From drpeters at umich.edu Thu May 30 15:25:05 2019 From: drpeters at umich.edu (Derek Peterson) Date: Thu, 30 May 2019 09:25:05 -0400 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers Message-ID: Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume 45, no. 1. https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to constitute novel forms of sociality. The essays are as follows: Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print Literacy in African Languages? Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the Operations of Genre? Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics in the 1920s and 30s? Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the Satirical Mode in South African Letters? Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild Conquest? Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African American History Archive? Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 Delighted to have this in print! With good wishes, Derek --- Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA Professor of History & African Studies University of Michigan tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 www.derekrpeterson.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From keith at breckenridge.org.za Thu May 30 15:38:26 2019 From: keith at breckenridge.org.za (Keith Breckenridge) Date: Thu, 30 May 2019 15:38:26 +0200 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Congratulations and thank you, Derek and all. Well done! ------- Keith Breckenridge *W I S E R* - The Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research, University of the Witwatersrand | Pbag 3, PO Wits, Johannesburg, South Africa, 2050 | Phone +27(0)11-7174272 | Web: wiser.wits.ac.za On Thu, 30 May 2019 at 15:25, Derek Peterson wrote: > Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: > > I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing > Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume > 45, no. 1. > > https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 > > This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print > Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a > June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws > together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring > how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to > constitute novel forms of sociality. > > The essays are as follows: > > Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and > Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? > > Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print > Literacy in African Languages? > > Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the > Operations of Genre? > > Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics > in the 1920s and 30s? > > Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the > Satirical Mode in South African Letters? > > Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: > Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild > Conquest? > > Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African > American History Archive? > > Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? > > > The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: > > > https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 > > > Delighted to have this in print! > > With good wishes, > > Derek > > > > --- > Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA > Professor of History & African Studies > University of Michigan > tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 > www.derekrpeterson.com > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From coetzee at umich.edu Thu May 30 15:38:28 2019 From: coetzee at umich.edu (Andries Coetzee) Date: Thu, 30 May 2019 09:38:28 -0400 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Congratulations to all on a wonderful collection of papers! Derek: Do you think this news should be shared with our friend over at Mellon (Saleem Badat)? Andries ____________________________________________ Andries W. Coetzee, www.umich.edu/~coetzee Editor of Language , Linguistic Society of America Director, African Studies Center , University of Michigan Professor, Department of Linguistics , University of Michigan Extraordinary Professor, North-West University , South Africa On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:25 AM Derek Peterson wrote: > Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: > > I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing > Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume > 45, no. 1. > > https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 > > This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print > Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a > June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws > together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring > how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to > constitute novel forms of sociality. > > The essays are as follows: > > Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and > Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? > > Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print > Literacy in African Languages? > > Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the > Operations of Genre? > > Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics > in the 1920s and 30s? > > Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the > Satirical Mode in South African Letters? > > Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: > Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild > Conquest? > > Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African > American History Archive? > > Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? > > > The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: > > > https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 > > > Delighted to have this in print! > > With good wishes, > > Derek > > > > --- > Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA > Professor of History & African Studies > University of Michigan > tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 > www.derekrpeterson.com > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Pamila.Gupta at wits.ac.za Thu May 30 15:51:06 2019 From: Pamila.Gupta at wits.ac.za (Pamila Gupta) Date: Thu, 30 May 2019 13:51:06 +0000 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: , Message-ID: Looks wonderful? congratulations to all! Sincerely, Pamila Sent from my iPhone On 30 May 2019, at 19:12, Andries Coetzee > wrote: Congratulations to all on a wonderful collection of papers! Derek: Do you think this news should be shared with our friend over at Mellon (Saleem Badat)? Andries ____________________________________________ Andries W. Coetzee, www.umich.edu/~coetzee Editor of Language, Linguistic Society of America Director, African Studies Center, University of Michigan Professor, Department of Linguistics, University of Michigan Extraordinary Professor, North-West University, South Africa On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:25 AM Derek Peterson > wrote: Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume 45, no. 1. https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to constitute novel forms of sociality. The essays are as follows: Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print Literacy in African Languages? Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the Operations of Genre? Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics in the 1920s and 30s? Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the Satirical Mode in South African Letters? Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild Conquest? Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African American History Archive? Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 Delighted to have this in print! With good wishes, Derek --- Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA Professor of History & African Studies University of Michigan tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 www.derekrpeterson.com _______________________________________________ Sugarman mailing list Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From cath at burns.org.za Thu May 30 15:54:29 2019 From: cath at burns.org.za (Catherine Burns) Date: Thu, 30 May 2019 15:54:29 +0200 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Well done! It looks great. Cath *Catherine Burns* *Associate Professor of History* *Faculty of Humanities -- Department of Sociology* *Affiliated -- Centre for Sexualities, AIDS & Gender (CSA&G) * *Historical & Heritage Studies* *Room 19-24 Humanities, University of Pretoria, * *Private Bag X20 Hatfield 0028, South AfricaTel +27 (0) 12 420 4393 catherine.burns at up.ac.za and http://www.csagup.org * On Thu, 30 May 2019 at 15:29, Derek Peterson wrote: > Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: > > I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing > Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume > 45, no. 1. > > https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 > > This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print > Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a > June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws > together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring > how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to > constitute novel forms of sociality. > > The essays are as follows: > > Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and > Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? > > Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print > Literacy in African Languages? > > Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the > Operations of Genre? > > Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics > in the 1920s and 30s? > > Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the > Satirical Mode in South African Letters? > > Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: > Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild > Conquest? > > Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African > American History Archive? > > Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? > > > The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: > > > https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 > > > Delighted to have this in print! > > With good wishes, > > Derek > > > > --- > Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA > Professor of History & African Studies > University of Michigan > tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 > www.derekrpeterson.com > > _______________________________________________ > Sugarman mailing list > Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za > http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman > This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. > If you have received this communication in error, please notify us > immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or > disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. > Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on > behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content > of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may > contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not > necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, > Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are > subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the > contrary. > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From lmonts at umich.edu Thu May 30 15:58:36 2019 From: lmonts at umich.edu (Lester Monts) Date: Thu, 30 May 2019 09:58:36 -0400 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Congratulations to all...very well done! -lester On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:25 AM Derek Peterson wrote: > Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: > > I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing > Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume > 45, no. 1. > > https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 > > This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print > Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a > June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws > together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring > how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to > constitute novel forms of sociality. > > The essays are as follows: > > Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and > Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? > > Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print > Literacy in African Languages? > > Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the > Operations of Genre? > > Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics > in the 1920s and 30s? > > Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the > Satirical Mode in South African Letters? > > Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: > Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild > Conquest? > > Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African > American History Archive? > > Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? > > > The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: > > > https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 > > > Delighted to have this in print! > > With good wishes, > > Derek > > > > --- > Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA > Professor of History & African Studies > University of Michigan > tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 > www.derekrpeterson.com > > -- *LESTER P. MONTS* Professor of Music (Ethnomusicology) Arthur F. Thurnau Professor School of Music, Theatre, and Dance *STEARNS COLLECTION OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS &* *MICHIGAN MUSICAL HERITAGE PROJECT* 2376 Duderstadt Center 2281 Bonisteel Boulevard The University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2094 Phone: (734) 764-7443/764-4812 Email: lmonts at umich.edu *Please Copy Patty Hogan (pahogan at umich.edu ) on all * *office-related business* -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From mckelley at umich.edu Thu May 30 16:13:56 2019 From: mckelley at umich.edu (Mary Kelley) Date: Thu, 30 May 2019 10:13:56 -0400 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <234FD567-FD99-4337-9D8C-248A7B3A4610@umich.edu> Dear Derek Wonderful news. Thanks so much for all you have done to make this possible All best Mary Kelley Sent from my iPhone > On May 30, 2019, at 9:58 AM, Lester Monts wrote: > > Congratulations to all...very well done! > -lester > >> On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:25 AM Derek Peterson wrote: >> Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: >> >> I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume 45, no. 1. >> >> https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 >> >> This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to constitute novel forms of sociality. >> >> The essays are as follows: >> >> Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? >> >> Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print Literacy in African Languages? >> >> Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the Operations of Genre? >> >> Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics in the 1920s and 30s? >> >> Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the Satirical Mode in South African Letters? >> >> Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild Conquest? >> >> Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African American History Archive? >> >> Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? >> >> >> The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: >> >> https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 >> >> Delighted to have this in print! >> >> With good wishes, >> >> Derek >> >> >> >> --- >> Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA >> Professor of History & African Studies >> University of Michigan >> tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 >> www.derekrpeterson.com >> > > > -- > LESTER P. MONTS > Professor of Music (Ethnomusicology) > Arthur F. Thurnau Professor > School of Music, Theatre, and Dance > > STEARNS COLLECTION OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS & > MICHIGAN MUSICAL HERITAGE PROJECT > 2376 Duderstadt Center > 2281 Bonisteel Boulevard > The University of Michigan > Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2094 > > Phone: (734) 764-7443/764-4812 > Email: lmonts at umich.edu > Please Copy Patty Hogan (pahogan at umich.edu) on all > office-related business > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From ghecht at stanford.edu Thu May 30 16:34:53 2019 From: ghecht at stanford.edu (Gabrielle Hecht) Date: Thu, 30 May 2019 14:34:53 +0000 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: <234FD567-FD99-4337-9D8C-248A7B3A4610@umich.edu> References: <234FD567-FD99-4337-9D8C-248A7B3A4610@umich.edu> Message-ID: <0FA8F177-7C68-4F96-B086-004AFBF2002E@stanford.edu> Congratulations, everyone! I love getting news about these accomplishments. Miss you all? Gabrielle Gabrielle Hecht Frank Stanton Foundation Professor of Nuclear Security Senior Fellow, Center for International Security and Cooperation Professor of History Professor of Anthropology, by courtesy Stanford University Air in the Time of Oil, LA Review of Books (January 2019) The African Anthropocene, Aeon (February 2018) Interscalar Vehicles for an African Anthropocene: On Waste, Temporality, and Violence, Cultural Anthropology 33 (1, 2018): 109-141. On May 30, 2019, at 07:13, Mary Kelley > wrote: Dear Derek Wonderful news. Thanks so much for all you have done to make this possible All best Mary Kelley Sent from my iPhone On May 30, 2019, at 9:58 AM, Lester Monts > wrote: Congratulations to all...very well done! -lester On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:25 AM Derek Peterson > wrote: Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume 45, no. 1. https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to constitute novel forms of sociality. The essays are as follows: Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print Literacy in African Languages? Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the Operations of Genre? Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics in the 1920s and 30s? Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the Satirical Mode in South African Letters? Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild Conquest? Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African American History Archive? Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 Delighted to have this in print! With good wishes, Derek --- Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA Professor of History & African Studies University of Michigan tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 www.derekrpeterson.com -- LESTER P. MONTS Professor of Music (Ethnomusicology) Arthur F. Thurnau Professor School of Music, Theatre, and Dance STEARNS COLLECTION OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS & MICHIGAN MUSICAL HERITAGE PROJECT 2376 Duderstadt Center 2281 Bonisteel Boulevard The University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2094 Phone: (734) 764-7443/764-4812 Email: lmonts at umich.edu Please Copy Patty Hogan (pahogan at umich.edu) on all office-related business _______________________________________________ Sugarman mailing list Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From pitchera at umich.edu Thu May 30 17:26:44 2019 From: pitchera at umich.edu (Anne Pitcher) Date: Thu, 30 May 2019 11:26:44 -0400 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: <0FA8F177-7C68-4F96-B086-004AFBF2002E@stanford.edu> References: <234FD567-FD99-4337-9D8C-248A7B3A4610@umich.edu> <0FA8F177-7C68-4F96-B086-004AFBF2002E@stanford.edu> Message-ID: Wonderful to hear that this is out-congrats! Anne Anne Pitcher Department of Political Science Department of Afroamerican and African Studies University of Michigan Winner, Dudley Seers Prize for Best Article in the Journal of Development Studies, http://explore.tandfonline.com/page/bes/dudley-seers-prize From: Sugarman on behalf of Gabrielle Hecht Date: Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 10:34 AM To: Keith Breckenridge Cc: "sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za" Subject: Re: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers Congratulations, everyone! I love getting news about these accomplishments. Miss you all? Gabrielle Gabrielle Hecht Frank Stanton Foundation Professor of Nuclear Security Senior Fellow, Center for International Security and Cooperation Professor of History Professor of Anthropology, by courtesy Stanford University Air in the Time of Oil, LA Review of Books (January 2019) The African Anthropocene , Aeon (February 2018) Interscalar Vehicles for an African Anthropocene: On Waste, Temporality, and Violence, Cultural Anthropology 33 (1, 2018): 109-141. > On May 30, 2019, at 07:13, Mary Kelley wrote: > > Dear Derek > > Wonderful news. Thanks so much for all you have done to make this possible > > All best > > Mary Kelley > Sent from my iPhone > > On May 30, 2019, at 9:58 AM, Lester Monts wrote: > >> Congratulations to all...very well done! >> -lester >> >> On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:25 AM Derek Peterson wrote: >>> Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: >>> >>> I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing >>> Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume >>> 45, no. 1. >>> >>> https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 >>> >>> This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print Sociability >>> in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a June 2016 >>> workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws together >>> scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring how the >>> practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to constitute novel >>> forms of sociality. >>> >>> The essays are as follows: >>> >>> Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and >>> Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? >>> >>> Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print >>> Literacy in African Languages? >>> >>> Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the >>> Operations of Genre? >>> >>> Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics in >>> the 1920s and 30s? >>> >>> Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the >>> Satirical Mode in South African Letters? >>> >>> Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: >>> Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild >>> Conquest? >>> >>> Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African American >>> History Archive? >>> >>> Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? >>> >>> >>> The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: >>> >>> https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/ >>> 02533952.2019.1589333 >>> >>> Delighted to have this in print! >>> >>> With good wishes, >>> >>> Derek >>> >>> >>> >>> --- >>> Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA >>> Professor of History & African Studies >>> University of Michigan >>> tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 >>> www.derekrpeterson.com >>> >> >> >> -- >> LESTER P. MONTS >> Professor of Music (Ethnomusicology) >> Arthur F. Thurnau Professor >> School of Music, Theatre, and Dance >> >> STEARNS COLLECTION OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS & >> MICHIGAN MUSICAL HERITAGE PROJECT >> 2376 Duderstadt Center >> 2281 Bonisteel Boulevard >> The University of Michigan >> Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2094 >> >> Phone: (734) 764-7443/764-4812 >> Email: lmonts at umich.edu >> Please Copy Patty Hogan (pahogan at umich.edu) on all >> office-related business >> > _______________________________________________ > Sugarman mailing list > Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za > http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman > This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If > you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately > and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this > communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised > signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University > and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be > legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and > opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of > The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the > University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the > University agrees in writing to the contrary. _______________________________________________ Sugarman mailing list Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From jti at umich.edu Fri May 31 00:24:04 2019 From: jti at umich.edu (Judith Irvine) Date: Thu, 30 May 2019 18:24:04 -0400 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Thanks so much, Derek, for all your (and Isabel's) work on this special issue! I'm very pleased to take part in it. All best, Judy Le jeu. 30 mai 2019 ? 09:25, Derek Peterson a ?crit : > Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: > > I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing > Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume > 45, no. 1. > > https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 > > This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print > Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a > June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws > together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring > how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to > constitute novel forms of sociality. > > The essays are as follows: > > Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and > Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? > > Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print > Literacy in African Languages? > > Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the > Operations of Genre? > > Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics > in the 1920s and 30s? > > Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the > Satirical Mode in South African Letters? > > Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: > Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild > Conquest? > > Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African > American History Archive? > > Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? > > > The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: > > > https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 > > > Delighted to have this in print! > > With good wishes, > > Derek > > > > --- > Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA > Professor of History & African Studies > University of Michigan > tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 > www.derekrpeterson.com > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From Maria.Suriano at