The Africa Bibliography has been published by the International African Institute (IAI) as a print volume since 1985. The first editor was Hector Blackhurst, a social anthropologist turned academic librarian at the University of Manchester. In the inaugural volume, Jacob F. Ade Ajayi, the then Chairman of the International African Institute wrote that ‘Greater technical experience will, it is hoped, facilitate typographical improvements'.Footnote 1 A second concern of the Bibliography, as expressed by Ajayi, was to monitor and record material produced in Africa ‘that does not always circulate widely and might otherwise escape notice’.Footnote 2
Ten years later the subsequent editor C.H. Allen set out the achievements of the Bibliography under Blackhurst: for ‘making it the best one-volume general Africana bibliography’.Footnote 3 But Allen was also frank about the weaknesses, which he would set out to address: fragmentation and poor bibliographic control in the humanities and social sciences, inclusion of knowledge produced outside the universities, inadequate computerisation, language coverage and subject indexation in an area of study where interdisciplinary is a hallmark of attractiveness.
Into its third decade Peter Limb, Africana Librarian at Michigan State University, set out the challenge as needing to pull together the best Africana literature in one place given the explosion of online information; and the danger of thinking that ‘Google will do it all; there is still a need to detect, select and classify relevant information’.Footnote 4
Such is the value of resources such as the Africa Bibliography. Limb further recommended that ‘In the future, a single, easily searchable, cumulative Africa Bibliography online database linked to full-text would help make this excellent resource more effective and ensure its continued existence in both print and electronic formats’.Footnote 5
Africa Bibliography is now 30 years old. The two basic aims as set out by Ajayi – to record Africana materials, including those published in Africa or in hard-to-find publications such as chapters published in non-Africa specialist books (in publisher parlance, ‘to promote discoverability’), and to make the bibliography more technologically adept and user-friendly – remain central. We are pleased that the Institute's long held ambition to transform the Bibliography from a print volume stocked by specialist academic libraries into an online database containing new and retrospective records with links to full text has been fulfilled. Our publisher Cambridge University Press (CUP) has been instrumental in investing resources and technical expertise in this digitisation project. The capability of the online Bibliography is described in more detail by Daniel Pearce from Cambridge University Press below. And as Daniel illustrates, the online database allows us to track with more accuracy trends in research publication, and equally, countries and subjects which remain understudied. Yet whilst the Press's priority is to improve the database driving the online version, an annual print volume of some 480 pages is still published, bearing in mind the needs of some academic libraries, staff and students in Africa for printed resources.
The Bibliography continues to be compiled on an ongoing basis and is expanding. Up to 6,000 entries are now added annually. One reason for this is the increased interest in Africa of general disciplinary journals. Another is the expansion of certain disciplines in recent years, for example gender studies. And see p. xix of this volume for further detail on new subject categories added from 2012. There is also better coverage of titles published in Africa: content aggregation projects such as African Journals Online (AJOL), of African published journals,Footnote 6 and the African Books Collective, a distributor of African-published print and e-books,Footnote 7 have greatly facilitated the collection of this data. However ease of online access to bibliographic records, including for an increasing number of online only publications, does pose new challenges to criteria for inclusion: notably considerations of quality and of how to handle ephemera, and writing and research emanating from outside the academy and mainstream publishing.
Introductory essays
Most volumes of the published Bibliography have included an introductory article. These essays, published annually from 1984, have now also been digitised. A part of the published record, together they provide an archival resource on subjects such as African(a) publishing, libraries and bibliography, bookshops, broadcast media and new information technologies.
In the first such article Michael CrowderFootnote 8 wrote in an essay titled ‘The Book Crisis: Africa's Other Famine' of ‘the terrible dearth of books and other teaching materials that afflicts nearly all African countries south of the Sahara, and which if not remedied soon may mortgage Africa's future for several generations to come’;Footnote 9 further of the ‘lack of books, journals and the chance to travel to other countries to attend conferences or conduct research’Footnote 10 besetting African academics. Today Crowther's insights may be understood as the pernicious consequences of structural adjustment policies with their assault on the knowledge industries and universities in Africa, which still haunt us today.
Crowder wrote too of a crisis of publishing and bookselling within Africa, which was to focus publishers on promoting exports of books within the continent and abroad. He thus foreshadowed a string of articles in the 1980s and early 1990s on publishing in Africa. Abiola Irele writing on the political economy of knowledge in Nigeria pointed to the inextricability of book markets with broader economies and infrastructural contexts and to the ‘only lasting solution to the problem of the supply of books and publication consisting in the development of a viable indigenous publishing industry’.Footnote 11 Further thereto, Henry Chakava provided an account of Kenya's publishing contextFootnote 12 and C.S.L. Chachage gave an historical overview of the situation in Tanzania.Footnote 13
Another major theme of the introductory articles is Africanist bibliography and libraries, both within Africa and outside, with state-of-the-art contributions from Peter LimbFootnote 14 and John McIllwaine.Footnote 15 Case studies were provided by Hans Panofsky writing on origins and development of the Melville J. Herskovits Library of Northwestern University,Footnote 16 and Evelyn Evans on the establishment of the Ghana Library Services as a service financed almost entirely from local funds, and recognised as ‘an essential element in the national scheme of educational advancement’.Footnote 17 Alli Mcharazo has more recently contributed a paper on the Tanzania Library Services Board’.Footnote 18
The IAI published its first essay on ‘The Internet in Africa’ in 1996 stressing ‘the urgency of providing Africa with ways to enter and participate in a world economy where information and communication technologies are a factor of economic development’.Footnote 19 More recently Daniel Reboussin has written a piece on library research methods in African studies in the digital era.Footnote 20
Other contributions include Graham Mytton's essay on radio, the BBC World Service, and broadcasting in African languages, and the role and place of radio on the continent,Footnote 21 themes which are enjoying an upsurge of academic interest.Footnote 22
Notable scholars Karin Barber and Paulo F. de Moraes Farias have written on a Yoruba religious archive,Footnote 23 and Graham Furniss contributed a paper on documenting Kano ‘market’ literature.Footnote 24
Such is the breadth and diversity of topics addressed in these published introductory essays. We hope that the digitised archive will make them more widely accessible, inspiring new and rigorous treatment of perennial themes.