African Literature in Transition: Volume 3
Print Cultures and African Literature, 1860-1960
Herausgeber: Barber, Karin; Newell, Stephanie
African Literature in Transition: Volume 3
Print Cultures and African Literature, 1860-1960
Herausgeber: Barber, Karin; Newell, Stephanie
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 350
- Erscheinungstermin: 6. November 2025
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781009622363
- ISBN-10: 1009622366
- Artikelnr.: 73985686
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Introduction: print cultures and African Literature Stephanie Newell and
Karin Barber; Part I. Producing Print: 1. The press at work: five
snapshots; 1.1 The press at work: Gakaara wa Wanjä Press Simon Gikandi; 1.2
Of rickety old printpresses in ramshackle printrooms and the stories they
told: the African press in colonial Kenya 1920-1960s Phoebe Musandu; 1.3
'Where money goes before, all ways do lie open': on some practicalities of
the newspaper business in 1920s and 1930s Lagos Katharina A. Oke; 1.4
Polyglossia and loanwords in the Tanganyikan press, 1916-1961 James R.
Brennan; 1.5 The West African Pilot and the creation of an anti-colonial
readership Ngozi Edeagu; 2. Expansive languages in nineteenth-century
Central Africa: missionary dictionaries between command and dialogue Harri
Englund; 3. Print cultures and printing diasporas: Gandhi, Dube and white
printworkers in Durban Isabel Hofmeyr; 4. George McCall Theal's urge to
publish and his collaborative printing process, 1862-1882 Sam Naidu; 5. A
tale of two print cultures: Hausa texts in Ajami and Roman script Graham
Furniss; 6. Still images, moving images: movie posters and film
spectatorship in colonial West Africa Odile Goerg; Part II. Readers and
Audiences: 7. Black South African intellectuals and the question of
colonial modernity Khwezi Mkhize; 8. 'How to cultivate a love for reading':
literacy, madness, and African selfhood in the Sierra Leone weekly news
Thomas Keegan; 9. Print culture and new fictional imagination in colonial
Egypt Lucie Ryzova; 10. A century of readers and readings: Abantu
Abamnyama, 1922-2022 Hlonipha Mokoena; Part III. New Genres: Form, Local
Aesthetics and Literary Creativity in Periodicals: 11. Linguistic
cohabitation and the equivalences of print Karin Barber; 12.
Autoethnographic expression and the politics of educational adaptation: the
Nigerian teacher and Nigeria magazines Terri Ochiagha; 13. Satirical Street
literature: city archiving and its afterlives Corinne Sandwith; 14.
Pioneers of the popular: literary experimentation in Swahili press writings
in Tanganyika, 1930s-50s Maria Suriano; 15. Orthographic arguments:
language debates in Swati newspapers of the 1950s and 1960s Joel Cabrita
and Thato Sukati; 16. 'Usefully unofficial' reading: Onitsha market
literature and Anglophone print cultures in colonial Nigeria Stephanie
Newell; Part IV. Worlds of Print: 17. Double-sided Print: silent and
communal reading during the rise of Islamic print in East Africa, c.
1880-1940 Anne K. Bang; 18. Between the railway and the minaret:
transregional Swahili Muslim booklets and transition in East African print
culture, 1930-1960 Annachiara Raia; 19. Making audiences: Gäbrä-¿gziabher
Gila-Maryam as a forerunner of Ethiopian print culture, 1895-1914 Sara
Marzagora; 20. Print and the question of literature in Islamic West Africa
Jeremy Dell; 21. Print networks in the Black Atlantic world, c. 1920-1960
Leslie James and Myles Osborne; 22. 'A curious creature from the market':
world literature and the 'Complete Gentleman' stories Tobias Warner.
Karin Barber; Part I. Producing Print: 1. The press at work: five
snapshots; 1.1 The press at work: Gakaara wa Wanjä Press Simon Gikandi; 1.2
Of rickety old printpresses in ramshackle printrooms and the stories they
told: the African press in colonial Kenya 1920-1960s Phoebe Musandu; 1.3
'Where money goes before, all ways do lie open': on some practicalities of
the newspaper business in 1920s and 1930s Lagos Katharina A. Oke; 1.4
Polyglossia and loanwords in the Tanganyikan press, 1916-1961 James R.
