sllm 2016 research report - wits.ac.za · professor dan ojwang was, from 1 april to 30 june 2016,...

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SLLM 2016 Research Report Introduction The School of Literature, Language and Media experienced a productive year in terms of research. Alongside our intensive full-time undergraduate and postgraduate teaching programme, the School produced some 84 units of published research. Aside from the many indexed research articles authored or co-authored by researchers in or associated with the school, a number of notable monographs were also produced. Media Studies produced three monographs in 2016: Consumption, Media and the Global South: Aspiration Contested (Palgrave MacMillan and UKZN Press) by Mehita Iqani; The End of Whiteness: Satanism and Family Murder in Late Apartheid South Africa by Nicky Falkof (Jacana); and The Politics of Technology in Africa: Communication, Development and Nation- Building in Ethiopia by Iginio Gagliardone (Cambridge University Press). Judith Inggs (Translation & Interpreting) published Transition and Transgression: English Young Adult Fiction in Post-Apartheid South Africa (Springer). Peter and Anette Horn (German) published Der Schrei ist das einzig Ewige: Die Romane Thomas Bernhards (Athena). A number of edited collections were also produced. Mehita Iqani (Media Studies) co-edited Consumption, Media and Culture in South Africa: Perspectives on Freedom and the Public. London. Michiko Kaneko (SASL) co-edited Introducing Sign Language Literature: Folklore & Creativity. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan. LINK published three issues of the DHET-accredited journal, The African Journal of Information and Communication (AJIC) in 2016: Thematic Issue 17: Economic regulation, regulatory performance and universal access in the electronic communications sector, edited by Dr Luci Abrahams with guest editor Prof Simon Roberts of the Centre for Competition Regulation and Economic Development (CCRED) at UJ; Thematic Issue 18: Informatics and digital transformation, edited by Dr Luci Abrahams, with guidance from Prof Jason Cohen (Information Systems at SEBS, Wits); and Thematic Issue 19: Knowledge governance for development, guest edited by LINK Visiting Researcher Dr Chris Armstrong and Dr Tobias Schonwetter of the UCT IP Law Unit. Research grants continue to be raised by researchers in the school. Notably, Dr Iginio Gagliardone succeeded in harnessing a significant grant from UNESCO for a project about world press freedom on which he is principal investigator. Prof Dan Ojwang has been leading as the co-investigator on a major DAAD-funded project on Literary Cultures of the Global South, in which several staff members in the School have participated. The number of rated researchers in the school increased to 19. Prizes, awards and honours African Literature Professor Pumla Gqola was awarded the 2016 Sunday Times Alan Paton Award for Non-Fiction for her book Rape: A South African Nightmare. Professor Pumla Gqola was appointed as the inaugural chair of the Fiction panel of the National Humanities and Social Sciences Awards.

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Page 1: SLLM 2016 Research Report - wits.ac.za · Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of

SLLM 2016 Research Report

Introduction

The School of Literature, Language and Media experienced a productive year in terms of research.

Alongside our intensive full-time undergraduate and postgraduate teaching programme, the School

produced some 84 units of published research. Aside from the many indexed research articles

authored or co-authored by researchers in or associated with the school, a number of notable

monographs were also produced. Media Studies produced three monographs in 2016: Consumption,

Media and the Global South: Aspiration Contested (Palgrave MacMillan and UKZN Press) by Mehita

Iqani; The End of Whiteness: Satanism and Family Murder in Late Apartheid South Africa by Nicky

Falkof (Jacana); and The Politics of Technology in Africa: Communication, Development and Nation-

Building in Ethiopia by Iginio Gagliardone (Cambridge University Press). Judith Inggs (Translation &

Interpreting) published Transition and Transgression: English Young Adult Fiction in Post-Apartheid

South Africa (Springer). Peter and Anette Horn (German) published Der Schrei ist das einzig Ewige: Die

Romane Thomas Bernhards (Athena).

A number of edited collections were also produced. Mehita Iqani (Media Studies) co-edited

Consumption, Media and Culture in South Africa: Perspectives on Freedom and the Public. London.

Michiko Kaneko (SASL) co-edited Introducing Sign Language Literature: Folklore & Creativity.

Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

LINK published three issues of the DHET-accredited journal, The African Journal of Information and

Communication (AJIC) in 2016: Thematic Issue 17: Economic regulation, regulatory performance and

universal access in the electronic communications sector, edited by Dr Luci Abrahams with guest

editor Prof Simon Roberts of the Centre for Competition Regulation and Economic Development

(CCRED) at UJ; Thematic Issue 18: Informatics and digital transformation, edited by Dr Luci Abrahams,

with guidance from Prof Jason Cohen (Information Systems at SEBS, Wits); and Thematic Issue 19:

Knowledge governance for development, guest edited by LINK Visiting Researcher Dr Chris Armstrong

and Dr Tobias Schonwetter of the UCT IP Law Unit.

Research grants continue to be raised by researchers in the school. Notably, Dr Iginio Gagliardone succeeded in harnessing a significant grant from UNESCO for a project about world press freedom on which he is principal investigator. Prof Dan Ojwang has been leading as the co-investigator on a major DAAD-funded project on Literary Cultures of the Global South, in which several staff members in the School have participated. The number of rated researchers in the school increased to 19.

Prizes, awards and honours African Literature Professor Pumla Gqola was awarded the 2016 Sunday Times Alan Paton Award for Non-Fiction for her book Rape: A South African Nightmare. Professor Pumla Gqola was appointed as the inaugural chair of the Fiction panel of the National Humanities and Social Sciences Awards.

Page 2: SLLM 2016 Research Report - wits.ac.za · Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of

Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of Tubingen, Germany. Linguistics Milani Tommaso M. University of the Witwatersrand Faculty of Humanities Teaching and Learning

Award Postgraduate studies.

