David Zeitlyn
21 July 1994
The document that follows is a digital version of 34 pages from
Chapter IX of C.K. Meek's "Tribal Studies in Northern Nigeria
Volume 1" 1931 London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co. Ltd.
It is the first major documentary source on the Mambila with whom
my own field research has been conducted. Apart from the
challenge of producing an electronic version the purpose of doing
this was to present and preserve the marginal notes made by
Professor Farnham Rehfisch during his fieldwork in 1953.
In addition to the marginal notes I have also included the
sections of Rehfisch's fieldnotes in which he mentions Meek.
These fieldnotes have been archived in Rhodes House Library
Oxford, and the School of Oriental and African Studies, London
with the kind permission of Mrs Rehfisch and with the help of a
grant from the Nuffield Foundation for which I am very grateful.
Digitisation of the photographs from Meek has been conducted as
part of a pilot project with pump-priming funding from the
University of Oxford. Routledge kindly gave copyright permission
for digitisation and circulation of this chapter to interested
parties.
There are a variety of ways in which annotations can be
included. For the present they are included in two different ways
since I have yet to be persuaded about the best way of doing it,
and would be most grateful for comments from readers.
The text of each annotation has been typed up and is included as
a footnote (different from the original footnotes which have been
included in the main text) at the end of the document. As an
alternative the annotations have been transformed into graphics
(using an apporpriate handwriting-like font) and these have been
included in the text. These graphics also serve as HTML links
which will take the reader from Meek's text to the note, but
without, please be warned, an easy way of retuning to the
original place in the main text. Since the document with the
graphics has become quite big each page has been made into a
separate file. This has the advantage of replicating the
individual pages of the book, and a WAIS index will allow
searching of the whole document. In addition a link has been made
between one of the plates (on p. 552) and some of the photographs
I took in Nigeria in April 1993 (there are more to come).
It is hoped that this will be but the first of a variety of background documents pertaining to the Mambila connected into a hypertextual web that will illuminate rather than befuddle the interested reader.
Read Meek's annotated chapter on the Mambila
For more information on the Mambila see VIMS - the Virtual Institute of Mambila Studies - online
EMail David Zeitlyn