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21. Tribal Arts - Links - Autumn Gallery Handcrafted Tribal Arts
Information available for the following peoples Akan Akuapem Baga Bali Bamana Bamileke bamum Bangubangu Bangwa Rainforest Jewels. Rare indigenous Folk art
http://www.autumngallery.net/links_tribalarts.html
@import url(http://www.homestead.com/~media/elements/Text/font_styles.css);
A Cool Tribal Arts Gallery

Hand crafted tribal, native and eastern sculpture, masks and other art works inspired by famous balinese, buddhist and hindu legends.
Africa Tribes

Learn about the customs, languages, and history of African tribes. Tribes. People who belong to a common ethnic group may one of the following tribes: Wolof, Fulani, Serer, Toucouleur of Madagascar, 18 different tribes speak Malagasy and French.
Afro-Dit, a place where lovers of African tribal art can share their enthusiasm

Any Search Info - Directory Arts Visual Arts Native and Tribal Oceania

Search-Info.Com leading the way for better search technology. Enjoy your search experience with fast relevant and comprehensive results!
Any Search Info - Directory Arts Visual Arts Native and Tribal

Search-Info.Com leading the way for better search technology. Enjoy your search experience with fast relevant and comprehensive results!
Art Deals Now on eBay
You can find art right here. With over 5 million items for sale every day, you'll find the art deals you're looking for at the world's online marketplace - eBay. ArtNatAm Native American Artists.

22. Beadwork Links: Aunt Molly's Bead Street
bamum Kingdom Art images of a beaded statue of Beadmaking and Beadwork Throughout africa; Beadwork of colorFUL photo essay of these indigenous people of Nepal
http://home.flash.net/~mjtafoya/links/blinkart.htm
Home Classroom Patterns Beadwork Links ... Auntie's Neighborhood Aunt Molly's
BEADWORK LINKS
Beadwork Around the World
Updated very slightly Jan. 21, 2001 Where DO us beaderfolk go to deepen the vision,
stretch our eyeballs, hang out and be impressed?
(Please notify me if you find broken links.)
Africa Asia Europe Huichol ... Textiles Around the World Africa Asia Europe (see also Vintage/Victorian)
  • Russian Beadwork Story rich with images, from the Moscow Bead Society, including this beautiful right angle weave

23. OutreachLectures @ University Of Pennsylvania Museum Of Archaeology And Anthropo
witness the ebb and flow of indigenous cultural developments socalled “nail fetishes” from the Kongo people. Arts of the Cameroons The bamum people of the
http://www.museum.upenn.edu/new/edu/outreach/africa.html
University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology
A F R I C A
The History and Mystery of Belly Dance
This general style of female solo interpretive dance is known and appreciated all over the Arab world including Northern Africa. There is no formal choreography but instead a variety of characteristic movements with which to interpret the music and show mastery of the rhythm. In the villages of northern Africa, most women dance as a social activity, at weddings for example, in all-female groups. The character of this sensual dance style is different in the big cities; particularly in Egypt where the dance has reached its most highly developed form. Top dancers achieve the status of movie stars because of the prominence of the entertainment industry. Through discussion, slides and demonstration, Ms. Siegel, as "Habiba" will trace the long history of this dance. Attend this fascinating lecture and find out for yourself the skills needed for authentic belly dance. Ms. Barbara Siegel

24. Taj Mahal Books
William M. and L. Jan Slikkerveer (editors), indigenous Knowledge and GIFT A BEADED SCULPTURE FROM THE bamum KINGDOM, CAMEROON Schieffelin, HM, PEOPLE OF africa.
http://www.indusbook.com/cgi-bin/indus/scan/mp=keywords/se=Africa/st=sql/ml=1000
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Abucar, Mohamed H. Post-Colonial Society : The Algerian Struggle for Econcomic, Social, and Political Change, 1965-1990 Adams, William M. and L. Jan Slikkerveer (editors) Indigenous Knowledge and Change in African Agriculture Afshar, Haleh, Editor. Women, State, and Ideology : Studies from Africa and Asia Akeley, Mary L. Jobe Carl Akeley's Africa : The Account of the Akeley-Eastman-Pomeroy African Hall Expedition of the American Museum of Natural Histo Allan, J. A., Editor LIBYA SINCE INDEPENDENCE: ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT Amara, Hamid Ait and Bernard Founou-Tchuigoua, editors African Agriculture : The Critical Choices American Association for the Advancement of Science Sub-Saharan Africa Program Malaria and Development in Africa; A Cross-Sectoral Approach Anthony, John TUNISIA: A PERSONAL VIEW OF A TIMELESS LAND Badran, Margot and Miriam Cooke, Editors Feminists, Islam and Nation : Gender and the Making of Modern Egypt Bannister, Anthony and Peter Johnson Namibia : Africa;s Harsh Paradise

