[Sugarman] Authorship and Print Sociability in African and African-American Newspapers

Pamila Gupta Pamila.Gupta at wits.ac.za
Thu May 30 15:51:06 SAST 2019


Looks wonderful— congratulations to all!

Sincerely,
Pamila

Sent from my iPhone

On 30 May 2019, at 19:12, Andries Coetzee <coetzee at umich.edu<mailto:coetzee at umich.edu>> 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<http://www.umich.edu/~coetzee>

Editor of Language<https://journals.linguisticsociety.org/language/index.php/language/index>, Linguistic Society of America
Director, African Studies Center<https://ii.umich.edu/asc>, University of Michigan
Professor, Department of Linguistics<https://lsa.umich.edu/linguistics>, University of Michigan
Extraordinary Professor, North-West University<http://www.nwu.ac.za/>, South Africa


On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 9:25 AM Derek Peterson <drpeters at umich.edu<mailto:drpeters at umich.edu>> 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<http://www.derekrpeterson.com>

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