The trans-Saharan book trade : manuscript culture, Arabic literacy and intellectual history in Muslim Africa

Bibliographic Information

The trans-Saharan book trade : manuscript culture, Arabic literacy and intellectual history in Muslim Africa

edited by Graziano Krätli, Ghislaine Lydon

(Library of the written word, v. 8 . The manuscript world ; v. 3)

Brill, 2011

Available at  / 8 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [375]-392) and index

Contents of Works

  • A historic geography of the trans-Saharan trade / Eric Ross
  • A thirst for knowledge : Arabic literacy, writing paper, and Saharan bibliophiles in the Southwestern Sahara / Ghislaine Lydon
  • The paper trade of Egypt and the Sudan in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and its re-export to the Bilād as-Sūdān / Terence Walz
  • The historic "core curriculum" and the book market in Islamic West Africa / Bruce S. Hall and Charles C. Stewart
  • The book and the nature of knowledge in Muslim Northern Nigeria, 1457-2007 / Murray Last
  • Literary culture and Arabic manuscripts in 19th-century Ilọrin / Stefan Reichmuth
  • An overview of major manuscript libraries in Timbuktu / Abdel Kader Haïdara
  • Information and communication technologies for the preservation and valorization of manuscript collections in Morocco / Said Ennahid
  • Coming to terms with tradition : manuscript conservation in contemporary Algeria / Judith Scheele
  • Camel to kilobytes : preserving the cultural heritage of the trans-Saharan book trade / Graziano Krätli

Description and Table of Contents

Description

As the manuscript treasures in the libraries of Timbuktu and throughout the northwestern quarter of Africa become known, many questions are raised. How did a manuscript culture flourish in the Sahara and in Muslim Africa more generally? Under what conditions did African intellectuals thrive, and how did they acquire scholarly works and the writing paper necessary to contribute to knowledge? By exploring the history of the trans-Saharan book and paper trades, the scholarly production and teaching curriculae of African Muslims and the formation, preservation and codicology of library collections, the authors of this original volume provide a variety of answers. The select number of invited contributions represents current research in the material, technological, economic, and cultural dimensions of manuscript production, circulation, and preservation, and the development of specific scholarly and intellectual traditions in Saharan and Sudanic Africa

Table of Contents

Foreword - Houari Touati Chapter One: The Historic Geography of the Trans-Saharan Book Trade - Eric Ross Chapter Two: A Thirst for Knowledge: Arabic Literacy, Writing Paper and Saharan Bibliophiles in Southwestern Sahara - Ghislaine Lydon Chapter Three: The Paper Trade of Egypt and the Sudan in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries - Terence Walz Chapter Four: The Historic "Core Curriculum" and the Book Market in Islamic West Africa -Bruce S. Hall and Charles C. Stewart Chapter Five: The Book and the Nature of Knowledge in Muslim Northern Nigeria, 1457-2007 - Murray Last Chapter Six: Notes on Arabic Manuscripts and Literary Culture in Nineteenth-Century Ilorin - Stefan Reichmuth Chapter Seven: An Overview of Major Manuscript Libraries in Timbuktu - Abdel Kader Haidara Chapter Eight: Information and Communication Technologies for the Preservation and Valorization of Documentary Heritage in Morocco - Said Ennahid Chapter Nine: Coming to Terms with Tradition: Manuscript Conservation in Contemporary Algeria - Judith Scheele Chapter Ten: Camel to Kilobytes: Preserving the Cultural Heritage of the Trans-Saharan Book Trade - Graziano Kratli Note on Contributors Glossaries Index

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