25. Cameroun / Cameroon - Introduction, Information And Links
are competing for Cameroonian souls, but indigenous beliefs and of art from the Bamiléké, bamum and other Nyos in Cameroon and killed more than 1700 people.
http://crawfurd.dk/africa/cameroon.htm
home sitemap search help ... about me Content on this page: Facts and figures
Around Cameroon

Links

See also: Cameroon Timeline Photos from Cameroon VR-panorma photo from Bafang, Cameroon (approx 1 Mb)
Requires QuickTime View a map of Cameroon
(PDF-document)
Shop now!
The Rough Guide
to West Africa
US order
European order Shopping info Shop now! Shopping info Shop now!
Black Livingstone:
A True Tale (By Pagan Kennedy) US order European order Shopping info
Cameroon
A starting point for your exploration of Cameroon: Country facts, links, news and photos.
Republic of Cameroon (facts and figures)
Capital: Area: 475,440 sq km (view PDF-map) Borders to: Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Nigeria Est. population:

26. Diasporal Imagination: On The Subject Of Kings And Queens:
modern” or “modernism” but to denote indigenous forms of he swore allegiance to the people.” 14 an existing rivalry with the bamum Kingdom (historically
http://web.africa.ufl.edu/asq/v7/v7i1a4.htm
Al-Yasha Ilhaam Williams

Print/Download PDF
[ Instructions: Print/Download PDF] And Palm Wine Will Flow INTRODUCTION And Palm Wine Will Flow th and early 20 th I use the term imagination to argue that the emphasis on regal power typifying African American conceptions of traditional African leadership and society are not based entirely on historical or archeological facts about African nations. DIASPORAL IMAGINATION On some accounts, it would seem integral to the reconstruction of African identity to recreate systems of hierarchical governance. The importance of royalty and status of various forms can be found, for example, in a press announcement of the Ausar Auset Society for the 25 th TRADITIONAL GOVERNANCE AND DEMOCRACY The choice of a leader was politically charged and if contestation arose, many traditional African cultures employed ritual checks and balances for resolving conflicts, especially those relating to succession issues. Some offices had categorical requirements of gender or age that narrowed the competition. In some cases certain responsibilities fell to the eldest male or youngest female, or choices could be be made between several people of approximately the same age. A prescribed inheritance pattern that connected certain classes or families is sometimes required. For example, Tangwa describes a particular strategy where the leader is chosen from a committee comprised of distinct gender and class representatives.

27. Africa Diaspora Speaks!
bamum(Cameroon),. Vai (Liberia),. George Ayittey indigenous african Institutions (1991). Sandra Barnes africa s OgunOld World and New Systems of Thought (1997).
http://groups.msn.com/AfricaDiasporaSpeaks/yourwebpage1.msnw
var nEditorialCatId = 150; MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: var zflag_nid="346"; var zflag_cid="27"; var zflag_sid="4"; var zflag_width="728"; var zflag_height="90"; var zflag_sz="14"; Groups Groups Home My Groups Language ... Help Africa Diaspora Speaks! AfricaDiasporaSpeaks@groups.msn.com What's New Join Now Messages Pictures ... Despite eurocentric strategies of disinformation, Africans developed knowledge systems of their own in the pre-colonial era. Some survived into the post-colonial era, despite various forms of colonial intimidation. In the case of writing, the use of specific scripts was often confined to the priestly hierarchy. Africans in various parts of the continent developed a wide range of symbols and motifs for communicating various ideas and concepts. The variety of writing material used in some parts of the continent, historically, reflects the complex history of Africa's writing systems which in the past were in scribed on materials such as parchment, papyrus, leather, skin, fabric, sand, clay, and metal more extensively in some parts of the continent than others. Among

