UJ History Seminars
Home » Faculties of Humanities » Departments » Department of History » UJ History Seminars »The Department of History hosts a regular seminar series. The seminar is a forum for scholarly works in progress and aims to be a rigorous intellectual space of scholarly exchange within the university and the wider academic community.
We pre-circulate the seminar paper via the departmental email list, and in order to enhance discussion we strongly encourage seminar participants to read the paper before-hand.
Should you wish to be added to our mailing list or present your work please email Stephen Sparks at sjwsparks@uj.ac.za.
2025
15/04/2025
Rachel Sandwell (Cornell University), ‘Gossip, innuendo, and intimacy: Micro-histories of ANC exile’
18/03/2025
Khumisho Moguerane (University of Witwatersrand), ‘A cloth over the mirror”: Oneself and Another in new post-apartheid biography’
2024
08/10/2024
Paul Edwards (Stanford University), ‘A Lightning History of Artificial Intelligence’ (Faculty of Humanities Distinguished 4IR Lecture)’
06/08/2024
Laura Mitchell (University of California, Irvine), ‘Domestic Space, Intimate Surprises: The Bonds and Bondage of Enslaved, Khoisan, and Settler Women in the 1825 Koue Bokkeveld Revolt’
30/04/2024
Bruce Hall (University of California, Berkeley), ‘Rethinking ‘precolonial Africa’ or, an unlikely history of capitalism in nineteenth-century Timbuktu’
19/03/2024
Khumisho Moguerane (University of Johannesburg), ‘Apartheid’s moral scaffolds: Noni Jabavu and the moral worlds of the southern African frontier’
2023
07/11/2023
Dr Sarah Delius (University of Johannesburg), ‘Burn Down the Town: Violence, Diplomacy, and Redrawing the Sierra Leone/Liberia Border 1885-1917′
29/08/2023
Zolani Ngwane (Haverford College), ‘Looking back, I know that I was not a man that day’: Nelson Mandela and the Ambiguities of Tradition in South Africa.’
18/04/2023
Mark Hunter (University of Toronto), ‘The rise and disregard of alcohol and drug rehabilitation centres in South Africa: from maladjusted workers to the underserving poor’
14/03/2023
Johann Tempelhoff (North-West University), ‘Reflections on Emfuleni’s water woes on the banks of the Vaal River’
2022
04/10/2022
Hilary Lynd (University of California, Berkeley) and Thom Loyd (Cardiff University), ‘Histories of Color: Blackness and Africanness in the Soviet Union’
23/08/2022
Meghan Healy-Clancy (Bridgewater State University), ‘The Politics of Friendship in the Federation of South African Women’
26/07/2022
Athambile Masola (University of Cape Town), ‘Native Girls in Scotland: tracing the travels of Tause Soga, Martha Kwatsha, Letitia Ngceni, Deena Nzanza and Sana Mzimba’
10/05/2022
John Aerni-Flessner (Michigan State University) and Grey Magaiza (University of Free State), ‘Basotho and the Bantustans: Long-Term Impacts of Historical Borders on Borderlands Communities in QwaQwa and Lesotho’
19/04/2022
Sarah Emily Duff (Colby College), ‘A Change of Life: Writing Hormonal Histories of Empire’
22/03/2022
Marijke du Toit (University of the Western Cape), ‘Daughters of Africa and the gender politics of urban segregation in Durban, 1935-1937’
01/03/2022
Linell Chewins (University of the Witwatersrand), ‘Stealing Dingane’s Title’: The Fatal Significance of Saguate Gift-Giving in Zulu King Dingane’s Killing of Governor Ribeiro (1833) and Piet Retief (1838)’
2021
12/10/2021
Cynthia Kros (UCT) and John Wright (UCT), ‘Journeys into the Archive of South Africa’s Deep Past’
21/09/2021
Keith Breckenridge (University of the Witwatersrand) (Faculty of Humanities Distinguished 4IR Lecture), ‘4IR in Historical Perspective’
10/08/2021
Deborah Posel (University of the Free State), ‘South Africa’s consumer revolution of the late 19th /early 20th century’
11/05/2021
Joel Cabrita (Stanford University), ‘Written Out: The Work and Life of Regina Gelana Twala’
13/04/2021
Jeff Peires (Fort Hare), ‘The Story of Dosini’
21/02/2021
Vusi Kumalo (Nelson Mandela University), ‘The Marshall Square Prison Escape: The Liliesleaf Farm Trust archive, Politics of Memory and the Creation of Historical Archives’
2020
31/07/2020
Abraham Mlombo, ‘The War Years, 1939-45: War Economy and Military Engagement in southern Rhodesia’
11/07/2020
Janeke Thumbran, ‘Configuring a Liberal Sociology: Afrikaner Sociology and the ‘Coloured Question”
11/03/2020
Stefan Berger, ‘Has history-writing become more self-reflexive about its relationship with identity formations?’