Journalism

International Association of Literary Journalism Studies prize for Best Article published in the

association’s journal, Literary Journalism Studies, in 2016, to L Cowling for “Echoes of an African Drum:

the Lost Literary Journalism of 1950s South Africa,” published May 2016.

Carolyn Raphaely was awarded a fellowship by North Western University’s Medill Justice Project (MJP)

in Chicago, in the United States.

Ruth Hopkins was awarded the inaugural Sylvester Stein Fellowship for 2016. Ruth spent two and a

half months in the United States investigating the similarities between issues facing both the American

and South African criminal justice systems.

Ruth Hopkins was awarded an Honourable Mention in the 2016 World Justice Project Anthony Lewis

Prize for Exceptional Rule of Law Journalism.

Paul McNally was selected as a Knight Visiting Nieman Fellow at Harvard University for 2016.

The fellowship ran for six week and provided short term research opportunities to journalists working

on innovative and original projects committed to fostering progress in the field of international

journalism.

Media Studies Mehita Iqani was awarded a Certificate of recognition for “Most highly cited researcher” in the Wits Faculty of Humanities in 2016, for her 2016 paper on selfies co-authored with Jonathan E. Schroeder. Media Studies received the Vice-Chancellors Team Teaching Award for 2016 for their curriculum development and teamwork. Importantly, in the context of research-led teaching and teaching-led research, in 2016 Oxford University Press has contracted Mehita Iqani to co-edit (with Sarah Chiumbu) a new book on Decolonial Media Theory. This book is the outcome of the collaborative research-led teaching development work done by the department. Creative Writing Phillippa Yaa de Villiers was shortlisted for Bellagio Residency. Phillippa Yaa de Villiers served on the judging panel, African Poetry Book Prize, English Department, University of Nebraska–Lincoln Ivan Vladislavić’s novel Double Negative (translation) shortlisted for Internationaler Literaturpreis in June 2016. English Prof Chris Thurman elected as president of the Shakespeare Society of Southern Africa.

Page 3: SLLM 2016 Research Report - wits.ac.za · Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of

Accredited Publications

Journal articles

African Languages

Brenda Mhlambi

2016 – ISI 2016

Embodied Discordance: Vernacular Idioms in Winnie: The Opera. African Studies, 2016, 75 (1) pp. 48-

73.

Brenda Mhlambi, Donato Somma, Naomi Andre

2016 – ISI 2016

Winnie: The Opera and Embodying South African Opera. African Studies, 2016, 75 (1) pp. 1-9.

Brenda Mhlambi

2016 – IBSS 2016

Wena ungubani (Who are you)?: Post-1994 identity and memory through ukuthakazela in the ‘new’

media blog. South African journal of African languages/Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir Afrikatale, 2016,

36 (1) pp. 109-122.

Boni Zungu

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

‘Direct indirectness’: evidence of ancestral veneration in the personal names within traditional

polygynous families in KwaMambulu, Kranskop. Nomina Africana: Journal of the Names Society of

Southern Africa/Tydskrif van die Naamkundevereniging van Suider Afrika, 2016, 30 (2) pp. 89-103.

Boni Zungu

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

“Ungethuki Yimina?” Naming process in light of Africa’s community-based identity in the Zulu

Anthroponymic system. Indilinga: African Journal of Indigenous Knowledge Systems, 2016, 15 (3) pp.

269-284.

African Literature

Pumla Gqola

2016 – IBSS 2016

Intimate foreigners or violent neighbours? Thinking masculinity and post-apartheid xenophobic

violence through film. Agenda, 2016, 30 (2) pp. 64-74.

Pumla Gqola

2016 – IBSS 2016

A peculiar place for a feminist? The New South African woman, True Love magazine and Lebo(gang)

Mashile. Safundi: journal of South African and American studies, 2016, 17 (2) pp. 119-136.

Page 4: SLLM 2016 Research Report - wits.ac.za · Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of

Danai Mupotsa, Dorothee Kreutzfeldt

2016 – IBSS 2016

Xenophobia, nationalism and techniques of difference. Agenda, 2016, 30 (2) pp. 13-20

Eddie Ombagi

2016 – IBSS 2016

Notes on the Nation: A Conversation with Sara Ahmed’s Strange Encounters: Embodied Others in Post-

Coloniality, The Cultural Politics of Emotion and Queer Phenomenology: Orientations, Objects, Others.

Agenda, 2016, (2) pp. 147-152

Zukolwenkosi Zikalala

2016 – IBSS 2016

A nation awakened out of its sleep paralysis: A review of Pumla Dineo Gqola’s Rape: A South African

Nightmare. Agenda, 2016, 30 (2) pp. 153-158

Carli Coetzee

2016 – ISI 2016

Afro-superheroes: prepossessing the future. Journal of African Cultural Studies, 2016, 28 (3) pp. 241-

244.

Carli Coetzee

2016 – ISI 2016

Contemporary Conversations: Afropolitanism: Reboot. Journal of African Cultural Studies, 2016, 28 (1)

pp. 101-103.

English Studies

Merle Williams

2016 – ISI 2016

‘A Shape… Crouching within the Shadow of a Tomb’: Shelley’s Qualified Apocalypse in ‘The Triumph

of Life’. Studia Neophilologica, 2016, 88 pp. 4-18.

Merle Williams

2016 – ISI 2016

Protean Form in Washington Square: Linguistic Experimentation and the Anticipation of Life.

English Studies in Africa, 2016, 59 (2) pp. 101 -113.

Merle Williams

2016 – ISI 2016

A Tale of Two Oskars: Security or Hospitality in Jonathan Safran Foer’s Extremely Loud & Incredibly

Close. American Literary History, 2016, 28 (4) pp. 702-720.

John Masterson

2016 – ISI 2016

‘It’s Not Dark Yet, but It’s Getting There’: Listening for the End times in the Contemporary American.