28. Raymond Aaron SILVERMAN
Images from bamum German Colonial Photography at the Islam and Art in West africa. Metropolitan Museum and Culture The Rights of indigenous People to Their
http://www.olats.org/africa/participants/silverman.shtml
PROJETS SINGULIERS AFRIQUE VIRTUELLE PARTICIPANTS RAYMOND AARON SILVERMAN Raymond Aaron SILVERMAN Education Ph.D. Art History. University of Washington. December 1983. Major: Sub-Saharan Africa.
Minors: Pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, Japan, 20th-century Mexico, Japan.
Dissertation: "History, Art and Assimilation: The Impact of Islam on Akan Material Culture." M.A. Art History. University of Washington. June 1977.
Major: Sub-Saharan Africa.
Thesis: "The Northern Factor in Asante Art." B.A. (summa cum laude) Art History. University of California, Los Angeles. June 1975. Areas of general interest Arts of sub-Saharan Africa, African Diaspora, Native North America, Oceania, Islam, pre-Columbian Mesoamerica, 20th century Mexico; aesthetic dimensions of culture evolution; art and religion. Primary research interest Interaction between sub-Saharan West Africa and the cultures of the Islamic Middle East and the West; Ethiopian aesthetic tradition. Employment history Interim Chair, Department of Art. Michigan State University. Summer 1999 to present. Coordinator, Museum Studies Program. Michigan State University. Summer 1999 to present.

29. Africa Direct-Ethnographic Art, Trade Beads, Masks, Carvings, Artifacts, Textile
$600. Product ID 007514; People Tikar; Price $522; Shipping $12; indigenous repair by braiding on top back corner. bags are carried by the Tikar, bamum, and Ndop
http://www.africadirect.com/productsdesc.html?ID=6677

30. African Foundation Of World Religions - People In Our Time
The two major religious systems indigenous to China Mende (Sierra Leone), Loma (Liberia), bamum (Cameroon), Nsibidi the most ancient world were black peoples.
http://www.muz-online.de/religion/religion2.html
Menschen unserer Zeit e.V. - People in Our Time
African Foundations of World Religions
Report from the magazine "NewAfrican", April 2001. No 395, pp.18
Naturalism

Western scholars

Cultural journey

Religious writings
...
Comparing Amenemope and Solomon

F
or thousands of years of prehistoric and recorded history, Africa led humanity in the art of group cohesion and social organisation. The spiritual matrix devised by African societies provided the earliest substance of social and psychological cohesion known to man.
These later impacted heavily on the societies of Western Asia and the Mediterranean world in particular, and were thereafter elaborated into distinct but ultimately related systems. Now referred to as "religion", these psycho-spiritual systems have profoundly affected humanity´s general way of being; its moral, social and transcendental "software".
Religious thought began where mankind began. Much like today´s societies, the first nations had a need for purposeful communal existence and spiritual sustenance.
The distinction between that termed "religion" and that termed "spirituality" is a recent development, incompatible with the ancient archetype. It is ultimately an extension of the tendency to compartmentalise; a quest to satisfy the individual ego. In the final analysis, they converge; one pertains to the inner and the other to the outer form of the same reality. Both the personal and social dimensions of transcendence were deemed necessary to group cohesion.

31. Nordstrom
The indigenous curators of the print selection will have worked example Christaud M. Geary, Images from bamum German Colonial Other peoples Bodies, Lives
http://wwwmcc.murdoch.edu.au/ReadingRoom/6.2/Nordstrom.html
Contents of this Issue Continuum Contents Reading Room CRCC ... MU Continuum:
vol. 6 no 2 (1991)
Photogenic Papers
Edited by John Richardson
'Persistent images: photographic archives in ethnographic collections' Alison Devine Nordstrom
From its beginnings, photography has been envisioned and utilised as a purveyor of vicarious experience equivalent to presence. Possession of a photograph was regularly confounded with possession of its subject, and it is not surprising that the camera was almost immediately turned on the new worlds and peoples amongst which Europe and the United States were building empires. As early as the 1850s, photographers were going out from the centres of photography's invention to capture what they perceived as the exotic and savage and bring it back for study and sale in the places where anthropology was in its infancy. It is no coincidence that photographs, which, by their de-contextualising nature, encourage the perception of specific and individualised subjects as generic types, played a significant role in anthropology's construction of the cultural Other, its definitive subject matter. Not only photographs made with ethnographic intent, but commercial novelties, pornography, travel souvenirs, military documentation and amateur snapshots were collected, catalogued and conserved by museums of anthropology, ethnology, natural history and folklore. Photographs, along with collections of objects and the written texts of travellers, missionaries and, somewhat later, field researchers, became the stuff that the sciences of the Other were made of - indeed were constructed into the Other itself.

32. Third Emeritus Lecture Honoring William R. Bascom - Published Works - Published
1950, 52(2)254255. (review) The Use of indigenous Authorities in Life of a Primitive People (africa) (Educational Collaborator). 3, pp. 71-72; bamum Vol.
http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/Anthro/bascom/pub/year02.html
You are here: Past Lectures William R. Bascom Published Works Published Works by Year, 1950s-1960s Scholarly Monographs by Year
Published Works by Year, 1950s-1960s
  • "The Focus of Cuban Santeria."
    Southwestern Journal of Anthropology
    • Reprinted in:
        Peoples and Cultures of the Caribbean . Edited by M.M. Horowitz. New York, NY: The Natural History Press. 1971, pp. 522-527.
      " Ponape: The Cycle of Empire ."
      Scientific Monthly
      " Ponape: The Tradition of Retaliation ."
      Far Eastern Quarterly
      Abstracts: Nos. 315, 316, 320, 322, 324, 326, 327, 359, 366 370, 437, 449.
      African Abstracts . 1950, 1(3):99-141, passim.
      Abstracts: Nos. 487, 527, 540.
      African Abstracts . 1950, 1(4):155-168, passim.
      (review) An African Aristocracy , by H. Kuper. American Anthropologist (review) The Use of Indigenous Authorities in Tribal Administration , by H.E. Lambert; Marriage in Langa Native Location , by R. Levin; The Political Annals of a Tswana Tribe , by I. Schapera;

33. Search For Books: S
A Beaded Sculpture from the bamum Kingdom, Cameroon of Change in a Ghanaian indigenous Knowledge System. Material Culture Black Kingdoms, Black peoples The West
http://bookstore.africanartbooks.us/search_s.htm
Searches 'S':
saar, alison
Body Politics: The Female Image in Luba Art and the Sculpture of Alison Saar

saar, betye
Betye Saar

sacred space
The Image of the Ordered World in Ancient Nubian Art: The Construction of the Kushite Mind, 800 Bc-300 Ad

sahel
The Grazing Land Ecosystems of the African Sahel

saint helena island (s.c.)
Local Heroes: Paintings and Sculpture by Sam Doyle
saint lucia sale adult - architecture Great Works of African Art Harlem Renaissance: Art of Black America African Art African Hats and Jewelry sale adult - pop arts Afropop: An Illustrated Guide to Contemporary African Music sale books The Art of African Textiles Great Works of African Art African Art: Sculpture Harlem Renaissance: Art of Black America African Hats and Jewelry ... James Van Derzee: The Picture-Takin' Man sale books - adult African Art: Sculpture African Textiles/Library of Style and Design sally hemings, an american sca Sally Hemings: An American Scandal: The Struggle to Tell the Controversial True Story Sally Hemings: An American Scandal: The Struggle to Tell the Controversial True Story samba, cheri, Cheri Samba: The Hybridity of Art san (african people) The stone age in Rhodesia Reality and non-reality in San rock art : twenty-fifth Raymond Dart lecture delivered 6 October 1987 The Bushman art of Southern Africa The Drakensberg Bushmen and their art : with a guide to the rock painting sites People of the Eland : rock paintings of the Drakensberg Bushmen as a reflection of their life and thought ... Art rupestre des Sans : Université de Pretoria, Exposition Woodhouse

34. African Studies Center | Publications | Index
and German Colonial Politics in the bamum Kingdom (Cameroon of North Pare, Tanzania indigenous Conservation, Local A Narrative History of People and Forests
http://www.bu.edu/africa/publications/index/indextopic.html
CENTER PUBLICATIONS BY MAJOR TOPIC Agriculture Arts/Art History Development Education ... Women And Gender
African Studies Center publications series listed here are intended to highlight the research of scholars affiliated with Boston University or the work of other scholars presented at Boston University. Note: These entries are listed alphabetically by title within each topic Explanation of code numbers (used for ordering): AH WP, and AAIC refer to article-length papers in Discussion Papers in the African Humanities (AH), Working Papers of the African Studies Center (WP), and African-American Issues Center Papers (AAIC). ARS refers to a paperback monograph in the African Research Studies. AFDOC refers to a book in the African Historical Documents series.

