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African History at Makerere in the 1960s: A Further Perspective

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 May 2014

Roy Bridges
Affiliation:
University of Aberdeen
Merrick Posnansky
Affiliation:
UCLA

Extract

As two expatriate academics who taught at Makerere in the 1960s (RB 1960-64; MP 1964-67), we were naturally interested in the article, “Building an African Department of History at Makerere, 1950-1972” in HA 30(2003), 253-82. The story Carol Sicherman has to tell is an important one and she has produced a well-documented and forcefully delivered account. It is to be hoped that she will be able to bring out a complete history of Makerere, which is something that is badly needed. We do, however, have some reservations about the picture of the early 1960s that emerges.

Our criticism of the impression given of what was happening at Makerere in the History Department in the early 1960s, before the arrival of J. B. Webster in 1968, is in two main respects. First, it may not be fair to judge everything in terms of how far an African syllabus taught by Africans had been established; the Department and the University might have had legitimate aims in addition to this. Second, even granting that moving towards an African syllabus was an aim in the 1960s—and we think it was—Sicherman tends to underestimate on the one hand the difficulties which then had to be overcome, and on the other the extent to which the aim was realized and the essential basis laid for Webster's work.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2004

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References

1 It is perhaps pertinent to note that the two very first degrees at the University of East Africa in 1965 emanated from Makerere, and both were supervised from the Department of History: Gordon P. McGregor's M.A. thesis, “King's College Budo: the First Sixty Years,” and J.E.G. Sutton's dissertation, “The Archaeology of the Western Highlands of Kenya.”