Novel. Studia Neophilologica, 2016, 88 pp. 68-80.

Page 5: SLLM 2016 Research Report - wits.ac.za · Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of

John Masterson

2016 – ISI 2016

Floods, Fortresses, and Cabin Fever: Worlding “Domeland” Security in Dave Eggers’s Zeitoun and The

Circle. American Literary History, 2016, 28 (4) pp. 721-739.

Michael Titlestad

2016 – ISI 2016

This is not the way the world ends: Richard Hughes’s rejoinder to William Golding’s Lord of the Flies

Studia Neophilologica, 2016, 88 pp. 33-46.

Michael Titlestad

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

No Time like the Present: Nadine Gordimer and the Burden of Telos. Journal of Literary Studies, 2016,

32 (2) pp. 1-12.

Michael Titlestad

2016 – IBSS 2016

Conspiracy, apocalypticism, and contingency in Smith Henderson’s Fourth of July Creek

Safundi: Journal of South African and American studies, 2016, 17 (4) pp. 447-459.

Barbara Boswell

2016 – IBSS 2016

Rewriting apartheid South Africa: race and space in Mariam Tlali and Lauretta Ngcobo’s novels.

Gender, place and culture: a journal of feminist geography, 2016, 23 (9) pp. 1329-1342.

Barbara Boswell

2016 – DHET South African List (January 2016)

“Conjuring up her wholeness”. Post-transitional black South African women’s poetry and its

restorative ethic. Scrutiny2 (Unisa English Studies), 2016, 21 (2) pp. 8-26.

Christopher Thurman

2016 – DHET South African List (January 2016)

Imraan Coovadia: Essay and/as Transformation. Current Writing: Text and Reception, 2016, 28 (1) pp.

73-87.

Charne Lavery

2016 – ISI 2016

‘The Darker Side of Durban’: South African Crime Fiction and Indian Ocean Underworlds. Journal of

Southern African Studies, 2016, 42 (3) pp. 539-550.

Hazel Frankel

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

A panorama of portraits: Elements of empathy in the Yiddish poems of David Fram. Literator, 2016,

37 (1) pp. 1-10.

Page 6: SLLM 2016 Research Report - wits.ac.za · Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of

Hazel Frankel

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

From steppe to veld: The landscape poems of the Yiddish poet David Fram. Journal for

Semitics/Tydskrif vir Semitistiek, 2016, 25 (1) pp. 235-252.

Linguistics

Tommaso Milani, E Levon

2016 – ISI 2016

Sexing diversity: Linguistic landscapes of homonationalism. Language & Communication, 2016, 51 pp.

69-86.

Tommaso Milani, D Machin, C R Caldas-Coulthard

2016 – ISI 2016

Doing critical multimodality in research on gender, language and discourse. Gender and Language,

2016, 10 (3) pp. 301-308.

Maxwell Kadenge, A Chebanne, C Phili

2016 – IBSS 2016

Making the form fit: Repair strategies in IKalanga loanword phonology. South African journal of African

languages/Suid-Afrikaanse tydskrif vir Afrikatale, 2016, 36 (2) pp. 231-241.

Maxwell Kadenga, G Mavunga

2016 – ISI 2016

Shona Slang used by Zimbabwean Sex Workers operating from Inner City Johannesburg, South Africa.

Journal of Communication, 2016, 07 (2) pp. 222-230.

Maxwell Kadenge, K Gotosa

2016 – IBSS 2016

Some Reflections on Politeness Strategies among Shona Speaking Couples in Zimbabwe. Journal of

sociology and social anthropology, 2016, 7 (2) pp. 92-100.

Ramona Kunene Nicolas, Saaliha Ahmed

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

Lexical development of noun and predicate comprehension and production in isiZulu. South African

Journal of Communication Disorders, 2016, 63 (2) pp. 1-10.

Journalism

Franz Kruger

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

Discourse Ethics and the Media. African Journalism Studies (Formerly Equid Novi – African Journalism

Studies), 2016, 37 (2) pp. 21-39.

Page 7: SLLM 2016 Research Report - wits.ac.za · Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of

Ewan Sutherland

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

China and Africa: Alternative Telecommunication Policies and Practices. African Journal of Information

& Communication, 2016, 17, pp. 165-195.

Media Studies

Antonio Ciaglia

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

Democratising Public Service Broadcasting: The South African Broadcasting Corporation – Between

Politicisation and Commercialisation. African Journalism Studies (Formerly Equid Novi - African

Journalism Studies), 2016, 37 (2) pp. 95-115.

Sarah Chiumbu

2016 – ISI 2016

Media, Race and Capital: A Decolonial Analysis of Representation of Miners’ Strikes in South Africa.

African Studies, 2016m 75 (3) pp. 417-435.

Glenda Daniels

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

Chasing Hashtag#25 in the newsrooms presents challenges for Journalism Education. But what are

they? African Journalism Studies (Formerly Equid Novi – African Journalism Studies), 2016, 37 (2) pp.

1-18.

Glenda Daniels

2016 – ISI 2016

Paradoxical Splits: Race and Journalists’ identity in Post-apartheid South Africa. African Studies, 2016,

75 (3) pp. 436-448.

Nicky Falkof

2016 – ISI 2016

ENG/AFR: white masculinity in two contemporary South African films. Critical Arts-South-North

Cultural and Media Studies, 2016, 30 (1) pp. 15-30.

Mehita Iqani, Jonathan E Schroeder

2016 – ISI 2016

#selfie: digital self-portraits as commodity form and consumption practice. Consumption Markets &

Culture, 2016, 19 (5) pp. 405-415.

Mehita Iqani, Pontsho Pilane

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

Miss-represented: A critical analysis of the visibility of black women in South African Glamour

magazine. Communicare: Journal for Communication Sciences in Southern Africa, 2016, 35 (1) pp. 126-

171.