35. African Studies Center | Publications | Index
The bamum TwoFigure Throne Additional Evidence, WP A Narrative History of People and Forests Between of North Pare, Tanzania indigenous Conservation, Local
http://www.bu.edu/africa/publications/index/indexauthor.html
CENTER PUBLICATIONS BY AUTHOR A B C D ... Z African Studies Center publications series listed here are intended to highlight the research of scholars affiliated with Boston University or the work of other scholars presented at Boston University. Explanation of code numbers (used for ordering): AH ILE WP, and AAIC refer to article-length papers in Discussion Papers in the African Humanities ( AH ), Working Papers of the African Studies Center ( WP ), Issues in Language Education ( ILE ), and African-American Issues Center Papers (AAIC). ARS refers to a paperback monograph in the African Research Studies. AFDOC refers to a book in the African Historical Documents series. BUPA refers to an edited book in the series Boston University Papers on Africa.
A Adam, Hussein M. 1993. Militarism and Warlordism: Rethinking the Somali Political Experience

36. Andrew Nfamewih Aseh
of the Nso people (Banadzem 1996), the bamum (Tardits, 1996 The choice is with African peoples themselves to either expand their indigenous worldview in
http://www.codesria.org/Links/Home/Abstracts Ga 6-11/Religion_Aseh.htm
The Development of Indegenous Religion as Basis for Community Orientation in Africa
Andrew Nfamewih Aseh
Head of Department for Civics and Social Legislation
Government Technical High School
Molyko, Buea- Cameroon
asehandrew@yahoo.com

ABSTRACT This paper examines how a religious system can orientate Community focus towards achieving practical goals of daily existence. Since African Traditional Religion is also a political system, its main features will be examined in the light of economic and political organisation, social stability, the exploration of nature, and technology, factors all of which if coupled with ideology can bring about the type of change that can induce the spirit of self-sustainability. I will, therefore, verify and propose how the development of this religion, which has never produced any religious controversy (Mbiti1975:15) into what Alan Evans (1991) calls "Social Gospel" and how this can promote sentiments of collective unity and the psychology of economic enterprise. Its applicability as a knowledge system within the post-modernist African social structure will also be versified. This is particularly relevant in an era where new loyalties, foreign beliefs and practices have divided families and communities, fragmented the moral base of the African social system, weakened the people and have rendered the society porous and susceptible to extraneous influences. The basic question I am thriving to answer is that of how African Traditional Religion can contribute in the development of African especially South of the Sahara.

37. Review Of African Crossroads- JAH 1998
focus on specific kingdoms and peoples to elucidate but to explain it through indigenous categories. bamum adoption of Germanstyle military dress demonstrated
http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/dz/xroads/vernick.html
JOURNAL of AFRICAN HISTORY
VOLUME 39, 1998
CAMEROON STUDIES
African Crossroads: Intersections between History and Anthropology in Cameroon
paperback (ISBN 1-57181-926-6).
In this volume, editors Ian Fowler and David Zeitlyn have brought together
Cameroonian and Cameroonist anthropologists and historians to celebrate the
contributions of ethnographer-historian Elizabeth Chilver. In her own
interdisciplinary work and in her collaborations with Phyllis Kaberry from the
1940’s, Chilver mined missionaries’, administrators’ and traders’ documents long
before it was fashionable to do so. Chilver integrated this material with ethnographic evidence to shed light on pre-colonial political hierarchies and religion, and to reconstruct the historical processes by which Africans and Europeans negotiated colonial rule in the Cameroonian Grassfields. She also helped to facilitate a lively dialogue between Cameroonian and Cameroonist scholars and to incorporate the concerns of non-academic Africans into scholarly debates about Cameroon’s past (pp.xii-xv).

