A Bibliography of Neo-African Literature, J. Jahn, xxxv + 359 pp. André Deutsch, 1965, 84s; English version of Die neoafrikanische Literatur: Gesamtbibliographie von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart, Eugen Diedericks Verlag, Düsseldorf und Köln, 1965, DM42.00.
2.
New Approaches to African Literature, J.A. Ramsaran, v + 177 pp. Ibadan University Press, Ibadan, Nigeria, 1965, paperbound, 2IS; new and enlarged edition of Approaches to African Literature, J. Jahn and J.A. Ramsaran, Ibadan, 1959.
3.
United States and Canadian Publications on Africa in I963, ed. P. Duignan. Hoover Institution, Stanford, Calif., U.S.A., 1965, $3.00 (Hoover Institution Bibliographical SeriesXX); annual since 1961.
4.
Griffith, Gwyn.A Scorpion on a Stone: six stories, 224 pp. Collins, I8s; first published 1965, U.S.A. edition; stories set in various parts of Africa.
5.
African/English Literature, ed. A. Tibble, xiv + 304 pp. Peter Owen, 32S 6d.
6.
An Anthology of Writings by and about Africans, ed. J. Drachler, vi +z86 pp. Collier Books, New York, 1964, paperbound; British price, 4s 6d; first published 1963, cloth; British price, 30s.
7.
Negro Verse, ed. A. Hollo, 48 pp. Vista Books ( Pocket Poets Series), 3s.
8.
Pan-African Short Stories, ed. N. Denny, xvi+223 pp. Nelson, 8s 6d; a school anthology with some notes.
9.
Schwarzer Orpheus: moderne Dichtung afrikanischer Völker beider Hemisphären. ed. J. Jahn, 323 pp. Carl Hauser Verlag, München, W. Germany, 1964; British price, 2IS; an anthology of African, Negro American and West Indian verse in German translation.
10.
Burns, D.G.African Education, 216 pp. Oxford University Press, paperbound, I3S 6d; deals with all types of education in African Commonwealth countries.
11.
A Book of African Verse, ed. J. Reed and C. Wake. Reviewed by M.M. Mahood, East Africa Journal, March, p. 38 (see EAST AND CENTRAL AFRICA, Journals).
12.
African Literature and the Universities, ed. G. Moore , iv + 148 pp. Ibadan University Press, Ibadan, Nigeria, for Congress for Cultural Freedom, paperbound, I5S; British price, I9S; the record of the Dakar and Freetown seminars held in 1963.
13.
' African Novelists and Social Change', B. Chukukere in Phylon, XXVI, 3, University of Atlanta, Atlanta, Georgia , U.S.A., pp. 228-40.
14.
'African-speaking Africa? Lessons from the Cameroon', W.R. Johnson in African Forum , I, 2 (see Journals).
15.
' Are there Under-developed Writers ?', in Times Literary Supplement , 27 May, pp.429-30.
16.
'English and the African Writer', C. Achebe in Transition, 18, p. 27 (see EAST AND CENTRAL AFRICA, Journals).
17.
'Ewo', A.J. Shelton in Transition, 20, pp. 7-9; comments on the contributions on African literature by C. Achebe, O. Wali and J. Gleason in Transition , 18.
18.
'Modern African Literature', S. Redding in College Language Association Journal, VII, 3, 1964, Morgan State College, Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A.
19.
'Nationalism and the Writer', E.D. Jones in Commonwealth Literature , ed. J. Press, pp. 151-6 (see COMMONWEALTH: GENERAL, Criticism).
20.
Oral Tradition: a study in historical methodology, Jan Vansina, translated from the French by H.M. Wright , xiv +226 pp. Routledge and Kegan Paul, 30S; first published as De la Tradition Oral, 1961.
21.
'Orpheus in Africa', in Times Literary Supplement, 29 April, p. 323; reviews of Black Orpheus: An Anthology ... and Origin East Africa.
22.
' Poetry in Africa Today', J.P. Clark in Transition, 18, p. 20.
23.
'Problem of the Literary Critic in Africa', L. Lagnean-Kesteloot in Abbia, 8 (see WEST AFRICA, Journals ).
24.
' Recent African Drama', P. Kennard in The Bulletin of the Association for African Literature in English, 1, pp. II-19 (see Journals).
25.
'Recent African Fiction', D. Killam in The Bulletin of the Association for African Literature in English, 1, pp. I-10.
26.
'Recent African Literature for Children', A. Davies in The Bulletin of the Association for African Literature in English, 3, pp. 40-3.
27.
'Theatre and the Common Man in Africa', Bob Leshoai in Transition , 19, P. 44.
28.
" Third-world Stage and Story', in Times Literary Supplement , I April, p. 252; includes a review of Modern African Prose, ed. R. Rive.
29.
'The African Novel: Document to Experiment', O.R. Dathorne in The Bulletin of the Association for African Literature in English, 3, pp. 18-39.
30.
'The Individual and the Novel in Africa', O. Wali in Transition, 18, p. 31.
31.
The Oxford Library of African Literature. Reviewed by K. Sommerfelt in Transition , 19, pp. 50-2.
32.
' The Threatened Language: English Loses Ground in South Africa', J. Povey in The New African, IV, 10 (see Journals).
33.
'Two African Poets', M. Rukeyser in African Forum, I, I; reviews of Okigbo's Limits and U'Tamsi's Brush Fire.
34.
Africa Report, X, I-12. African American Institute, Washington, U.S.A.; appears monthly.
35.
African Forum, I, 1-2. American Society for African Culture, I5 East 40th St, New York I00I6. Annual sub., $4.00 or 20S; 'a quarterly journal on Afro and Afro-American political, social, economic and cultural developments'; first issue, Summer 1965.
36.
AMSAC Newsletter, VII, I-12. American Society for African Culture, New York. Annual sub., $2.00; appears monthly.
37.
Black Orpheus: A Journal of African and Afro-American Literature, 17-18, ed. U. Beier and A. Irele, Longmans of Nigeria, Ikeja, Nigeria, in association with Mbari, Ibadan, 7s 6d.
38.
Cultural Events in Africa, 2-13. The Transcription Centre, 38Dover. St, London, W.I. Annual sub., institutions, £5 or $14; individuals, 20S or $2.80; appears monthly.
39.
English Studies in Africa, VIII, I-2. Witwatersrand University Press, Johannesburg, South Africa, R.0.75 or 7s. 6d. Annual sub., R.I.50 or I5S.
40.
Présence Africaine. 'Présence Africaine', Paris. Annual sub., 36s; English and French editions; appears quarterly.
41.
The Bulletin of the Association for African Literature in English, 2-3, ed. E. D. Jones, Dept of English, Fourah Bay College, Freetown, Sierra Leone. Annual sub., Le 2 or 20S; mimeographed.
42.
The New African, IV, I-10, ed. R. Vigne, 60 Paddington St, London, W.i. Annual sub., 20S or $2.80; appears monthly and always includes literary contributions; March issue (IV, I) the first since July 1964, and the first from a London address.