Empire and Education in Africa brings together a rich body of scholarship on the history of education in colonial Africa. It provides a unique contribution to the historiography of education in different African countries and a useful point of entry for scholars new to the field of African colonial education. The collection includes case studies from South Africa, Ethiopia, Madagascar, French West Africa (Afrique Occidentale Française) and Tanzania (then Tanganyika). It will therefore prove invaluable for scholars in the histories of French, British and German colonialism in Africa. The book…mehr
Empire and Education in Africa brings together a rich body of scholarship on the history of education in colonial Africa. It provides a unique contribution to the historiography of education in different African countries and a useful point of entry for scholars new to the field of African colonial education. The collection includes case studies from South Africa, Ethiopia, Madagascar, French West Africa (Afrique Occidentale Française) and Tanzania (then Tanganyika). It will therefore prove invaluable for scholars in the histories of French, British and German colonialism in Africa. The book examines similarities and differences in approaches to education across a broad geographical and chronological framework, with chapters focusing on the period between 1830 and 1950. The chapters highlight some central concerns in writing histories of education that transcend geographic or imperial boundaries. The text addresses the relationship between voluntary societies' role in education provision and state education. The book also deals with 'adapted' education: what kind of education was appropriate to African people or African contexts, and how did this differ across and between colonial contexts? Finally, many of the chapters deal with issues of gender in colonial education, showing how issues of gender were central to education provision in Africa.
Peter Kallaway, a teacher educator/historian/comparative educationalist/policy analyst, is Emeritus Professor of Education at the University of the Western Cape and Research Associate at the University of Cape Town. A past and current member of the editorial boards of several academic journals, including History of Education, he is editor of The History of Education under Apartheid: 1948¿1994 (2003); Education after Apartheid (1997); Johannesburg: Images and Continuities: A History of Working Class Life through Pictures, 1885¿1935 (with P. Pearson, 1986); and Apartheid and Education (1984). Rebecca Swartz completed her Ph.D., "Ignorant and Idle: Indigenous Education in Natal and Western Australia, 1833¿1875", at Royal Holloway, University of London, in 2015. She was funded by the Commonwealth Scholarship Commission. She is currently a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Historical Studies at the University of Cape Town.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments - Peter Kallaway/Rebecca Swartz: Introduction - Tim Allender: 'Lessons' from the Subcontinent: Indian Dynamics in British Africa - Section One: Nineteenth Century - Rebecca Swartz: Industrial Education in Natal: The British Imperial Context, 1830-1860 - Helen Ludlow: Shaping Colonial Subjects through Government Education: Policy, Implementation and Reception at the Cape of Good Hope, 1839-1862 - Brian Willan: 'A Test of Civilisation'? Shakespeare, the Anglican Church and Mission Education in Victorian Grahamstown - Section Two: Inter-War Era British Territories - Christina Cappy: The Role of Philanthropic Foundations in Shaping South African Colonial Educational Policy in the Early Twentieth Century - Richard Glotzer: Charles Templeman Loram: Education and Race Relations in South Africa and North America - Meghan Healy-Clancy: Mass Education and the Gendered Politics of 'Development' in Apartheid South Africa and Late-Colonial British Africa - Section Three: German Sphere/East Africa - Peter Kallaway: German Lutheran Missions, German Anthropology and Science in African Colonial Education - Section Four: French Colonial Education in Africa - Elsie Rockwell: Tracing Assimilation and Adaptation through School Exercise Books from Afrique Occidentale Française in the Early Twentieth Century - Ellen Vea Rosnes: Protestant and French Colonial Literacies in Madagascar in the Early Twentieth Century - Pierre Guidi: Independence and Influence: Empress Mänän School-An Ethio-French Girls' School in 1930s Ethiopia - Bio-Notes of Contributors - Index
Acknowledgments - Peter Kallaway/Rebecca Swartz: Introduction - Tim Allender: 'Lessons' from the Subcontinent: Indian Dynamics in British Africa - Section One: Nineteenth Century - Rebecca Swartz: Industrial Education in Natal: The British Imperial Context, 1830-1860 - Helen Ludlow: Shaping Colonial Subjects through Government Education: Policy, Implementation and Reception at the Cape of Good Hope, 1839-1862 - Brian Willan: 'A Test of Civilisation'? Shakespeare, the Anglican Church and Mission Education in Victorian Grahamstown - Section Two: Inter-War Era British Territories - Christina Cappy: The Role of Philanthropic Foundations in Shaping South African Colonial Educational Policy in the Early Twentieth Century - Richard Glotzer: Charles Templeman Loram: Education and Race Relations in South Africa and North America - Meghan Healy-Clancy: Mass Education and the Gendered Politics of 'Development' in Apartheid South Africa and Late-Colonial British Africa - Section Three: German Sphere/East Africa - Peter Kallaway: German Lutheran Missions, German Anthropology and Science in African Colonial Education - Section Four: French Colonial Education in Africa - Elsie Rockwell: Tracing Assimilation and Adaptation through School Exercise Books from Afrique Occidentale Française in the Early Twentieth Century - Ellen Vea Rosnes: Protestant and French Colonial Literacies in Madagascar in the Early Twentieth Century - Pierre Guidi: Independence and Influence: Empress Mänän School-An Ethio-French Girls' School in 1930s Ethiopia - Bio-Notes of Contributors - Index
Rezensionen
«Empire and Education in Africa is a useful collection and should be valuable to readers as they discover the roots of current issues from the study of colonial schooling in Africa.» (Brendan P. Carmody, History of Education 2017)
«[...] scholars and students of the history of education in Africa or the history of colonial education in other world regions will find something of interest in this collection. It is a valuable and welcome addition to the literature.» (Kelly Duke Bryant, The International Journal of African Historical Studies vol. 50, 2 2017).
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