Page 8: SLLM 2016 Research Report - wits.ac.za · Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of

Nicky Falkof

2016 – ISI 2016

Out the back: Race and reinvention in Johannesburg’s garden cottages. International Journal of

Cultural Studies, 2016, 19 (6) pp. 627-642.

Ufuoma Akpojivi, Ayesha L Bevan-Dye

2016 – ISI 2016

South African General Y students’ self-disclosure on Facebook. South African Journal of Psychology,

2016, 46 (1) pp. 114-129.

Modern Languages

Fiona Horne

2016 – DHET South African List (January 2016)

The repositioning of literature in French foreign language teaching in South Africa:

Performing dialogue, diversity and difference. Journal of Language Teaching: (SAALT Journal for

Language Teaching), 2016, 50 (1) pp. 11-27.

Alexia Vassilatos

2016 – DHET South African List (January 2016)

The transculturation of Thomas Mofolo’s Chaka. Tydskrif Vir Letterkunde, 2016, 53 (2) pp. 161-174.

Alexia Vassilatos

2016 – DHET South African List (January 2016)

Au croisement des cultures: Reine Pokou de Veronique Tadjo au niveau des etudes superieures dans

le contexte sud-africain. French Studies in Southern Africa, 2016, 46 pp. 132-148

Anita Virga

2016 – DHET South African List (January 2016)

Pamela ovvero la ‘Venere Bianca’: II racconto dissidente di fausta cialente. Italian Studies in Southern

Africa, 2016, 29 (2) pp. 75-97

Nereida Ripero-Muniz

2016 – ISI 2016

Metropolitan nomads: a journey through Jo’burg’s “little Mogadishu”. Anthropology Southern Africa,

2016, 39 (3) pp. 232-240.

Peter Horn

2016 – DHET South African List (January 2016)

Warum drucken wir etwas aus? Zu einigen Gedichten Gottfried Benns. Acta Germanica, German

Studies in Africa, 2016, 44 (1) pp. 219 – 231.

Page 9: SLLM 2016 Research Report - wits.ac.za · Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of

South African Sign Language

Morgan Ruth, Glaser Meryl, Magongwa Lucas

2016 – DHET South African list (January 2016)

Constructing and rolling out the new South African Sign Language (SASL) Curriculum. Reflexive Critique

Per Linguam: A Journal of Language Learning, 2016, 32 (2) pp 15-29.

Senna Tshegofatso

2016 – IBSS 2016

Deaf women’s lived experiences of their constitutional rights in South Africa. Agenda, 2016, 30 (1) pp.

65-75.

Chapters

African Literature

Bheki Peterson – 2016

Sol Plaatje’s Native life in South Africa: Past and Present

Chapter 2 – In B. Peterson & B. Willan & J. Remmington (eds.)

Modernist at large: The aesthetics of Native life in South Africa.

(pp. 18-36) Johannesburg: Wits University Press.

978-1-86814-981-0

Media Studies

Glenda Daniels – 2016

South African Arab or Democracy to Come? An analysis of South African Journalists’ Engagement with

Citizenry through Twitter.

Chapter 7 – In B. Mutsvairo (eds) Participatory Politics and Citizen Journalism in a Networked Africa.

(pp. 107-122) BASINGSTOKE: Palgrave MacMillan.

978-1-137-55449-9

Dina Ligaga – 2016

Writing the Postcolony: Narrative, (re)Memory and the Imaginary in The Blind Kingdom and Queen

Pokou.

Chapter 2 – In D. Kabwe-Segatti & S. Cordova (eds.) Ecrire, traduire, peindre Veronique Tadjo.

(pp. 121-137) Paris: Presence Africaine, 978-2-7087-0892-1

Ufuoma Akpojivi – 2016 / M Fosu

Indigenous Language Media, Language Politics and Democracy in Africa.

Chapter 6 – In M.B. Chibita & A. Salawu (eds.) Indigenous Language Broadcasting in Ghana: Retrospect

and Prospect. (pp. 121-150) England: Palgrave MacMillan, 978-1-137-54729-3

Johanna Willems – 2015

The Routledge Companion to Alternative and Community Media.

Chapter 7 – In C. Atton (eds.) Alternative mediation, power and civic agency in Africa.

(pp. 88-99) Abington, Oxon and New York: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, 978-0-415-64404-4

Page 10: SLLM 2016 Research Report - wits.ac.za · Professor Dan Ojwang was, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, the Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies at the University of

Johanna Willems – 2015

Race and the Reproduction of Colonial Mythologies on land: A Post-Colonial reading of British Media

discourse on Zimbabwe

Chapter 15 – In W, Mano (eds.) Racism, Ethnicity and the Media in Africa: Mediating conflict in the

twenty-first century. (pp. 298-315) London: IB Tauris 978-1-78076-706-2

Modern Languages

Luigi Robuschi – 2016

Cavalieri Mediterranei e Corsari Caraibici: L’ordine di Malta nelle Antille Francesi.

Chapter 5 – In G. Spani & M. Marino (eds.)

Visioni Mediterranee. Itinerari e Migrazioni Culturali.

(pp. 73-89) Lanciano: Casa Editrice Rocco Carabba.

978-88-6344-398-1

Andreas Hettiger – 2016

Babel in Regenbogenland?

Chapter 2 – In K. Wermbter & Martin. Neef (eds.) Babel re-searched: Braunschweiger Beitrage zu

Mehrsprachigkelt und Interkulturalitat. (pp. 147-174) Marburg: Tectum Verlag. 978-3-8288-3735-5

Authored Books

African Literature

Pumla Gqola – 2015

Rape: A South African Nightmare. (1st edition): Johannesburg: Jacana Media (Pty) Ltd. 192 pp.

