Notes
Joseph Harrison, University of Manchester.
Steven Pierce, School of Arts, Histories and Cultures, University of Manchester.
S. H. Rigby, History, University of Manchester.
Jelke Boesten, Peace Studies, University of Bradford.
Jelke Boesten, Peace Studies, University of Bradford.
Paul Garner, Spanish, Portuguese and Latin American Studies, University of Leeds.
Stephen K. Wegren, Southern Methodist University, Texas, USA.
Mark Moritz, Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology Western Oregon University, USA.
Dip Kapoor, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
1 Outside America, of course, the study of Africa was established much earlier, and involved equally specific approaches. One is the tradition of British colonial writing exemplified by Hailey [Citation1938]. Another is represented by anthropological monographs based on participant-observation, studies dating back to the 1920s [Kuper, Citation1973]. The third is the long-established historiography of South Africa, outlined by Saunders [Citation1988]. All of them had much to say about rural African society.