A Cartographic Narrative
Visualizing the 1760-1761 Slave Revolt in Jamaica, the greatest slave insurrection in the eighteenth century British Empire.
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Liz Timbs is a postdoctoral teaching fellow in African History at North Carolina State University. She is a contributing editor at Africa is a Country.
Visualizing the 1760-1761 Slave Revolt in Jamaica, the greatest slave insurrection in the eighteenth century British Empire.
A digital collection that enhances understandings of the South African struggle against apartheid through the medium of film.
The global impact of the exchanges and experiences between China and Africa.
The digitization of oral histories of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti and its aftermath.
The preservation of nostalgia by evicted black residents of one of Cape Town’s now very white suburbs.
Badilisha is rare: an African project funded by a mix of government and private art donors, facilitating media access to African poets.
When the government does not step in, these informal economies are developed to meet a certain need that the government should be taking care of. That’s exactly what’s happened here. And it’s fascinating to see, because it’s totally driven by need.Early last year, these routes were used in efforts to fundamentally restructure the informal transit system in Nairobi, utilizing this knowledge and the digital technologies that created it to design more effective routes and provide better information on routes to citizens. You can see the fruits of their labor above and on their site. The GIS data for this project is available on this site, meaning that researchers can access and utilize this data for their own purposes. Someone has already begun trying to utilize GoogleMaps to map out the matatu routes. Using the files available on the site,I created an interactive version of this map using ArcGIS. You can access this map by clicking on the image below. The data generated in this project has already been used by some to improve the experience of matatu riders, with some developers using this project as a launchpad for crowdsourcing data on accidents and crime, while others have developed a mobile payment system that calculates the correct payment for a rider’s trip to combat price fluctuations. And, really, this project is about more than just a single map. In a piece written for The Guardian, Klopp insisted that
To us the data and map are not ends in themselves; they should be powerful ways to spur advocacy and support better-informed public dialogue and planning. This is a necessary step towards better public transit, which is critical to building better cities.In this perspective, this project is just a stepping stone to utilizing digital technologies to improve the daily lives of citizens around the world, not just in Nairobi. And it shows the potential for using African participants to devise solutions to real problems that require innovative solutions. Follow Digital Matatus on Facebook and Twitter. Also keep track of the latest from the C4D Lab at the University of Nairobi on Twitter. As always, feel free to send me suggestions in the comments or via Twitter of sites you might like to see covered in future editions of The Digital Archive!
For me, the purpose of this blog is simply to learn more about my history. Collectively, there is constant negativity that surrounds Nigeria and Africa as a whole, so the objective of this blog is to show Nigeria’s true beauty and richness in culture both in the past and at this very moment. And who doesn’t like to see old pictures of their beloved country? Haha.As Olayemi's comments indicate, the main focus of this project, whether on Tumblr, Facebook or Instagram, is on photographs as a means to preserve the past, in addition to inspiring nostalgia among Nigerians, wherever they may be located. The Facebook group (which requires membership) is host to a whole range of content, from advertisements in magazines to profiles of athletes to family photos. The Tumblr offers photographs, gifs, and videos that span the Nigerian past from the nineteenth century to the present. Between the two different platforms, users can explore a wide expanse of Nigerian realities, inspiring critical thought and nostalgic reflection. You can see a selection of photos pulled from Tumblr below. [gallery theme="photomosaic" ids="88547,88546,88544,88543,88542,88541,88540,88538,88539"] Over the years, the project has jumped from social media to the art scene, being featured in art exhibitions in LagosPhoto 2012 and a "Native Nostalgia" exhibit in Johannesburg in 2013-2014. The Lagos event, in particular, marked the first time that the project left the confines of social media, with the "intimately scaled prints cover the walls of the exhibition venue to form an encapsulating mural." Curator of LagosPhoto, Joseph Gergel, found that although there was doubt about the transition of the project into a gallery space and the ability to maintain the connectivity that marks the project online, but, he found, "it did: visitors conversed in person and exchanged their own memories of...cultural events." The analog presentations of the fruits of this digital projects shows just how far an endeavor of this kind can go in forging community outside of physical boundaries. Contribute to Nigerian Nostalgia through Facebook. You can also submit photos through the Tumblr site. You can also follow Nigerian Nostalgia on Twitter and Instagram. As always, feel free to send me suggestions in the comments or via Twitter of sites you might like to see covered in future editions of The Digital Archive!
This tumblr focuses on reading, researching, and writing histories of intimacy, sex, and sexuality during Atlantic slave period.
An archive – stretching from 1820 to 1960 – of civil, police, and criminal records in colonial Banjul.
Rock art is one of the most evocative of all the pieces of heritage left for us by our ancient ancestors. By looking into its symbolism, we can look into the minds of people who lived thousands of years ago. Rock art can take us back to a time when the world was very different, to the time when Egypt was home to the greatest civilization on earth. At that time people were painting rock art in the centre of the Sahara. But, even then, the rocks were not clean. The painters were covering over rock art that was already some 6000 years old. And, while Pygmy dancers entertained the great Pharaohs, their womenfolk painted the shelters of central Africa with a geometric art that remains amongst the most sophisticated of all the world's arts. These great traditions, and hundreds of others, remain on the rocks to be discovered by anyone willing to take the time. The following pages introduce you to some of our great painted and engraved treasures, but words and pictures are a poor substitute for a visit to a site to witness the real thing.The Rock Art Research Institute (RARI), based at the University of the Witswatersrand in Johannesburg, aims to not only research Africa's rock art, but also to publicize, preserve, and conserve these treasures. And one of the ways that they have worked to achieve these aims is through the South African Rock Art Digital Archive. Some of the images from RARI are available through the Google Cultural Institute. But while the Google collection only contains five images, this site contains over 270,000 images of rock art from 30 institutions around the world. The digitization of the RARI collections began in 2002, thanks to funding from the Ringing Rocks Foundation. In developing their preservation schema and digitization methods, this organization realized it could use their newfound expertise to preserve other private and institutional collections, including materials owned by the Analysis of Rock Art of Lesotho project, Iziko Museums of Cape Town, Natal Museum, National Museum, University of Cape Town, and the University of South Africa (the specific collections and their digitization dates can be found on this page). This collaborative venture (funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation) resulted in the website that you can access today. [gallery theme="photomosaic" ids="86875,86885,86886,86887,86888,86889,86890" orderby="rand"] There are multiple ways to navigate the site, which are laid out in these guidelines on how to search the database. The most straightforward way to explore the archive is through the Browse options. You can search by subject (ranging from animals to equipment to human figures), traditions (focusing on African hunter-gatherers, farmers, and pastoralists/herders), researchers and institutions, and locations (specifically Southern African public rock art sites--though this project also features rock art from throughout the continent). For those planning trips to Southern Africa, this site also acts as a hub of information for public rock art sites that you can visit (as well as proper etiquette for interacting with the artifacts). It is useful to go through each browsing function to explore all of the options available, since the organizational scheme of this site seems to obfuscate as much of its content as it presents. For example, there are brief essays with each browsing category that are only accessible if you click through each section. Take, for example, this introductory essay on KhoeKhoe Rock Art. Or this essay on Chewa Rock Art in Malawi and Zambia. On that same note, this is not just, as the title suggests, a South African Rock Art Digital Archive, but an African Rock Art Digital Archive. There are artifacts included from Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Lesotho, Mali, the Sahara, Kenya, and, of course, South Africa. But you do have to dig for them. Find out how you can get involved with SARADA's efforts here. You can also follow the Rock Art Research Institute on Facebook.
The African Activist Archive Project website contains more than 7,200 freely accessible documents, photographs, buttons, T-shirts, posters, and video and audio recordings from the African solidarity movement from the 1950s to the 1990s. We thank the more than 90 activists who have contributed materials to this collection. We have been adding about 1,200 items per year, and we are eager to hear from people who have kept materials from this struggle.The collaborative nature of this archive, being gathered from individual activists and organizations, as well as being sourced from various archives around the world, captures a rich geographic and thematic focus. You can navigate the collection through a variety of categories, from the media type to the African nation referenced to the organization which produced the material (both inside and outside the US). Root and Knight provided a great sampling of the posters available on the site in their previous post, so below are a few examples of the other materials captured in the collection. [gallery theme="photomosaic" ids="86534,86533,86536,86554,86555,86553"] It's hard to describe the width and breadth of this collection, let alone it's potential utility for research. While I am a historian of South Africa and Africa more generally, I can only grasp a fraction of the potential that this archive holds for unlocking more stories of decolonization, the antiapartheid movement, and international social justice efforts. Each person who uses this site will discover something different. But taking the time to explore and discover in this rich resource will, undoubtedly, reap rewards. Users interested in delving into the anti-apartheid movement will find the Related Sites list interesting. This extensive list of digital initiatives, museum websites, films, and archives provides a great jumping off point for further exploration into these compelling histories. For those scholars and researchers who might want to go a step further than that, the Archives list offers further pathways for exploring the rich history of the global African activist networks. Keep up with all of the latest from African Activist Archive on Facebook. If you have or know of anyone who has materials that would fit this unique archive, see the Collection Policy for more information. As always, feel free to send me suggestions in the comments or via Twitter of sites you might like to see covered in future editions of The Digital Archive! We've been getting some good suggestions from readers that will be reviewed soon!
“Photographs are a way of imprisoning reality... One can't possess reality, one can possess images--one can't possess the present but one can possess the past.”While, as a historian, I can not pretend to be attempting to possess the past, I can always strive to present the past, an endeavor made much easier through the existence of digital historical photograph collections like the The Humphrey Winterton Collection of East African Photographs: 1860-1960. The Humphrey Winterton Collection is an expansive collection of over 7,500 photographs taken mainly in East Africa between 1860 and 1960. Part of the Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies Collection at Northwestern University, the Winterton Collection was assembled by British collector Humphrey Winterton. These photographs preserve a range of key historical moments in the region, from the opening of the Busoga Railway in 1912 to Hermann von Wissman's 1889-1890 expedition to suppress the Abushiri Revolt. In addition to major historical events, this collection also captures life in this region from the mid-nineteenth- to mid-twentieth century. From portraits to landscapes, this collection really does, as the site purports, represent "an unsurpassed resource for the study of the history of photography in East Africa." The photographs are tagged and cataloged in a variety of ways, but, to be honest, these efforts at organizing the collection make it quite difficult to find anything. It's much simpler to use the keyword search function to navigate the collection or, if you have the time, to browse the collection in its totality. [caption id="attachment_86451" align="alignleft" width="200"] Jomo Kenyatta & Christopher Kiprotech, then member for Kericho East[/caption] The site also features an educational collection, entitled "In the Classroom." Educators will find the Lesson Plan useful to begin teaching students how to engage with not only the items contained in the Winterton collection, but historical photographs more general. The architects of the site have also assembled a series of curated galleries that can serve as jumping off points for learning more about East African women, political leadership, and, even, the Kenyan heritage of President Barack Obama. This section also includes links to some other African historical photograph collections (which I won't go into detail about here since they might appear in a future edition of The Digital Archive!). Keep up with all of the latest from the Winterton Collection and the Melville J. Herskovits Library at Northwestern University on Twitter and, as always, feel free to send me suggestions in the comments or via Twitter of sites you might like to see covered in future editions of The Digital Archive!