Idi Amin and Uganda: An Annotated Bibliography
By (Author) Martin P. Jamison
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
20th October 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Bibliographies, catalogues
016.96761
Hardback
168
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
624g
In this volume, Martin Jamison provides a descriptive bibliography of published material on Idi Amin and Uganda during the Amin years. Arranging the entries topically within chronological sections, Jamison covers the span of Amin's reign from 1971 to 1979. The work also includes entries providing background information on Amin and covering Amin in exile. The volume covers scholarly, research-level, English-language works, all of which are generally accessible in libraries in North America. The literature covered includes journal articles, books, chapters within edited volumes, conference papers, government publications, audiovisual materials and theses. Works included are those that are substantial and to the point, that provide more than a passing glance of Amin, and that speak directly to the topic of Amin or Uganda under Amin. With some exceptions, the bibliography excludes newspaper articles, popular or news magazine articles, fiction, encyclopaedias, yearbooks and other standard handbooks. After personally examining all but 15 of the entries cited, Martin has provided descriptive nonevaluative annotations. Annotations also note such features as length, type of illustrative material, indices and notes. The volume also includes author, title and subject indices. It should be a valuable aid for students and other researchers who want to find and select literature on Idi Amin and his times.
When was the last time you read a bibliographic work for pleasure I recommend Martin Jamison's book for that rare experience. This slim but tightly packed volume begins with a concise introduction narrating the major events of Amin's eight years of haphazard rule in Uganda, followed by a brief discussion of sources and organizing principles. . . . The real pleasure of this bibliographic treasury is not so much the new discoveries that almost everyone will find here, but the generous annotations that describe the contents of each item with such care and precision that one knows immediately whether and how it will be of use. Unlike so many bibliographies that are content merely to list titles and authors in alphabetical order, this is clearly the work of a scholar who has become a knowledgeable expert on Idi Amin . . .-The International Journal of African Historical Studies
"When was the last time you read a bibliographic work for pleasure I recommend Martin Jamison's book for that rare experience. This slim but tightly packed volume begins with a concise introduction narrating the major events of Amin's eight years of haphazard rule in Uganda, followed by a brief discussion of sources and organizing principles. . . . The real pleasure of this bibliographic treasury is not so much the new discoveries that almost everyone will find here, but the generous annotations that describe the contents of each item with such care and precision that one knows immediately whether and how it will be of use. Unlike so many bibliographies that are content merely to list titles and authors in alphabetical order, this is clearly the work of a scholar who has become a knowledgeable expert on Idi Amin . . ."-The International Journal of African Historical Studies
MARTIN JAMISON is Reference/Circulation Librarian at and assistant professor at Ohio State University. He is the author of several articles, including a short bibliography on Amin published in the Bulletin of Bibliography.