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Julie is an Associate Professor in the Department of History, UKZN (Howard College). She is interested in histories of mental health and illness, psychiatry, and medicine, and on the ethical use of state archival records relating to institutionalized psychiatric patients. Currently engaged in research on the histories of emotions, the family and class in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, especially in KwaZulu-Natal; and with colleagues, a critical history of McCord “Zulu” Hospital. She teaches on topics such as Health and healing in Africa: the history of epidemics; world history to 1700. Julie is also concerned with developing Southern African students’ participation in the discipline and practice of History.
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Ackson is Associate Professor of History Department at the University of Botswana and publishes on the political economy of underdevelopment and teaches histories of West Africa, slavery, colonialism and historical research methodology. Ackson says that this photo 'shows my rural and agricultural background and my capacity to change with technology. An agriculture-based breakfast is good for history.' After his morning coffee, he is busy teaching and working with post-graduate students. Email:
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Thembisa holds a Senior Lecturer post in the Department of History, University of KwaZulu-Natal (Howard College). She is interested in the politics of gender and culture, and the way they inform debates about modernity and national identity. Email:
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Anton is a Professor of History at Stellenbosch University, who specialises in South African economic history with a particular interest in business, banks, retail and non-profit organisations. He teaches 20th century South African history, European history and methodology. Email:
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Prinisha is a PhD candidate in History at UKZN, currently writing her thesis on the crime of infanticide in the Natal between the years 1880 and 1935. She has also published on the history of Indian interpreters within the British Empire as well as, on the complicated, sometimes lethal, relationship between masters and servants in colonial Natal.
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Emile is currently a MA History student at the University of Johannesburg. He completed a Post-Graduate Diploma in Museum Sciences, is a registered Tourist Guide and works as an assistant to UJ's archives on the Doorfontein campus. He is interested in the history of the right-wing organizations in South Africa and South Africa's political history in the 20th Century. Email:
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Gerald holds a post of Senior Lecturer at the University of Johannesburg. His main research interest is the development of a unique society at the Cape of Good Hope during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. He has published (with Nigel Worden) Trials of Slavery, 1705-1794 as well as several articles and essays on topics ranging from slavery and gender and family history to the social and economic history of early modern Cape Town. Email:
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Karen is a Professor at the University of Pretoria, lecturing in history as well as heritage and cultural tourism. She is also the director of the University of Pretoria Archives. Karen specialises in the field of diasporic Chinese studies. She is an executive board member of the International Society for the Study of Chinese Overseas (ISSCO) and a ministerial appointee to the (South African) National Archives Advisory Council. Email:
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Simon is an Assistant Professor in the Department of History at the University of Saskatchewan. An Alumni of Wits University, she did an M.Sc and D.Phil in history of medicine and African studies at Oxford University. Her research interests include the histories of hospitals, nursing, leprosy and HIV/AIDS.
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Lize is an Associate Professor in the department of Historical and Heritage Studies at the University of Pretoria. She is interested in the making and circulation of historical knowledge and focuses primarily on the role of missionary manuscripts and publications.
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Harvey is Professor Emeritus of History at the Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven, U.S.A. and a research collaborator with historical studies at University of Pretoria. He is interested in the aftermath of the Natives Land Act, 1913-1948; in farms owned by black South Africans in the Transvaal and in changes in land policy after 1918. He is involved in teaching and seminars in South AFrican history for graduate students and senior history majors.
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Cynthia, an Associate Professor at WITS, is also head of the division of Arts, Culture, Heritage and Management at the Wits School of Arts. Her research interests are in apartheid education, memorialisation and memory and museums ans spaces for cultural dialogue. She teaches post graduate courses in public culture and reprsenations of history and undergraduate courses in customary law in South Africa.
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Mucha teaches in the Department of History at the University of the Witwatersrand. His research areas are urban and environmental history, particularly the politics of water and other resources in colonial and post-colonial Zimbabwe. He teaches African history and courses that focus on South Africa and Zimbabwe, as well as Latin America.
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Arianna is a postdoctoral research fellow in the NRF Chair themed 'Local History and Present Realities' at Wits University. She is currently working on a research project on the politics of resistance in the town of Zeerust and the adjacent Lehurutshe region. Her PhD in History (from the School of Oriental and African Studies) has re-examined the history of the South African liberation movements in exile in the 1960s.
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Nick is a Senior Lecturer at the University of South Africa in the department of History. His research interests are in relgion, gender, commemoration and historiography. He teaches courss on East Africa, Southern African in the colonial period as well as philosophy, methdology and historiography.
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Thula completed his Ph.D at the University of London in 2007 and now holds a Senior Lecturer post in the department of Historical and Heritage Studies, University of Pretoria. His Ph.d thesis is titled 'The People's War of Umkhonto we Sizwe, 1961-1990' and current work continues his research interest in ANC armed struggle.
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Sandra is Associate Professor of History at Stellenbosch University. She is a social and environmental historian of southern Africa, having received concomitantly both a doctorate in modern history at the University of Oxford and an MSc in Environmental Management also from Oxford. She has published on Afrikaner identity and animals in history. She is the co-author with Greg Bankoff, of Breeds of Empire (NIAS Press, 2007) co-editor, with Lance van Sittert, of Canis Africanis: a dog history of southern Africa (Brill, 2008) and she is currently writing the history of horses in southern Africa. Sandra teaches a course called “A brief history of the last five million years”, environmental history and methodology.
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