From Algiers to Timbuktu: Multi-Local Research in Colonial History Across the Saharan Divide

The so-called “Saharan Divide” separating sub-Saharan Africa and North Africa into distinct fields has a long and complicated history. Paradoxically, given its dense historiography, this divide is particularly pronounced in scholarship on the colonial period. This article proposes an approach to res...

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Veröffentlicht in:History in Africa 2022-06, Vol.49, p.277-299, Article 277-299
1. Verfasser: Anderson, Samuel D.
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description The so-called “Saharan Divide” separating sub-Saharan Africa and North Africa into distinct fields has a long and complicated history. Paradoxically, given its dense historiography, this divide is particularly pronounced in scholarship on the colonial period. This article proposes an approach to researching across this division, centered on research in multiple African archives, to build a “multi-local” understanding of colonial-era trans-Saharan Africa. This approach is illustrated by the story of Algerians who taught in colonial schools in Mauritania and French Soudan, and by the author’s discovery of this story in sites across northwest Africa. This approach can help scholars reconceptualize multi-sited research and reevaluate the Area Studies divisions that continue to structure knowledge of African history.
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source Cambridge Journals
subjects African history
Anthropology
Area studies
Careers
Colonialism
Cultural instruction
French language
Government archives
Historians
Historiography
History
History Spanning the Sahara
Schools
title From Algiers to Timbuktu: Multi-Local Research in Colonial History Across the Saharan Divide
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