38. THE VIRTUAL INSTITUTE OF GRASSFIELDS STUDIES
them are intimately familiar with the peoples they have mid1902) of the spectacular neighbouring kingdom of bamum. of Human Sciences, mostly indigenous to the
http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/dz/grassfields.html
The Kaberry Research Centre KRC ), Bamenda, Cameroon has recently published the volume:
RITES OF PASSAGE AND INCORPORATION IN THE WESTERN GRASSFIELDS OF CAMEROON
Volume I
Birth, Naming, Childhood, Adolescence, some Palace Rituals
Edited by Patrick Mbunwe-Samba Paul N. Mzeka Mathias L. Niba Clare Wirmum
See: CONTENTS
  • Preface Patrick Mbunwe-Samba
  • Introduction Dr Mathias L. Niba
  • Rituals of Initiation: Paul N. Mzeka the Nso' case
  • A Case-Study of the Patrick Mbunwe-Samba Wimbum Ethnic Group
  • Rites of Passage Dr Joseph Banadzem among the Yamba
  • Birth, Childhood Dr Mathias L. Niba and Adolescence: the case of Bafut
  • Initiation and Rites John Koyela Fokwang of Passage: the case of Bali-Nyonga
  • The case of the Oshie Isaac Akenji Ndambi Clan in Momo Division
  • Delivery and Naming Sam N. Wambeng in Oku
  • Rites of Passage and Dr Clare Wirmum Incorporation in Bamunka, Mezam Division
  • Initiation and Rites John Koyela Fokwang of Passage in Aghem, Menchum Division
  • Rites of Passage in Kom Jerome Nsom
  • Rites of Passage: Isaac Akenji Ndambi the case of Moghamo (Batibo)
  • Naming and Initiation Sali Django and Rites: the Fulani case Paul N. Mzeka
  • 39. Michael Stevenson Fine Art
    dispersal of groups of indigenous people all make take responsibility to reinterpret images of Native peoples. C. Geary, Images from bamum German colonial
    http://www.michaelstevenson.com/books/html/lens.htm
    Surviving the Lens
    For a full version of the Surviving the Lens essay click here

    This selection of fifty compelling photographs of people from south and east Africa offers an opportunity to re-evaluate the colonial photography of these regions. During this era, indigenous subjects usually struggled to retain their dignity and composure in the exploitative lens of the European traveller, tourist, scientist and commercial photographer. In those instances when the sitter's humanity survived the racial prejudices and technology of the time, the images often transcend their role as historical records and can be seen as provocative and poignant works of art.
    The photographs chosen for inclusion are from the authors' own collection and most of them have never been published before. Each is reproduced on a double-page spread accompanied by captions that often provide new information about the photographers and the subjects. An introductory essay, which contextualises the practice of photography in south and east Africa during this period, is illustrated with full-page details from the selected photographs.
    The images reproduced in this book all retain a lasting and intriguing engagement. They reveal the intensity of these troubled encounters and provide evocative human portraits captured at a time of rapid change in Africa.

    40. Zentrum Für Afrikastudien Basel
    of two photographs taken in Cameroon bamum early in in West africa and the portrayal of indigenous people and culture , History in africa , 1993, pp.
    http://www.unibas-zasb.ch/redakteure/jenkins/mitarbeiter_e.php
    Home The Centre People Studying ... Cooperation and Networks
    Paul Jenkins, MA cantab., Historiker und ehem. Archivar von Mission 21
    Curriculum Vitae
    Pensionierung und Rückzug von der Funktion als Archivar der mission 21 und als Dozent für Afrikanische Geschichte an der Universität Basel. Dozent für Afrikanische Geschichte, Universität Basel Co-Leitung (mit Barbara Frey Näf) des Projektes für Konservierung und Erschliessung historischer Fotografien des Archivs der Basler Mission. Wissenschaftspreis des Kantons Basel-Stadt Bibliothekar und Archivar (Archivar seit 1980) der Basler Mission (jetzt: mission 21) als Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter. Tätigkeit im Erwachsenenbildungsprogramm der im Aufbau befindlichen c. Dozent für Geschichte an der Universität Ghana Assistant Resident Tutor am Institute of Public Education an der Universität Ghana (Organisation von Einrichtungen für die Teilzeit-Studierende im Zentrum von Accra). Studium von Geschichte und Pädagogik an der Universität Cambridge (Christ's College). geboren in Sunderland/GB
    Fields of specialisation in research and/or teaching
    • Social History of Missions and African Churches African History in overview Methodology of historical work with photographs as sources Geographical emphases: West Africa, especially Ghana and Cameroon.

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