Translation and Interpreting Studies

Judith Inggs – 2016

Transition and Transgression: English Young Adult Fiction in Post-Apartheid South Africa. (1st edition):

Gewerbestrasse: Springer. 120 pp.

Media Studies

Mehita Iqani – 2016

Consumption, Media and the Global South: Aspiration Contested.

(1st Edition): Pietermartizburg: University of KwaZulu-Natal Press. 232 pp.

Iginio Gagliardone – 2016

The Politics of Technology in Africa: Communication, Development and Nation-Building in Ethiopia.

(1st Edition): Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 177 pp.

Modern Languages

Anette and Peter Horn – 2016

Der Schrei ist das einzig Ewige: Die Ramone Thomas Berhards. (1st Edition): Oberhausen: Athena

Verlag. 258 pp.

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Non-Accredited Publications but Peer-Reviewed

Journal articles

African Literature

Isabel Hofmeyr - Editorial

2016 – ISI 2016

Durban and Cape Town as Port Cities: Reconsidering Southern African Studies from the Indian Ocean.

Journal of Southern African Studies, 2016, 42 (3) PP. 539-550.

Creative Writing

Bronwyn Law-Viljoen

The Package. 2016 In Source: The Photographic Review 87 (Autumn), 23-25.

Bronwyn Law-Viljoen

This is what I talk about when I talk: the portraits of Zanele Muholi. 2016 ZUM Magazine.

Ivan Vladislavić

Excerpt from Double Negative, in Betti-Sue Hertz, Frank Smigiel and Dominic Willsdon (eds), Public

Intimacy: Art and Other Ordinary Acts in South Africa (Yerba Buena Centre for the Arts, San Francisco,

2016).

Ivan Vladislavić

‘Vaggsång’ (story), Karavan, No. 1 2016 (Stockholm, 2016; Swedish translation of ‘Lullaby’).

Ivan Vladislavić,

‘De blankenbank’ (story), Tirade, 464 September 2016, Jaargang 60 (Amsterdam, 2016; Dutch

translation of ‘The Whites Only Bench’).

Ivan Vladislavić

‘101 Detectives’ (story), in The Offing, Los Angeles Review of Books, 2016.

Ivan Vladislavić,

‘On first looking into Godot’ (essay), Thesis Eleven, Vol. 136, No. 1, October 2016.

English

Barbara Boswell; Jane Bennett; Tanekwah Hinds; Jody Metcalfe and Ivy Kabura Nganga

Activist Leadership and Questions of Sexuality with Young Women: A South African Story

2016 Feminist Formations: Vol. 28 No. 2 (Summer) pp. 27 – 50.

Media Studies

Iginio Gagliardone and Frederick Golooba-Mutebi

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The Evolution of the Internet in Ethiopia and Rwanda: Towards a “Developmental” Model? 2016

Journal of Security & Development. 5(1): 8: pp 1-24.

Modern Languages

Nereida Ripero-Muniz

2015. Mayfair: “A Somali Island In Johannesburg”. Itch. The Creative Journal. Volume 15. Available from: http://itch.co.za/writing/mayfair-gallery

Nereida Ripero-Muniz and Salym Fayad. 2015. “Mayfair, el barrio somalí de Johannesburgo”, EL PAÏS, Planeta Futuro, Blog Seres Urbanos. Available from: http://blogs.elpais.com/seres-urbanos/2015/04/mayfair-el-pulso-del-barrio-somal%C3%AD-de-johannesburgo.html

Nereida Ripero-Muñiz, Nereida and Salym Fayad 2015. ”Metropolitan Nomads A journey through Joburg’s Little Mogadishu”, Afrikan Sarvi, 2. Available from: http://afrikansarvi.fi/issue10/109-matkakertomus/266-metropolitan-nomads-a-journey-through-joburg-s-little-mogadishu

Véronique Tadjo

Écrire, traduire, peindre (Writing, Translating, Painting) Présence Africaine

Kathleen Thorpe

Temeswarer Beitráge Zur Germanistik 2015 Verlag; Band 12. 193-201

Anette Horn – Online article

2016 Metaphorische Gratwanderungen göttlichen Scheiterns. In: Polylogzentrum für Kunst, Kultur, Wissenschaft und Gesellschaft 2016-08-27 für Kunst, Kultur, Wissenschaft und Gesellschaft http://www.polylogzentrum.at/weltprojekt-der-berge/dokumentation/anschauungen-der-

berge/metaphorische-gratwanderungen-goettlichen-scheiterns/

Peter Horn

2016 Die Namen der Berge im Südlichen Afrika. In: Polylogzentrum für Kunst, Kultur, Wissenschaft und Gesellschaft 2016-08-27. http://www.polylogzentrum.at/welt projekt-der-berge/dokumentation/die- namen-der-berge/die-namen-der-berge-im-suedlichen-afrika/

Peter and Anette Horn - Editorial

2017 Peter Horn & Anette Horn (Edited by). 100 Poems from Bangladesh. Edition Delta, Stuttgart

Andreas Hettiger

Der Beitrag von Sprachenzentren zur Internationalisierung der Hochschulen, in: 2016 Fremdsprachen

und Hochschule (FuH). Bochum: AKS-Verlag, Vol 91; pp 9-22

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Philina Wittke

Curriculum Transformation at the University of the Witwatersrand; Thoughts of a Lecturer in German

Studies. 2016 eDUSA Deutschunterricht im Südlichen Afrika Teaching German in Southern Africa Vol

11/1

Chapters

Media Studies

Iginio Gagliardone and Matti Pohjonen

Chapter 2, pp 25-43, Engaging in Polarized Society: Social Media and Political Discourse in Ethiopia

Book: “Digital Activism in the Social Media Era: Critical Reflections on Emerging Trends in sub-Saharan

Africa”

Modern Languages

Andreas Hettiger

Chapter 2, pp 147-174, Babel im Regenbogenland? Book: Babel re-searched: Vraunschweiger Beitrage

zu Mehrsprachigkeit und Interkulturalitat

Peter Horn

2016 „We all sat round a faia“. In: Lawrence J. Trudeau (ed.) Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism. Gale, Farmington Hills, MI. p.3-8. ISBN 13-978-1-4103-1598-4. Reprint rom: UCT Studies in English 7 (1977): pp. 28-36.

