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Writing Timbuktu: The Book in West African History

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Writing Timbuktu: The Book in West African History

Contributors:

By (Author) Shamil Jeppie

ISBN:

9780691273853

Publisher:

Princeton University Press

Imprint:

Princeton University Press

Publication Date:

15th April 2026

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Literary studies: general
History of ideas

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

240

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 235mm

Description

The long overlooked, centuries-long, culture of the book in WestAfrica

Printed books did not reach West Africa until the early twentieth century. And yet, between the fifteenth and twentieth centuries, literate and curious readers throughout the region found books to read-books that were written and copied by hand. In Writing Timbuktu, Shamil Jeppie offers a history of the book as a handwritten, handmade object in West Africa. Centering his account in the historic city of Timbuktu, Jeppie explores the culture of the "manuscript-book"-unbound pages, often held together by carefully crafted leather covers. He describes the most important and most prolific scholars and their works, the subjects they covered, and ways these books were circulated, collected, and preserved.

The authors of the manuscript-books wrote to demonstrate their knowledge to their peers, expound theological and legal opinions, and engage in scholarly disputation. After beginning his account in Timbuktu, Jeppie traces the literary connections among places as distant as Marrakesh in the north and Sokoto in the south, and smaller settlements in between. He chronicles the work of Ahmad Baba in late sixteenth-century Timbuktu and his students in early seventeenth-century Marrakesh; the emergence of writers in the eighteenth century in what today is Mauritania; the writings of the scholar-rulers of Sokoto, northern Nigeria, in the nineteenth century; and the eventual discovery of the manuscript-book world of West Africa by European travelers and French colonial officials. Finally, Jeppie finds that the handwritten text persisted even after the advent of the printed book, and even among writers whose books were in print, including the famous Malian novelist Amadou Hampte B.

Author Bio

Shamil Jeppie is associate professor of history at the University of Cape Town, where he founded the Tombouctou Manuscripts Project. He is the coeditor of The Meanings of Timbuktu. He is on the Advisory Board of the research center Understanding Written Artefacts at the University of Hamburg.

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