Researching African History: A Practical Guide to Sources, Archives, and Digital Methods
MTA
Methodology, Oral History, and Building Ethical Archives for Scholars and Students
*Researching African History: A Practical Guide to Sources, Archives, and Digital Methods* provides a comprehensive framework for conducting rigorous and ethical historical research across the continent. The book emphasizes that methodology is inseparable from ethics, urging researchers to move beyond colonial-era extractive practices toward collaborative models that prioritize community reciprocity, data sovereignty, and linguistic plurality. By mapping diverse repositoriesâfrom national and missionary archives to Islamic manuscript libraries and family collectionsâthe guide offers a practical roadmap for navigating the fragmented and often politically charged landscape of African historical records.
The text provides detailed technical guidance on the "hands-on" aspects of fieldwork, including the craft of oral history, the management of material culture, and the use of environmental and scientific data. It highlights the importance of "reading against the grain" of colonial sources while elevating oral testimonies and vernacular traditions as foundational evidence. Practical chapters cover the logistics of safety and fieldwork, the nuances of interview design across different languages, and the complexities of permissions and intellectual property in varied legal and cultural contexts.
A significant portion of the book is dedicated to digital methods, offering reproducible workflows for managing large, multilingual datasets. It introduces scholars to tools such as GIS for spatial analysis, OCR and OpenRefine for data cleaning, and platforms like Omeka and Mukurtu for building accessible, ethically grounded digital archives. The guide emphasizes that digital tools should augment rather than replace human judgment, ensuring that technological interventions respect cultural protocols and maintain the interpretive depth required for historical analysis.
Ultimately, the book serves as both a manual and a call to action for decolonizing African history. It encourages researchers to embrace uncertainty and silences in the record as analytical opportunities rather than failures. By integrating traditional archival skills with modern digital techniques and a steadfast commitment to stewardship, the guide aims to equip the next generation of scholars to produce histories that are methodologically robust, transparently sourced, and deeply accountable to the communities they document.
This book is designed for graduate students and independent researchers specializing in African history who need concrete, practical guidance for conducting archival, field, and digital research. It particularly benefits those committed to ethical, collaborative approaches that prioritize community engagement, data sovereignty, and methodological rigor while navigating the continent's diverse linguistic, regional, and source landscapes.
May 5, 2026
English
64,516 words
4 hours 31 minutes
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