Authored Books

Creative Writing

Bronwyn Law-Viljoen

The Printmaker, Umuzi; pp9-267

Media Studies

Mehita Iqani and Bridget Kenny

Consumption, Media and Culture in South Africa: Perspectives on freedom and the public.

Routledge; pp 1-173.

Modern Languages

Peter Horn – Book translation

2016 M.N.K. Mtileni (Translator): Switlhokovetselo Swa Peter Horn. Nhlalala Books. [Poems translated

into Xitsonga]

South African Sign Language

Michiko Kaneko Sutton-Spence, Rachel & (2016)

Introducing Sign Language Literature: Folklore & Creativity. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

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Commercial long-form publications:

Davie, Kevin: Through Sinai, the land of Moses, in the time of Islamic State, by bicycle (Mail &

Guardian, 27 Sep 2016) https://mg.co.za/data/2016-09-27-mosess-path-in-islamic-state-times-on-a-

bicycle

Sampear, Aldrin: The blood-stained chronicles: undercover as a homeless windscreen washer

(Mail&Guardian, 25 October 2016) https://mg.co.za/article/2016-10-25-the-blood-stained-

chronicles-undercover-as-a-hillbrow-homeless-windscreen-washer

Davie, Kevin: The ghosts that accompany endurance cyclists (Mail&Guardian 9 January, 2016),

https://mg.co.za/article/2016-01-27-the-ghosts-that-accompany-endurance-cyclists

PG students completed (PhD, MA dissertation, MA Course-Work and

Research Report) African Literature 1. Anne Ajulu-Okungu (PhD) 2. Modupe Adebawo (MA) 3. Unifier Dyer (MA) 4. Linda Thango (MA) 1 PhD 3 MA English 1. Josiah Nyanda (PhD) 2. Carla Chait (MA) 3. Baron Glanvill (MA) 4. Kate Sidley (MA) 1 PhD 3 MA Creative Writing 1. Baikie, T. MA by research. With distinction. 2. Kurgan, T. MA by research. With distinction. 3. Oldert, N. MA by research. With distinction. 4. Gabonewe, T. MA by research. 5. Sidley, K. MA by research. 6. Jacobs, P. MA by research. 7. Johaardien, A. MA by research. 8. Langer, M. MA by research. With distinction. 9. Thomas, R. MA by research. 9 MA Journalism 1. Brigitte Read – MA Course work and Research Report

2. Moagasi Sibanda – MA Course work and Research Report

3. Kate Ferreira – MA Course work and Research Report

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4. Nooshin Erfani Ghadmi – MA by Research

5. Richard Frank – MA Course work and Research Report

6. Lisa Steyn - MA Course work and Research Report

7. Mike Smurthwaite – MA Course work and Research Report

8. Sintha Chiuma – MA Course work and Research Report

8 MAs

Linguistics 1. Tasmia Khan MA by research 2. Dakom Damun MA by research 3. Nonhlanhla Ntuli MA by research 4. Megan Edwards MA by research 5. Kate Ferrera MA by research 5 MAs

Media Studies 1. Tendai Chari, PhD 2. Zvenyika Mugari, PhD. William and Ntihila Kupe Prize for Postgraduate Research Excellence for

best PhD thesis in 2016 3. Christi Kruger, PhD. Registered in Wiser but supervised in Media Studies. Winner of 2015 Monica

Wilson Prize for best article published in Anthropology South Africa 4. Sally Kumwenda, MA 5. Jessica Pereira, MA. Stuart Hall Prize for best Masters dissertation in 2016 6. Simphiwe Emmanuel Rens, MA 7. Megan Edwards, MA. Co-supervised with Linguistics 3 PhD 4 MA Publishing Studies 1. C Willis, MA Coursework and Research Report 2. C Jelegat, MA Coursework and Research Report 3. G Marx, MA Coursework and Research Report 3 MA SA Sign Language 1. Nyeleti Nkwinika (MA Dissertation) 2. Donovan Wright (MA Dissertation) – dissertation submitted in December 2016, corrections

submitted in March 2017. 2 MA School Total: 5 PhD, 24 MA

PhD students registered

African Literature 1. Francis Anolue 2. Rangarirayi Mapanzure 3. Nomonde Ntsepo 4. Femi Eromosele

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5. Thabang Nkuna 6. Natasha Himmelman 7. Byron Sherman 8. Rangoato Hlasane 9. Addamms Mututa 10. Eddie Ombagi 11. Felix Ndaka 12. Jane Wakarindi 13. Joshua Kumwenda 14. Vusi Mchunu Creative Writing 1. Greta Schuler 2. Joanne Hichens 3. Rohan Dickson 4. Kgafela Magogodi 5. Bronwyn Law-Viljoen English 1. Anthea Buys 2. Leila Hassim 3. Barbara Janari 4. Tafirenyika Madziyauswa 5. Edwin Mhandu 6. Manosa Nthunya 7. Natalie Paoli 8. Robyn Pierce 9. Daniela Pitt 10. Clea Schultz 11. Sergio Teixeira 12. Marinus van Niekerk 13. Karl van Wyk 14. Alexandra Wheeler Linguistics 1. Saaliha Ahmed

2. Cynthia Mazibuko

3. Nonhlanhla Ntuli

4. Gilles Baro

5. Megan Edwards

6. William Kelleher

7. Clive Vanderwagen 8. Steven Fielding Journalism 1. Ms. Dineshree Balliah – In progress (Supervisor - Dr. Glenda Daniels)

