Deprecated: Array and string offset access syntax with curly braces is deprecated in /data/indian-ocean.nmafa/htdocs/wp-content/plugins/simple-ldap-login/includes/adLDAP.php on line 2267
Resources on east Africa and Indian Ocean world photography: bibliography, links and audio files

Resources

This resources page contains three sections: a selected series of links to online exhibitions, collections, and articles; a select bibliography organised by themes; and audio files which include poetry and music from Oman and the Swahili coast (including versions in Swahili and Arabic).

BIBLIOGRAPHY

East Africa and the Indian Ocean, culture and migration

Alpers, Edward and Himanshu Prabha Ray. Cross Currents and Community Networks, the History of the Indian Ocean World, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2007

Fair, Laura. Pastimes and Politics: Culture, Community, and Identity in Post-Abolition Urban Zanzibar, 1890-1945. James Currey, Oxford, 2001

Glassman, Jonathon. Feasts and Riot: Revelry, Rebellion, and Popular Consciousness on the Swahili Coast, 1856-1888, Heinemann, Portsmouth, 1995

Myers, Garth. “The Early History of the Other Side of Zanzibar Town,” in History and Conservation of Zanzibar Stone Town, ed. A. Sheriff. Ohio University Press, Athens, pp. 30-45, 1995

Prestholdt, Jeremy. Domesticating the World: African Consumerism and the Genealogies of Globalization. University of California Press, Berkeley, 2008

Sherrif, Abdul. Dhow Cultures of the Indian Ocean: Cosmopolitanism, Commerce and Islam. Columbia University Press, New York, 2010

Collections of the Mathatma Gandhi Institute and Rabindranath Tagore Institute Museum and Archives here

Clarence-Smith, William Gervase, et al. “The Economics of the Indian Ocean Slave Trade in the Nineteenth Century”, special issue of Slavery and Abolition, 9, 3, 1988

Women, biography, identity

Fair, Laura. “Remaking Fashion in the Paris of the Indian Ocean: Dress, Performance, and the Cultural Construction of a Cosmopolitan Zanzibari Identity,” in Fashioning Africa: Power and the Politics of Dress, ed. Jean Allman, Indiana University Press, Bloomington, 2004

McCurdy, Sheryl. “Fashioning Sexuality: Desire, Manyema Ethnicity, and the Creation of the ‘Kanga,’ ca. 1880-1900.” The International Journal of African Historical Studies 39, 3 (2006) pp 441-69

Salme, Sayyide (Ruete, Emily). An Arabian Princess Between Two Worlds: Memoirs, Letters Home, Sequels to the Memoirs, Syrian Customs and Usages. E. Van Donzel, eds. E.J. Brill, Leiden, 1992.
The 1886 autobiography of a daughter of Sa’id ibn Sultan, the Sultan of Oman and Zanzibar, offers glimpses of Zanzibar life between 1850 and 1865

Early photography and visual culture

Barthes, Christine. Camera obscura : premiers portraits au Daguerréotype, 1841-1851, Musée du quai Branly, Paris, 2007

Haney, Erin. Photography and Africa. Reaktion, London, 2010

Collections of l’Iconothèque Historique de l’Océan Indien www.ihoi.org

Killingray, David and Andrew Roberts. “An Outline History of Photography in Africa to ca. 1940,” in History of Africa: A Journal of Method. 16, 1, (1989), pp. 197-208

Meier, Sandy Prita. “At Home in the World: Portrait Photography and Swahili Mercantile Aesthetics.” A Companion to Modern African Art, Wiley-Blackwell, 2013

Nippa Annagret and Peter Herbstreuth. Along the Gulf, From Basra to Muscat, Photographs by Hermann Burchardt, Schiler, Berlin, 2006

Perez, Nissan N. Focus East: Early Photography in the Near East 1839-1885, Harry N. Abrams, New York, 1988

Revue Noire. Anthology of African and Indian Ocean Photography, Paris, 1999

Collections of Frank and Francis Carpenter Collection, Library of Congress on the World Digital Library

East African collections, The National Archives, United Kingdom, on flickr 

The African Diaspora in the Indian Ocean World, New York Public Library http://exhibitions.nypl.org

ONLINE COLLECTIONS AND RESOURCES

Guillain’s Atlas

Re-examining Charles Guillain’s folio-atlas, by Xavier Courouble blog.library.si.edu

Full text, Documents sur l’histoire, la geographie et le commerce de l’afrique Orientale, by Charles Guillain, 1856; tome 1, archive.org

Full text, Documents sur l’histoire, la geographie et le commerce de l’afrique Orientale, by Charles Guillain, 1856; tome tome 2, part 1, archive.org

Full text, Documents sur l’histoire, la geographie et le commerce de l’afrique Orientale, by Charles Guillain, 1856; tome 2, part 2, archive.org

Illustrations, Voyage à la Côte Orientale d’Afrique, by Charles Guillain, 1856; folio atlas, archive.org

Charles Guillain’s daguerreotypes taken along the east coast of Africa in 1847 and 1848, scalarchives.com

