Affichage de 15 résultats

Description archivistique
FHYA curation of items derived from the James Stuart Papers at the Killie Campbell Africana Library
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Circumscribed editor's annotated photocopies of James Stuart's handwritten notes

[Source - Carolyn Hamilton for FHYA, 2019: John Wright, one of the editors of the published volumes of The James Stuart Archive of Recorded Oral Evidence Relating to the History of the Zulu and Neighbouring People (6 vols.), arranged, used and annotated these photocopies of handwritten originals from the James Stuart Papers to prepare the published texts.

The Killie Campbell Africana Library, which holds the original handwritten notes, has given permission for the photocopies pertinent to only one interlocutor, Socwatsha kaPhaphu, to be made available online. We are thus currently unable to provide the annotated photocopies of the handwritten originals for the remaining 184 interlocutors.]

Socwatsha ka Papu, Hyperlinked Archival Research Tool

[Source - John Wright for FHYA, 2017: An electronic research tool which was made by the FHYA team in 2016-17. They made a digital copy of John Wright’s set of hand-annotated photocopies of the notes of James Stuart’s conversations with Socwatsha ka Papu, and linked it in an ‘e-book format’ to the published Socwatsha text.]

Circumscribed James Stuart Archival Research Tool

[Source: Debra Pryor for FHYA, 2019 - This is a circumscribed version of the Hyperlinked Archival Research Tool created by the FHYA in 2018. The Research Tool is an experiment in research infrastructure development. It links each page of the published James Stuart Archive of Recorded Oral Evidence Relating to the History of the Zulu and Neighbouring Peoples (6 vols.) to the photocopies of James Stuart’s original handwritten notes (used and annotated by one of the editors in preparing the volumes for publications). This means that researchers are able, with a single click, to check the published translation against a photocopy of the original handwritten notes.

The Killie Campbell Africana Library, which holds the original handwritten notes, has given permission for the photocopies pertinent to only one interlocutor, Socwatsha kaPhaphu, to be made available online. We are thus currently able to provide links to the annotated photocopies of the handwritten originals for only this interlocutor.]