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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. -- The University of Alabama department
of history will broaden its curriculum this year by offering classes on the
history of Africa taught by Dr. Josephine Nhongo Simbanegavi, UA
assistant professor of history from Zimbabwe.
“I was excited to be asked to teach classes on the history
of Africa because it was something that UA had not offered before
and I think it is an opportunity for American students to learn
about this globe we live in from the perspectives of the other
people we share it with,” Simbanegavi said.
Simbanegavi said because a significant segment of the population
in the South traces their past and their identity to Africa, it
is important for our curricula to reflect that and to promote a
better understanding of Africa. “It is commendable that UA
and the history department in particular took the initiative to
seek out an African historian to join their faculty. As a Southern-based
university, I do not think that the teaching of African history
is something UA can choose to have or not to have,” she commented.
She says that history course offerings should “accommodate
all sections of our population, giving African-Americans an opportunity
to learn about their ancestral past in a way that takes them beyond
the history of enslavement. A study of African institutions and
civilizations takes their history to a healthier start.” Simbanegavi
views this as something that would greatly benefit contemporary
U.S. society. “While restoring respectability to the African-American
ancestral past, the study and deeper understanding of African history
fills many gaps in Americans’ understanding of the world
that they share with others,” she says.
Simbanegavi studied for her first degree at the University of
Zimbabwe then attended St. Antony’s College in Oxford University
where she obtained her doctorate in 1997. She taught for a number
of years at the University of Zimbabwe prior to coming to the U.S.
Before assuming her current position, she was a UA Bankhead Fellow
and a Fulbright Visiting Scholar at Columbia University in New
York.
This fall she is teaching a 200-level class “Introduction
to the Study of African History” -- an introductory course
designed to contrast students’ preconceived knowledge of
Africa with perspectives that are African-informed -- and a 400-level
course “Women in Southern African History” tracing
feminist issues in Southern African countries as they relate to
changing times and changing cultures. This Southern Africa-focused
course connects Simbanegavi with her current research project investigating
the intricate relationship between gender and international migration
in that region.
At present, Simbanegavi is the only professor of African history
teaching at UA. She hopes that her classes will interest students
and gain enough attention that complementary courses could be added.
She aims to help her students visualize Africa through the occasional
use of films in her classes, but she also hopes that, in the future,
it will be possible for UA to broaden its study abroad programs
to Africa to provide students with deeper insights into the African
world.
“My attempt is to help students gain access to a different
culture,” she said. “In fact, the history of Africa
is the history of many worlds. With many centuries of history to
cover, at least 52 African countries, hundreds of linguistic and
cultural groups to account for, I will be happy if I am able to
give my students the necessary skills to find information and cultivate
a better knowledge of this vast continent on their own.”
She says if we are genuine about connecting with the rest of the
world as neighbors in a global village, African history “is
not a luxury, it is a necessity.”
For the future, Simbanegavi said she hopes to encourage her department
to include African history as one of the required courses for history
majors “Beyond the bits and pieces we get from CNN and other
such organizations, we need a more balanced and comprehensive knowledge
of the continent and its peoples,” she says.
For more information about the classes on African history or to
register for her spring semester offerings of Peoples and Cultures
of Africa (HY 200) and Aspects of African History (HY 400), please
contact the UA history department at 205/348-7100.
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