2. Mr. Franz Kruger – In Progress (Supervisor – Professor Sue Van Zyl)

3. Mr. Emeka Umejei – Proposal submitted (Supervisor – Dr. Iginio Gagliardone)

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Media Studies (supervisor’s noted by initials) 1. Onkopotse JJ Tabane – on final draft 2. Dinesh Balliah – busy with fieldwork 3. David Wigston – investigating his drop out out 4. Siyasanga Tyali (Submitting thesis for examination in June) 5. Last Alfandika 6. Lwazi Mjiyako 7. Yolanda Vamusse 8. Gloria Ernest-Samuel 9. Anthony Ambala 10. James Smurthwaite (writing up) 11. Gloria Ooko (commencing) 12. Vidhya Sana (Fieldwork) 13. Catherine Duncan – writing up 14. Katlego Disemelo – busy with fieldwork 15. Yolo Siyabonga Koba – thesis under examination, submitted January 2017 16. Sphesihle Khanyile – just submitted proposal (April 2017) 17. Hugh Ellis – writing up 18. Beauty Muromo – writing up 19. Viraj Suparsad – fieldwork 20. Emeka Umejei – submitting 21. Job Mwaura – commencing 22. Edwin Tallam – commencing Publishing Studies 1. Griffin Shea

Staff with/without PhDs

Permanent Academic Staff with/without PhDs

Of the total permanent staff complement of 54, 45 or 83% already have PhDs.

Four members of academic staff are currently registered for a PhD, one of these being a tutor.

One is registered for an MA (submitted).

Of the remaining four the staff members without PhD, one holds an Honours degree and is a

Distinguished Professor (Creative Writing), one holds an MA degree (English), and the remaining two

are tutors.

Staff working on postgraduate degrees are provided with support through writing retreats and

teaching buy-outs.

AFRICAN LANGUAGES

4 members of staff, 2 with PhD

1 Associate Professor

1 Lecturer

1 Principal Tutor

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1 Tutor, registered for a PhD

AFRICAN LITERATURE

5 members of staff, all with PhDs

3 Professors (1 Research Professor)

1 Associate Professor

1 Lecturer

CREATIVE WRITING

3 members of staff, 1 with PhD

1 Distinguished Professor

1 Associate Professor

1 Lecturer

ENGLISH

13 members of staff, 12 with PhDs

4 Professors

2 Associate Professors

2 Senior Lecturers

4 Lecturers

JOURNALISM

3 members of staff, one with a PhD

1 Adjunct Professors 1 registered for PhD

1 Associate Professor

1 Lecturer

LINGUISTICS

4 members of staff, all with PhDs

2 Associate Professors

1 Senior Lecturer

1 Lecturer

MEDIA STUDIES

7 members of staff, 7 with PhDs

2 Associate Professors

4 Senior Lecturers

1 Lecturer

MODERN LANGUAGES

French Studies

3 members of staff, 3 with PhD

1 Senior Lecturer

2 Lecturers

German Studies

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1 member of staff, with PhD

1 Professor

Italian Studies

3 members of staff, 2 with PhDs

2 Lecturers

1 Tutor

Spanish

1 member of staff with PhD

1 Lecturer

South African Sign Language

3 permanent members of staff, 2 with PhDs

3 Lecturers (1 at 50%)

(1 Associate Lecturer 50%)

Translation & Interpreting Studies

3 members of staff, 3 with PhDs

1 Associate Professor

1 Senior Lecturer (50%) (resigned July 2016)

1 Lecturer

LINK CENTRE

1 members of staff, with PhD

1 Senior Lecturers

Table 6: Distribution in 2014 – permanent staff only

Positions Totals and percentage

Tutors 3 (5%)

Principal Tutors 1 (2%)

Lecturers 20 (37%)

Senior Lecturers 10 (19%)

Associate Professors 11 (20%)

Adjunct Professors 1 (2%)

Professors 8 (15%)

Totals 54

Associate Lecturers 2

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Breakdown by discipline: Profs, Aspros, Snr Lects, Lects, Assoc Lects, Tutors

African Languages

Assoc. Professor (1): Mhlambi, I.

Lecturer (1): Zungu, Boni, Dr

Principal Tutor (1): Setshedi, Q. Mrs

Tutor (2): Mjiyako, L.

African Literature

Professor (3): Hofmeyr, I.; Peterson, B.; Gqola, P

Assoc. Professor (1): Ojwang, D.

Lecturer (1): Mupotsa, D.

CREATIVE WRITING

Professor (1): Vladislavic, I.

Assoc. Prof (1): Law-Viljoen, B.

Lecturer (1): De Villiers, P.

English

Professor (4): Houliston, V.; Williams, M.; Titlestad, M; Muponde, R.

Ass. Professor (3): Gaylard, G.; Thurman, C.;

Senior Lecturer (1): Jones, T; Boswell, B.

Lecturer (3): Adler, M.; Gordon, C.; Kostelac, S.; Van Schalkwyk, S; Fanucchi, S.

JOURNALISM

Adjunct Professor (2): Kruger, F.

Assoc. Prof (1): Cowling, L.

Lecturer (1): Balliah, D.

LINGUISTICS

Ass. Professor (1): Milani, T; Kadenge, M.

Senior Lecturers (2): Van Der Spuy, A. Dr;

Lecturer (1): Kunene-Nicolas, R. Dr

MEDIA STUDIES

Assoc. Prof (1) Iqani, M; Falkof, N.

Senior Lecturer (3): Ligaga, D; Daniels, G.; Akpojivi, U.; Van Staden, C.;

Lecturer (3): Gagliardone, I.

MODERN LANGUAGES

French Studies

Sen. Lecturer (1): Vassilatos, A.

