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Periodical article |
| Title: | The medium of 'tradition': Amadou Hampâté Bâ's confrontations with languages, literacy, and colonialism |
| Author: | Austen, Ralph A. |
| Year: | 2010 |
| Periodical: | Islamic Africa (ISSN 2154-0993) |
| Volume: | 1 |
| Issue: | 2 |
| Pages: | 217-228 |
| Language: | English |
| Geographic term: | West Africa |
| Subjects: | language usage writing systems Fulfulde language |
| About person: | Amadou Hampaté Bâ (1900-1991) |
| External link: | https://doi.org/10.1163/21540993-90000017 |
| Abstract: | In his efforts to communicate his research on 'African tradition', more specifically oral texts, Hampâté Bâ was faced with a choice of languages and alphabets. Much of his work appeared only in French, the language of his main formal education and administrative training. In collaboration with several French colonial scholar-administrators (Henri Gaden, Colonel R. Figaret, and Gilbert Vieillard) Hampâté Bâ eventually developed a system for writing his native Fulfulde in Roman characters. However, for his own Fulfulde religious poetry ('mes seules oeuvres de 'création''), Hampâté Bâ used Ajami (Arabic letters representing non-Arabic languages), a writing system that he also promoted as a medium of wider Fulbe literacy. Notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] |