Brennan; 1.5 The West African Pilot and the creation of an anti-colonial
readership Ngozi Edeagu; 2. Expansive languages in nineteenth-century
Central Africa: missionary dictionaries between command and dialogue Harri
Englund; 3. Print cultures and printing diasporas: Gandhi, Dube and white
printworkers in Durban Isabel Hofmeyr; 4. George McCall Theal's urge to
publish and his collaborative printing process, 1862-1882 Sam Naidu; 5. A
tale of two print cultures: Hausa texts in Ajami and Roman script Graham
Furniss; 6. Still images, moving images: movie posters and film
spectatorship in colonial West Africa Odile Goerg; Part II. Readers and
Audiences: 7. Black South African intellectuals and the question of
colonial modernity Khwezi Mkhize; 8. 'How to cultivate a love for reading':
literacy, madness, and African selfhood in the Sierra Leone weekly news
Thomas Keegan; 9. Print culture and new fictional imagination in colonial
Egypt Lucie Ryzova; 10. A century of readers and readings: Abantu
Abamnyama, 1922-2022 Hlonipha Mokoena; Part III. New Genres: Form, Local
Aesthetics and Literary Creativity in Periodicals: 11. Linguistic
cohabitation and the equivalences of print Karin Barber; 12.
Autoethnographic expression and the politics of educational adaptation: the
Nigerian teacher and Nigeria magazines Terri Ochiagha; 13. Satirical Street
literature: city archiving and its afterlives Corinne Sandwith; 14.
Pioneers of the popular: literary experimentation in Swahili press writings
in Tanganyika, 1930s-50s Maria Suriano; 15. Orthographic arguments:
language debates in Swati newspapers of the 1950s and 1960s Joel Cabrita
and Thato Sukati; 16. 'Usefully unofficial' reading: Onitsha market
literature and Anglophone print cultures in colonial Nigeria Stephanie
Newell; Part IV. Worlds of Print: 17. Double-sided Print: silent and
communal reading during the rise of Islamic print in East Africa, c.
1880-1940 Anne K. Bang; 18. Between the railway and the minaret:
transregional Swahili Muslim booklets and transition in East African print
culture, 1930-1960 Annachiara Raia; 19. Making audiences: Gäbrä-¿gziabher
Gila-Maryam as a forerunner of Ethiopian print culture, 1895-1914 Sara
Marzagora; 20. Print and the question of literature in Islamic West Africa
Jeremy Dell; 21. Print networks in the Black Atlantic world, c. 1920-1960
Leslie James and Myles Osborne; 22. 'A curious creature from the market':
world literature and the 'Complete Gentleman' stories Tobias Warner.
Introduction: print cultures and African Literature Stephanie Newell and
Karin Barber; Part I. Producing Print: 1. The press at work: five
snapshots; 1.1 The press at work: Gakaara wa Wanjä Press Simon Gikandi; 1.2
Of rickety old printpresses in ramshackle printrooms and the stories they
told: the African press in colonial Kenya 1920-1960s Phoebe Musandu; 1.3
'Where money goes before, all ways do lie open': on some practicalities of
the newspaper business in 1920s and 1930s Lagos Katharina A. Oke; 1.4
Polyglossia and loanwords in the Tanganyikan press, 1916-1961 James R.
Brennan; 1.5 The West African Pilot and the creation of an anti-colonial
readership Ngozi Edeagu; 2. Expansive languages in nineteenth-century
Central Africa: missionary dictionaries between command and dialogue Harri
Englund; 3. Print cultures and printing diasporas: Gandhi, Dube and white
printworkers in Durban Isabel Hofmeyr; 4. George McCall Theal's urge to
publish and his collaborative printing process, 1862-1882 Sam Naidu; 5. A
tale of two print cultures: Hausa texts in Ajami and Roman script Graham
Furniss; 6. Still images, moving images: movie posters and film
spectatorship in colonial West Africa Odile Goerg; Part II. Readers and
Audiences: 7. Black South African intellectuals and the question of
colonial modernity Khwezi Mkhize; 8. 'How to cultivate a love for reading':
literacy, madness, and African selfhood in the Sierra Leone weekly news
Thomas Keegan; 9. Print culture and new fictional imagination in colonial
Egypt Lucie Ryzova; 10. A century of readers and readings: Abantu
Abamnyama, 1922-2022 Hlonipha Mokoena; Part III. New Genres: Form, Local
Aesthetics and Literary Creativity in Periodicals: 11. Linguistic
cohabitation and the equivalences of print Karin Barber; 12.
Autoethnographic expression and the politics of educational adaptation: the
Nigerian teacher and Nigeria magazines Terri Ochiagha; 13. Satirical Street
literature: city archiving and its afterlives Corinne Sandwith; 14.