18/02/2020
Shahid Mathee, ”Colonial rule and the post-colonial state in two twentieth-century Timbuktu chronicles
2019
8/10/2019
Sandra Shell, ‘The Oromo children of Lovedale, South Africa: Prosopography and Profiles from Horn to Hope’
17/09/2019
Hlopnipha Mokoena, “Strict Observers of Truth”: Colonial Imagination and the Disciplining of the Frontier’
27/08/2019
Stephanie Quinn, ‘Infrastructure, Ethnicity, and Political Mobilization in Tsumeb, Namibia, 1946-87’
30/07/2019
Sarah Duff, ‘Training for Citizenship: The Women’s Suffrage Movement and Modernising the State in Early Twentieth-Century South Africa’
23/07/2019
William Beinart, ‘Priorities for Land Reform in South Africa: a pragmatic approach’
7/05/2019
Jill Kelly, ‘Gendered Militancy and Congress Networks in Rural Natal in 1959’
16/04/2019
Vusi Khumalo, ‘African Education and Land Rights on the Rand: The Tsewu court case and the Wilberforce Institute, 1903-1905’
19/03/2019
Marc Epprecht and Allison Goebel, ‘Exhibiting African Art in Canada: A Decolonizing Community Project at Queen’s University?’
19/02/2019
Sebabatso Manoeli, ‘Remembering the ‘Golden Years’: Nationalism in the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) Training Camps in Gambella, Ethiopia, 1983-91′
2018
20/11/2018
Kerry R Ward, ‘From Ground Zero to Zero Tolerance: Human Trafficking Responses in Houston, Texas’
16/10/2018
A.G. Hopkins, ‘Rethinking the American Empire’
2/10/2018
Lize Kriel and Natalie Fossey, ‘The ‘reading African’ in the hierarchy of Others as visualised in the periodical Der Missionsfreund, early 20th century’
14/08/2018
Linell Chewins & Peter Delius, ‘The North Eastern Factor in South African history: Re-evaluating the volume of the slave trade out of Delagoa Bay the and the nature of its impact on its hinterland in the early 19th centuries’
24/07/2018
Sacha Hepburn ‘Working Motherhood, Childcare and Children’s Work in Zambia’
15/05/2018
Glen Ncube ‘From Rome to Rhodesia: Nutrition, health and the adaptation of FAO’s global Freedom from Hunger Campaign in late colonial Zimbabwe’
24/04/2018
Deborah Posel ”Getting inside the skin”: advertising, market research and “the black consumer” in apartheid South Africa’
20/02/2018
Deborah Gaitskell, ‘Mentoring Mandela’s Generation: Challenges for a Methodist Mission School in Segregationist South Africa’
13/02/2018
Katie McKeown, ‘The Ingwawuma Land Deal, Conservation and Animal Belonging’
2017
29/08/2017
Jacob Dlamini, ‘A transnational history of the Kruger National Park’
23/08/2017
Claire D. Clark, ‘Peter Bourne’s Drug Policy and the Perils of a Public Health Ethic, 1976-1978’
8/08/2017
Khumisho Moguerane, ‘A Home of One’s Own: An exploration of home-ownership in the borderlands of post-apartheid Eastern Free State and Lesotho’
25/04/2017
Todd H. Leedy, ‘But Did They Really Race? The Early History of Black Competitive Cycling around Johannesburg’
28/03/2017
Catherine Burns, ‘City of women – Johannesburg: The Early years 1900 to 1940
28/02/2017
