Abstract
ABSTRACTThe publication of a new translation of Akiga Sai's History of
the Tiv invites reappraisal of Akiga himself as a local
intellectual. This essay presents a biographical account of this early Tiv
convert to Christianity, locating his celebrated History in its
social, cultural, ethnic and historical contexts, and presents a provisional
narrative of his career subsequent to the publication of
Akiga's Story, the version of the
History edited by Rupert East. As such, it is intended as
an invitation to a full biography. The essay reconstructs, insofar as sources
permit, the complex relationship between Akiga, East, the Dutch Reformed Church
Mission and the International African Institute that led to the publication of
Akiga's Story in the form known until now,
comparing that version with the complete translation. Akiga's
History emerges from this re-examination as a compellingly
contemporary narrative engaged with the lived experience of ethnic
identification under colonial rule.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Anthropology,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference48 articles.
1. An Unknown Nigerian Export: Tiv Benniseed Production, 1900–1960
2. Pine A. (n.d. 2) ‘Akiga Sai: anthropologist or historian? Notes towards an epistemological identity’ (abstract only, 1 page). , accessed May 2015.
3. Subject to Colonialism
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