Notes from the Field is a new section that will appear regularly in The Historian. Historians will be invited to contribute short “notes” discussing what they are currently working on and thinking about, whether in their research, their teaching, their public history projects, or their administrative positions. We hope that this will help foster collegial recognition across the discipline's many fields and institutional divisions
Notes
Notes from the Field is a new section that will appear regularly in The Historian. Historians will be invited to contribute short “notes” discussing what they are currently working on and thinking about, whether in their research, their teaching, their public history projects, or their administrative positions. We hope that this will help foster collegial recognition across the discipline's many fields and institutional divisions
1. Nomboniso Gasa, “‘Let Them Build More Gaols,’” in Basus'iimbokodo, Bawel'imilambo/They Remove Boulders and Cross Rivers: Women in South African History, ed. Nomboniso Gasa (Cape Town: HSRC Press, 2007), 132.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Jill E. Kelly
Jill E. Kelly is Associate Professor of History at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas. She is the author of To Swim with Crocodiles: Land, Authority, and Belonging in South Africa, 1800‐1996 (Michigan State University Press, 2018, and University of KwaZulu‐Natal Press, 2019). Her work has also appeared in African Historical Review, Journal of Southern African Studies, and the edited collection Gendering Ethnicity in African Women's Lives (University of Wisconsin Press). Her research has been supported by the American Council of Learned Societies (2015) and Fulbright (2010‐2011, 2018‐2019).