New Article: Pluralizing Archives for Histories of Extraction in Africa
The AFREXTRACT project published a new article on sources for writing histories of extraction in Africa. It is titled 'Pluralizing Archives for Histories of Extraction in Africa', and it is published in Africa Bibliography, Research and Documentation.
ABSTRACT:
With which sources can we write environmental histories of mining and oil drilling in Africa? Paradoxically, the pollution and environmental disruption caused by extractive industries are at once omnipresent and difficult to trace. In documentary evidence, multinational companies are hesitant to disclose the full extent of their polluting activities. In order to understand how people living around sites of extraction make sense of polluted rivers or suffocating smoke, we argue that archives need to be pluralized. State and company archives can fruitfully be paired with newspaper collections, oral history interviews, cultural production (songs, poems and literary works) and photography. Using examples from Johannesburg, Mazowe, the Central African Copperbelt and the Niger Delta, we map sources and methodologies that might be employed to grasp people’s lived experiences of environmental change in localities of resource extraction.
More news
-
02 June 2026
Nominees Ben Feringa Impact Award 2026 | Interviews
-
26 May 2026
Student teams compete with self-driving cars
-
26 May 2026
Babs Gons, new guest writer at the UG