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ASAUK Presidential Address Given at the Oxford Conference, September 1978: Four Hundred Years of Library Material on Africa
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 April 2022
Extract
The African Studies Association gives its Presidents no formal guidance on the content or presentation of their addresses, but my predecessor Rowland Moss suggested that one method was to chose a title first and write the address afterwards. In my case, the major part of the title was easy to decide on, since it was as the representative of SCOLMA, the Standing Conference on Library Materials on Africa, that I first joined the A.S.A. Council in 1964. I do not, however, intend to speak about SCOLMA in any detail, since I have done so on more than one occasion; my aim is to look at the materials which one might find in a major library on Africa and consider how they came to be written, the categories into which they fall, and the way in which they reflect changing attitudes to Africa.
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- Copyright © International African Institute 1978
Footnotes
Among works found particularly useful in preparing this address are Eldred Jones, The Elizabethan Image of Africa, Richmond, Va., 1971; P. D. Curtin, The Image of Africa: British ideas and action 1780-1850, 1965) Douglas Grant, The Fortunate Slave, 1968; A. J. Barker, The African Link: British attitudes to the Negro in the 17th and 18th Centuries, 1978. Footnotes have been added where the work mentioned has not been adequately cited in the text. Books are published in London unless otherwise stated.
References
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57 For fuller information on the matters summarised in the remainder of this address see the items listed in footnotes 2 and 51, also J. D. Pearson and Ruth Jones (eds), The Bibliography of Africa: Proceedings and Papers of the International Conference on African Bibliography, Nairobi, 4-8 December, 1967, 1970; J. H. Mcllwaine (ed), Progress in African Bibliography; Scolma Conference 1977, 1977.
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