Pioneers of the popular: literary experimentation in Swahili press writings
in Tanganyika, 1930s-50s Maria Suriano; 15. Orthographic arguments:
language debates in Swati newspapers of the 1950s and 1960s Joel Cabrita
and Thato Sukati; 16. 'Usefully unofficial' reading: Onitsha market
literature and Anglophone print cultures in colonial Nigeria Stephanie
Newell; Part IV. Worlds of Print: 17. Double-sided Print: silent and
communal reading during the rise of Islamic print in East Africa, c.
1880-1940 Anne K. Bang; 18. Between the railway and the minaret:
transregional Swahili Muslim booklets and transition in East African print
culture, 1930-1960 Annachiara Raia; 19. Making audiences: Gäbrä-¿gziabher
Gila-Maryam as a forerunner of Ethiopian print culture, 1895-1914 Sara
Marzagora; 20. Print and the question of literature in Islamic West Africa
Jeremy Dell; 21. Print networks in the Black Atlantic world, c. 1920-1960
Leslie James and Myles Osborne; 22. 'A curious creature from the market':
world literature and the 'Complete Gentleman' stories Tobias Warner.
Karin Barber; Part I. Producing Print: 1. The press at work: five
snapshots; 1.1 The press at work: Gakaara wa Wanjä Press Simon Gikandi; 1.2
Of rickety old printpresses in ramshackle printrooms and the stories they
told: the African press in colonial Kenya 1920-1960s Phoebe Musandu; 1.3
'Where money goes before, all ways do lie open': on some practicalities of
the newspaper business in 1920s and 1930s Lagos Katharina A. Oke; 1.4
Polyglossia and loanwords in the Tanganyikan press, 1916-1961 James R.
Brennan; 1.5 The West African Pilot and the creation of an anti-colonial
readership Ngozi Edeagu; 2. Expansive languages in nineteenth-century
Central Africa: missionary dictionaries between command and dialogue Harri
Englund; 3. Print cultures and printing diasporas: Gandhi, Dube and white
printworkers in Durban Isabel Hofmeyr; 4. George McCall Theal's urge to
publish and his collaborative printing process, 1862-1882 Sam Naidu; 5. A
tale of two print cultures: Hausa texts in Ajami and Roman script Graham
Furniss; 6. Still images, moving images: movie posters and film
spectatorship in colonial West Africa Odile Goerg; Part II. Readers and
Audiences: 7. Black South African intellectuals and the question of
colonial modernity Khwezi Mkhize; 8. 'How to cultivate a love for reading':
literacy, madness, and African selfhood in the Sierra Leone weekly news
Thomas Keegan; 9. Print culture and new fictional imagination in colonial
Egypt Lucie Ryzova; 10. A century of readers and readings: Abantu
Abamnyama, 1922-2022 Hlonipha Mokoena; Part III. New Genres: Form, Local
Aesthetics and Literary Creativity in Periodicals: 11. Linguistic
cohabitation and the equivalences of print Karin Barber; 12.
Autoethnographic expression and the politics of educational adaptation: the
Nigerian teacher and Nigeria magazines Terri Ochiagha; 13. Satirical Street
literature: city archiving and its afterlives Corinne Sandwith; 14.
Pioneers of the popular: literary experimentation in Swahili press writings
in Tanganyika, 1930s-50s Maria Suriano; 15. Orthographic arguments:
language debates in Swati newspapers of the 1950s and 1960s Joel Cabrita
and Thato Sukati; 16. 'Usefully unofficial' reading: Onitsha market
literature and Anglophone print cultures in colonial Nigeria Stephanie
Newell; Part IV. Worlds of Print: 17. Double-sided Print: silent and
communal reading during the rise of Islamic print in East Africa, c.
1880-1940 Anne K. Bang; 18. Between the railway and the minaret:
transregional Swahili Muslim booklets and transition in East African print
culture, 1930-1960 Annachiara Raia; 19. Making audiences: Gäbrä-¿gziabher
Gila-Maryam as a forerunner of Ethiopian print culture, 1895-1914 Sara
Marzagora; 20. Print and the question of literature in Islamic West Africa
Jeremy Dell; 21. Print networks in the Black Atlantic world, c. 1920-1960
Leslie James and Myles Osborne; 22. 'A curious creature from the market':
world literature and the 'Complete Gentleman' stories Tobias Warner.







