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African History

A brief overview of African history and politics.

Introduction to Archival Searching

There are different search tactics to find primary sources.  Here are some methods to help start finding relevant archival and special collections to you.  The first step, of course, is having your research topic defined and having done some preliminary readings.  Having a clear idea of what information that you need to find or what information will help with the search process. 

As anyone who has done research typically goes from Broad to Narrow focus of research.  Whereas for Special Collection and Archives, to find specific documents relevant for your research, you must go from narrow to board.  The best questions to start your searching are:

  • What records would be produced?
  • When would these records be created?
  • Who would save these records?”

This helps you to figure out what is a reasonable place to start searching and where to start looking.

Methods

Citations

In historical books, essays, encyclopedias , or news articles may have used archival collections as a source of information for their writing.  Looking at citations can tell you useful collections and series that you can request.  This can be especially useful if you are analyzing the document in a different historiography philosophy than the author.  In the majority of cases, citations of primary resources will point to overarching collections at an institution, not necessarily the specific series where they are pulling documents.  This will require further investigation of the Special Collections and looking at the Finding Aid for finer details.

 

Finding the Search Terms

Using subject index search is not a good methodology to find or see what archival collections exist.  Part is due to the fact that records will cover too broad of topics.  For example,  correspondences will cover in-depth detail about an individual’s feelings, current events, and drawings over a period of several years.  In some cases, the volume of records prevents a subject index being formed.  Second, most Archival or Special Collection’s search/ retrieval systems will not have “related” search term features or the “Narrow or broader” categories to help with your search.  The third aspect is most archival collections are arranged to preserve the context of which the records are created.

The best search methods are identifying formal names of individuals, corporate names , or full organization names.  This is due to how records are being preserved, it also depends on the institution and how these records were created.  For Example, Ella Baker, the African-American Civil Right Activist, has personal papers at  New York Public Library.  However, her professional’s work papers can be found under Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)’s Record and at National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)’s records. 

Date Ranges

Identifying date ranges of creations.  Having key time frames helps greatly with filtering what are relevant materials while searching for primary resources.  Knowing when an organization was formed or disbanded , when an individual lived where for what duration,  or what years are most relevant to your topic of research.  Answering these questions helps filter when you are looking at the right series.  This also will help Archivist and Special Collections Librarian in advising you on next searching steps.  Case and point, the Bureau of Indian Affairs’ California regionally offices regions grow and shrink, changing where records for a specific Native American’s tribes will be stored.  As a result, you may end up going to the National Archives at San Francisco for one year and the next year all records will be stored at the  National Archives at Riverside.

African Specific Archival Databases

National Library of South Africa - Archives

This consist of the digital/digitized collections of the  National Library of South Africa (NLSA).  The collections includes newspapers of historical value, as well as material from the Special Collections section of the Information Access Services, which provides reference and retrieval services for specific material and collections which can be divided into four distinct categories: Rare books, Manuscript, Maps, and Iconography.

Tunisian National Archives

This is the Tunisian National Archives’ mission is to preserve, collect, and manage Tunisia’s public and private archival heritage.  It engages in cultural, educational, and research activities, including digitization and document conservation.  This website is in Arabic but can be translate if you enable an extension from google. 

Archives Africa

The Archives Africa online catalogue forms part of a new project: ‘Finding Africa: exploring the potential of a continent's archives', supported and developed by a team from King's College London and the National Archives of Madagascar. Archives Africa has cross-reference both new and existing archive catalogues by students, researchers and the general public drawn from more than 150 cultural organizations across London including those of universities, learned societies and local government.

Kenya National Archives and Documentation

The Kenya National Archives and Documentation Service was officially established by an Act of Parliament in 1965 which tasked it with management of all public records.

African Activist Archive

The African Activist Archive is preserving and making available online the records of activism in the United States to support the struggles of African peoples against colonialism, apartheid, and social injustice from the 1950s through the 1990s.

Bailey’s African History Archives

This website has been set up to host the Bailey’s African History Digital Archive. The Digital Archive is a work in progress and is being added to and developed over time.  This website aims to create a space for students, researchers, artists and the greater public to find inspiration and engage with its historical content. Images featured were photographed over a period of three-decade, Drum magazine’s five editions captured both the brutal realities of apartheid South Africa, that it delivered in a sweet-wrapper of sport, sex and scandal, as well as the newly urbanized black culture of the anglophone African countries as they achieved independence.