SCENES FROM OMAN

Photographs of Oman from the Estate of Hermann Burchardt, Ethnologisches Museum der Staatlichen Museen zu Berlin, Preußischer Kulturbesitz www.smb-digital.de

Gifts Made by the Imam of Muscat, to the Government of the United States, in 1840, transferred from U.S. Patent Office in 1858 to the Anthropology Department at the National Museum of Natural History collections.si.edu

IN QAJAR PERSIA

Photographic portraiture and the royal family of Qajar Iran, from the collections of the Freer|Sackler Museums of Asian Art, Smithsonian Institution, by Xavier Courouble, Smithsonian Collections Blog

Photos of Africans in Persia from the Myron Bement Smith Collection of Sevruguin Photographs and the Stephen Arpee Collection of Sevruguin Photographs, Freer|Sackler Archives, Smithsonian Institution, collections.si.edu

ZANZIBAR COSMORAMA

Architectural Family Ties: Zanzibar and Oman in the 19th century, Antoni Folkers and Frank Koopman here

Zanzibar Stone Town Projects: A Plan for the Historic Stone Town, Aga Khan Trust for Culture, Historic Cities Support Programme, the Aga Khan Development Network www.akdn.org

Swahili, Historic Urban Landscapes. Report on the Historic Urban Landscape Workshops and Field Activities on the Swahili Coast in East Africa, 2011-2012. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), 2013, accessible here

Ost-Afrika, Dr. Oscar Baumann, Winterton Collection of East African Photographs, Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies, Northwestern University, Evanston, accessible here and here

Collections of Zanzibari families here

SWAHILI COAST DAUGHTERS

Winterton Collection of East African Photographs, Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL here

Postcards, Swahili coast, Eliot Elisofon Photographic Archives, Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of African Art, collections.si.edu

INDIAN OCEAN PORTRAITS

Esclaves Libérés aux Seychelles, 1861-1872, Iconothèque Historique de l’Océan Indien; online exhibit www.ihoi.org

Slave register from the H.M. Ship ‘Columbine,’ 1872. Historical Papers, The Library, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa here

MONSOON DHOWS

Photographs, Winterton Collection of East African Photographs, Melville J. Herskovits Library of African Studies, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL here

Postcards, Eliot Elisofon Photographic Archives, Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of African Art, accessible here on collections.si.edu

MUSIC AND POETRY

Music from Oman

1. A Dance with the Oboe: a song of the Lewa genre. This accompanies a traditional dance with African origins, performed in communities of people descended from the Swahili coast in eastern Arabia

2. A Dance of the Sailor comes from the A’Shuwabani genre

3. Mowashah Ya Gareed Aldar, composed by Fuad Abdul Magid and performed by the Oud Hobbyists Association

4. Ahasees, composed by Abadi Algawhar, performed by the Oud Hobbyists Association

The Oud is a traditional cord instrument of Arabic origin made out of wood and played throughout the western Indian Ocean

Lewah

A’ Shuwbani

Mowashah Ya Gareed Aldar, comp. by Fuad Abdul Magid

Ahasees, comp. by Abadi Algawhar

Swahili Poetry

Historical Swahili poetry, an oral form which was transmitted into Arabic script, borrows from both Arabic and east African writing traditions; it often explores the themes of love, history and family. Arabic poetry from the Western Indian Ocean addresses the themes of travel and diaspora along the Arabian and Swahili coasts. Both traditions of poetry are primarily composed in the form of nostalgic epics.

Utendi Wa Hati – Poem of the Written Homily, by Shaaban Robert
1. recited in Swahili by Anna Mwalagho
2. recited in Arabic by Muzna AlMusafer
3. recited in English by Nicole Shivers and Cedric Muhammad

Mazoea Ya Ghafula – Sudden Moods from the Anthology of Ali A. Jahadhmy
4. recited in Swahili by Anna Mwalagho
5. recited in Arabic by Muzna AlMusafer
6. recited in English by Nicole Shivers and Cedric Muhammad

Transferring Seasons by the Omani navigator Ahmad Ibn Majid
7. recited in Arabic by Muzna AlMusafer

Ahmad Ibn Majid (c. 1432-1498) was a pioneering navigator, writer, humanist and chronicler from the coast of Oman.
Shaaban Robert (1909-1962) was a Tanzanian poet and writer, celebrated as one of the greatest Swahili thinkers.

POETRY TRACK 1 Utendi Wa Hati by Shaaban Robert, in Swahili

POETRY TRACK 2 Utendi Wa Hati by Shaaban Robert, in Arabic

POETRY TRACK 3 Utendi Wa Hati by Shaaban Robert, in English

POETRY TRACK 4 Mazoea Ya Ghafula, from the Anthology of Ali A. Jahadhmy, in Swahili

POETRY TRACK 5 Mazoea Ya Ghafula, from the Anthology of Ali A. Jahadhmy, in Arabic

POETRY TRACK 6 Mazoea Ya Ghafula, from the Anthology of Ali A. Jahadhmy, in English

POETRY TRACK 7 Transferring Seasons by Ahmad Ibn Majid, in Arabic