wits.ac.za Fri May 31 09:55:34 2019 From: Maria.Suriano at wits.ac.za (Maria Suriano) Date: Fri, 31 May 2019 07:55:34 +0000 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: <234FD567-FD99-4337-9D8C-248A7B3A4610@umich.edu> <0FA8F177-7C68-4F96-B086-004AFBF2002E@stanford.edu> Message-ID: Greetings! Congratulations, Isabel, Derek and all, for this special issue. I look forward to reading it! Maria From: Sugarman [mailto:sugarman-bounces at lists.wits.ac.za] On Behalf Of Anne Pitcher Sent: 30 May 2019 05:27 PM To: Gabrielle Hecht; Keith Breckenridge Cc: sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za Subject: Re: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers Wonderful to hear that this is out-congrats! Anne Anne Pitcher Department of Political Science Department of Afroamerican and African Studies University of Michigan Winner, Dudley Seers Prize for Best Article in the Journal of Development Studies, http://explore.tandfonline.com/page/bes/dudley-seers-prize From: Sugarman > on behalf of Gabrielle Hecht > Date: Thursday, May 30, 2019 at 10:34 AM To: Keith Breckenridge > Cc: "sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za" > Subject: Re: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers Congratulations, everyone! I love getting news about these accomplishments. Miss you all- Gabrielle Gabrielle Hecht Frank Stanton Foundation Professor of Nuclear Security Senior Fellow, Center for International Security and Cooperation Professor of History Professor of Anthropology, by courtesy Stanford University Air in the Time of Oil, LA Review of Books (January 2019) The African Anthropocene, Aeon (February 2018) Interscalar Vehicles for an African Anthropocene: On Waste, Temporality, and Violence, Cultural Anthropology 33 (1, 2018): 109-141. On May 30, 2019, at 07:13, Mary Kelley > wrote: Dear Derek Wonderful news. Thanks so much for all you have done to make this possible All best Mary Kelley Sent from my iPhone On May 30, 2019, at 9:58 AM, Lester Monts > wrote: Congratulations to all...very well done! -lester On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:25 AM Derek Peterson > wrote: Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume 45, no. 1. https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 This special issue-which we have entitled 'Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers'-arises out of a June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to constitute novel forms of sociality. The essays are as follows: Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, 'The Politics of the Page: Cutting and Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers' Judith Irvine, 'Minerva's Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print Literacy in African Languages' Madhumita Lahiri, 'The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the Operations of Genre' Natasha Erlank, 'Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics in the 1920s and 30s' Corinne Sandwith, 'Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the Satirical Mode in South African Letters' Bhekizizwe Peterson, 'Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine's Serialisation of Wild Conquest' Aston Gonzalez, 'William Dorsey and the Construction of an African American History Archive' Marry Kelley, 'The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism' The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 Delighted to have this in print! With good wishes, Derek --- Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA Professor of History & African Studies University of Michigan tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 www.derekrpeterson.com -- LESTER P. MONTS Professor of Music (Ethnomusicology) Arthur F. Thurnau Professor School of Music, Theatre, and Dance STEARNS COLLECTION OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS & MICHIGAN MUSICAL HERITAGE PROJECT 2376 Duderstadt Center 2281 Bonisteel Boulevard The University of Michigan Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2094 Phone: (734) 764-7443/764-4812 Email: lmonts at umich.edu Please Copy Patty Hogan (pahogan at umich.edu) on all office-related business _______________________________________________ Sugarman mailing list Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. _______________________________________________ Sugarman mailing list Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the contrary. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From simeneh at umich.edu Fri May 31 10:06:31 2019 From: simeneh at umich.edu (Simeneh Gebremariam) Date: Fri, 31 May 2019 11:06:31 +0300 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear Derek and All, Congratulations and thank you for this inspiring work, especially for us, students! Kindly, Simeneh On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 4:29 PM Derek Peterson wrote: > Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: > > I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing > Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume > 45, no. 1. > > https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 > > This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print > Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a > June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws > together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring > how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to > constitute novel forms of sociality. > > The essays are as follows: > > Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and > Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? > > Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print > Literacy in African Languages? > > Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the > Operations of Genre? > > Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics > in the 1920s and 30s? > > Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the > Satirical Mode in South African Letters? > > Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: > Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild > Conquest? > > Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African > American History Archive? > > Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? > > > The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: > > > https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 > > > Delighted to have this in print! > > With good wishes, > > Derek > > > > --- > Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA > Professor of History & African Studies > University of Michigan > tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 > www.derekrpeterson.com > > _______________________________________________ > Sugarman mailing list > Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za > http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman > This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. > If you have received this communication in error, please notify us > immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or > disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. > Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on > behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content > of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may > contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not > necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, > Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are > subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the > contrary. > -- Simeneh Betreyohannes Gebremariam PhD Candidate, Sociocultural Anthropology| Afroamerican & African Studies| World Performance Studies| http://lsa.umich.edu/anthro/people/graduate-students/simeneh.html -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From AAGONZALEZ at salisbury.edu Fri May 31 16:54:52 2019 From: AAGONZALEZ at salisbury.edu (Aston Gonzalez) Date: Fri, 31 May 2019 14:54:52 +0000 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <1559314498142.20218@salisbury.edu> Derek, This is fantastic news! Thank you for the leadership and advice that you and Isabel provided us during the publication process. Many congratulations all around. All my best, Aston Aston Gonzalez Assistant Professor of History Salisbury University ________________________________ From: Derek Peterson Sent: Thursday, May 30, 2019 9:25 AM To: sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za Cc: ASC-Heritage; Keith Breckenridge; Derek Peterson; Madhumita Lahiri; Erlank, Natasha; Corinne Sandwith; Bhekizizwe Peterson; Aston Gonzalez; Mary Kelley Subject: Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume 45, no. 1. https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 This special issue-which we have entitled 'Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers'-arises out of a June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to constitute novel forms of sociality. The essays are as follows: Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, 'The Politics of the Page: Cutting and Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers' Judith Irvine, 'Minerva's Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print Literacy in African Languages' Madhumita Lahiri, 'The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the Operations of Genre' Natasha Erlank, 'Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics in the 1920s and 30s' Corinne Sandwith, 'Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the Satirical Mode in South African Letters' Bhekizizwe Peterson, 'Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine's Serialisation of Wild Conquest' Aston Gonzalez, 'William Dorsey and the Construction of an African American History Archive' Marry Kelley, 'The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism' The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 Delighted to have this in print! With good wishes, Derek --- Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA Professor of History & African Studies University of Michigan tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 www.derekrpeterson.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From dwcohen at umich.edu Fri May 31 18:04:59 2019 From: dwcohen at umich.edu (David Cohen) Date: Fri, 31 May 2019 12:04:59 -0400 Subject: [Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: So great to read. Congratulations to all who participated in this achievement. On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:29 AM Derek Peterson wrote: > Dear Wits and Michigan colleagues: > > I am happy to say that the latest publication arising out of our ongoing > Mellon-funded collaboration has just appeared in _Social Dynamics_, volume > 45, no. 1. > > https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rsdy20/45/1 > > This special issue?which we have entitled ?Authorship and Print > Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers??arises out of a > June 2016 workshop held in the Maropeng Hotel in Sterkfontein. It draws > together scholars of African-American and African print cultures, exploring > how the practice of reprinting, plagiarism, and archiving helped to > constitute novel forms of sociality. > > The essays are as follows: > > Isabel Hofmeyr and Derek Peterson, ?The Politics of the Page: Cutting and > Pasting in South African and African-American Newspapers? > > Judith Irvine, ?Minerva?s Orthography: Early Colonial Projects for Print > Literacy in African Languages? > > Madhumita Lahiri, ?The Pose of the Author: Colonial Africa and the > Operations of Genre? > > Natasha Erlank, ?Umteteli wa Bantu and the Constitution of Social Publics > in the 1920s and 30s? > > Corinne Sandwith, ?Well-seasoned Talks: The Newspaper Column and the > Satirical Mode in South African Letters? > > Bhekizizwe Peterson, ?Imagining and Appreciating the Long Eye of History: > Race, Form, and Representation in Drum Magazine?s Serialisation of Wild > Conquest? > > Aston Gonzalez, ?William Dorsey and the Construction of an African > American History Archive? > > Marry Kelley, ?The Difference of Colour: Reading and Writing Abolitionism? > > > The introductory essay by Isabel and myself can be downloaded here: > > > https://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/h3HGTYZyQCX7tWtZajD4/full?target=10.1080/02533952.2019.1589333 > > > Delighted to have this in print! > > With good wishes, > > Derek > > > > --- > Dr. Derek R. Peterson, FBA > Professor of History & African Studies > University of Michigan > tel: (+1) 734 615 3608 > www.derekrpeterson.com > > _______________________________________________ > Sugarman mailing list > Sugarman at lists.wits.ac.za > http://lists.wits.ac.za/mailman/listinfo/sugarman > This communication is intended for the addressee only. It is confidential. > If you have received this communication in error, please notify us > immediately and destroy the original message. You may not copy or > disseminate this communication without the permission of the University. > Only authorised signatories are competent to enter into agreements on > behalf of the University and recipients are thus advised that the content > of this message may not be legally binding on the University and may > contain the personal views and opinions of the author, which are not > necessarily the views and opinions of The University of the Witwatersrand, > Johannesburg. All agreements between the University and outsiders are > subject to South African Law unless the University agrees in writing to the > contrary. > -- David William Cohen 1129 Pontiac Trail Ann Arbor, MI 48105 USA -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: