, travellers, and other significant figures whose life or work is important to the study of Africa are actively acquired.