Susanne Klausen, ‘Sex, Shame and Suicide: Policing White Male Heterosexuality in South Africa during Apartheid’
14/02/2017
Katharina Fink ‘FAVT: Future Africa Visions in Time’
2016
10/08/2016
Linda Gordon, ‘Leadership and Followership: The Montgomery Bus Boycott, 1955-56′
12/04/2016
Linda Chisholm, ”Fate comes to the Mission Schools’: Fire at Bethel, 1953′
15/03/2016
Jeffrey Murray, ‘Once upon a time at Thermopylae: The Reception of the Battle of Thermopylae in the Golden Age of Children’s Literature, 1860–1920’
2015
21/04/2015
Liz Gunner, ‘Song, Identity and the State: Julius Malema’s “Dubul’ ibunu” Song as Catalyst’
2014
13/05/2014
Elizabeth Pleck, ‘Historian as Friend of the (U.S.) Court’
8/04/2014
Luise White, “The Last Good White Man Left”: Rhodesia, Rhonasia, and the Decolonization of British’
18/03/2014
Alex Lichtenstein, ‘Post-Wiehahn Shop Floor Battles for Union Recognition in Natal’s Textile Industry’
2013
29/10/2013
Joel Quirk, ”Native’ Marriage as a form of Slavery: Reflections on Colonial Classifications in Africa’
6/08/2013
Edward Cavanagh, ‘Empire’s Companies in Southern Africa: How the VOC got its Land’
23/07/2013
Michael Mahoney, ‘Towards a History of African Unemployment in South Africa: Bringing Political Economy ‘Back In’ to South African Historiography’
19/07/2013
Heather Hughes, ‘Family history, gendered biography: individual and social biography-writing in South Africa’
11/06/2013
Dan Magaziner, ‘Studios and Schools: The Ambiguities of African Art Teachers’
14/05/2013
Julie Parle, ‘Searching for the okapi: thalidomide in Africa’
12/03/2013
Shahid Mathee and Mauro Nobili, ”From history to mystery in a recent English translation of a seventeenth-century Timbuktu chronicle’
12/02/2013
Andrew MacDonald, ‘Bars, Barmaids and southern Africa’s Indian Ocean World, 1870s-1950s
2012
16/10/2012
Lindie Koorts, ”A mutually corrupt relationship’: The Kruger state, the Dynamite Concession and the Transvaal Concessions Commission, c. 1900′
18/09/2012
Helen Ludlow, ‘What’s the fuss about chocolate? Ghana, cocoa, colonialism and globalization
21/08/2012
Charl Blignaut, ‘Untold History with a Historiography: A Review of Scholarship on Afrikaner Women in South African History’
24/06/2012
Lynn Thomas, ‘A Transnational History of Biomedical Opposition to Skin Lighteners’
19/06/2012
Susan Newton King, ‘Slavery, Race and Citizenship: The ambiguous status of freed slaves at the Cape in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
22/05/2012
Shula Marks, ‘Social Medicine: common sense or utopian dream? The South African experience in transnational perspective’
24/04/2012
Nicole Ulrich, ‘Heads of the Hydra in Southern Africa: rethinking proletarian community and traditions of protest in the Cape of Good Hope, c. 1652-1770’
20/03/2012
Jimmy Pieterse, ‘Dictionaries and Discourses of Deviance’
28/02/2012
Jonathan Hyslop, ‘The Strange Death of Liberal England and the Strange Birth of Illiberal South Africa: British Trade Unionists, Indian Labourers and Afrikaner Rebels, 1910-1914’