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There are anywhere between 1,500 and 2,000 languages in Africa, most of which are still poorly documented. While much linguistic field work is being carried out in Africa, and thus also many publications do see the light of day, access to descriptive materials is in general hard to come by and often fragmentary. These webpages aim to simplify the finding of linguistic Africana on the net.
WHAT'S THIS SITE ABOUT?
The main purpose of these pages is to offer easy access to online materials dealing with African languages.
These pages contain links to other sites hosting free stuff, be they downloadable files (of any format), web-readable texts, searchable databases, or whatever. Particular attention is given to materials that contain structural/descriptive data, though not exclusively so. Links to commercial enterprises won't be added, as a rule.
UPDATES AND REVISIONS
Updates and revisions are performed as time allows.
I cannot add anything that I do not know about. If you know of any material that should be on these pages, then please drop me a mail using the email address listed somewhere on this page. (Avoid sending attachments, though.)
The most recent additions on any particular page are, or at least should be, flagged with an image stating "NEW" ( ). Corrected links are flagged with a similar image stating "CORR" ( ). The latest additions are also listed chronologically on a special page created just for that purpose.
Thanks to Marvin Beachy, Roger M. Blench, Mark Dingemanse, Ines Fiedler, Harald Hammarström, Stuart McGill, Amina Mettouchi, Bonny Sands, Gilles-Maurice de Schryver, Anne Schwarz, Lameen Souag, Oliver Stegen, and others, for helping me keep this updated.
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Most recently updated pages:
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NEWS, NOTICES, UPDATES
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The most recent additions are listed here.
2008-07-16
The journal Mandenkan has put out most of its contents online. (Thanks to H.H. for making me aware of this.) It contains a sizeable chunk of really good articles, so it comes highly recommended. Hence due to the now massively increased number of Mande links, I have had to break out the Manding links and put them on a page of their own. Possibly Bambara deserves its own page, too, but I'll leave that for later.
2008-06-26
Updates will be slow over the coming weeks, in case you'll start wondering if I've finally abandoned this project. I haven't. Incidentally, I've started my own blog. As seemingly every one else has one, I feel I must have one, too.
2008-04-10
The Internet Archive has lots of fascinating public domain stuff, such as old books and old movies. They even have past versions of web pages. There's quite a lot of interesting Africana there, too, and I'll be adding links to them as I find them. But it's a slow process searching for them, so it might take a while before I've found them all (or at least most of them).
( Older notices & news )
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