Lecturer (2): Horne, F. Dr; Moji, P. Dr

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German Studies

Professor (1): Horn, A.

Italian Studies

Lecturer (2): Robuschi, L. Dr; Virga, A. Dr

Tutor (1): Gianoglio, C. Mrs.

Portuguese

Associate Lecturer (1)

South African Sign Language

Lecturers (3): Janse Van Vuuren, N. Ms; Kaneko, M.; Morgan, R. (50 %)

Associate Lecturer (1): Wright, D. (50%)

Spanish

Lecturer (1): Ripero-Muniz, N. Dr

TRANSLATION & INTERPRETING STUDIES

Ass. Professor (1): Inggs, J.

Senior Lecturer (1): Fléchais, O. Dr (50%) (until mid-2016)

Lecturer (1): Fotheringham, C. Dr

LINK CENTRE

Senior Lecturer (2): Abrahams, L.

Postdoctoral Fellows

Linguistics

Dimitris Kitis 07 November 2013 to 08 November 2016

English/African Literature

Charne Lavery 23 January 2014 to 24 January 2017

English/Creative Writing

Hazel Frankel 01 January 2015 to 30 March 2017

English

Lara Buxbaum 01 April 2015 to 31 March 2017

French

Katia Gottin 05 October 2015 to 30 September 2017

International research collaborations African Literature The DAAD-funded Thematic Network on “Literary Cultures of the Global South.” The research network, which is funded to the tune of 1 million euros over a 4-year period (2015-2018) involves academics and postgraduate students from 8 universities. The network organizes students and staff exchanges, conferences, annual summer schools and student workshops. The Wits team is coordinated by Prof Dan Ojwang.

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Journalism Indra de Lanerolle is a member of the World Internet Project international research group that

includes members from more than twenty countries in North and South America, Asia, the Middle

East and Europe. The research group meets annually and aims to produce quantitative research on

Internet access and use.

Indra de Lanerolle was appointed as a member of the Making All Voices Count Research Outreach

Team in 2016 by the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, Brighton, one of the

leading development research institutions in the world. He works with researchers in the UK,

Philippines, East Africa, Indonesia and Ghana to develop research, evidence and learning approaches

for the Making All Voices Count programme which aims to strengthen the use of Internet and related

technologies in transparency and accountability.

Indra de Lanerolle concluded a research study with partners in the UK, Norway and Kenya on

processes of technology selection and development in transparency and accountability in South Africa

and Kenya. The study was published in May 2016.

Bob Wekesa is a steering committee member of the Chinese in Africa, Africans in China Research

Network with partners from USA, China (including Hong Kong), Belgium and Norway. This initiative

includes an active google group with over 700 members. Wekesa represents Africa in the group.

Bob Wekesa representing Wits Africa China Reporting Project in an ongoing project with Friedrich

Ebert Stiftung (Germany Foundation) and Institute for Global Dialogue (South Africa) aimed at

developing an African policy towards China.

Alan Finlay ran a two-day pre-event at the Internet Governance Forum in Guadalajara in Mexico on

the topic of economic, social and cultural rights and the internet, on behalf of the Association for

Progressive Communications.

Linguistics Kunene Nicolas R. 4-Year, Marie Curie International Research Staff Exchange Scheme (IRSES), Seventh

Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development, Grant number: GEST_LAN_D

PIRSES-GA-2013-612563 “Gesture and Language Development across Romance and Bantu Languages.

€52164 (Euros)/ +R890,000 for Wits partner. Principal Investigator for Wits, Co-PI for collaboration. A

4 year international partnership between the university of Grenoble Alpes, France, (GLADD) Lab at the

Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) of the National Council for Research (CNR) of

Italy and the university of Cape Town.

Milani Tommaso M. Research Council of Norway. 3-year International Partnership (NOK 3 978 000)

between the University of Oslo, University of the Witwatersrand, University of Cape Town, University

of the Western Cape and Stellenbosch University. Main applicant is Professor Elizabeth Lanza

(University of Oslo). The aim of the network is to develop a North/South dialogue on issues of

multilingualism.

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Milani Tommaso M. Danish Agency for Science and Innovation. 1-year International Partnership on

“Language, Gender and Sexuality in a Global Materialility Perspective” (DKK 199 000). The aim of the

collaboration is to initiate a North/South and South-South dialogue on issues of gender, sexuality and

language. The collaboration involves researchers from the University of Copenhagen (Denmark),

University of Sao Paulo (Brazil) and Wits University (South Africa). Main applicant is Dr Marie Megaard

(University of Copenhagen).

Van Der Spuy, Andrew: ‘The embedded indexical value of /s/-fronting in Afrikaans and South African

English.’ Joint project with Prof Ian Bekker, NWU, and DR Erez Levon, Queen Mary’s College, London.

(Co-editor with Lutz Marten, SOAS, and DR Kristina Riedel, UFS) Special edition of Nordic Journal of

African Studies (forthcoming).

Media Studies Ufuoma Akpojivi worked with Teke Ngomba (Aarhus University, Denmark); Michael Coynette

(Okanagan College, Canada); Jose Luis Gomez (UDEN Spain).

Iginio Gagliardone won a major grant from UNESCO, on which he is the principal investigator. The

project is on World Trends of Freedom of Expression and Media Development. The Co-Investigator is

Emanuele Fantini on UNESCO-IHE project on Water Diplomacy and the Media on the Nile Basin.

Mehita Iqani worked with Dr Simidele Dosekun (Sussex, UK) on convening a workshop on ‘Luxury

Aesthetics in Africa’ in November 2016, which will be turned into a book project.

Nicky Falkof worked with Moradewun Adejunmobi from UC Davis on a journal special issue; and is

working towards a joint article with Sara Orning from Oslo University

SA Sign Language Michiko Kaneko Ongoing collaboration with Prof Anne Baker from Stellenbosch Creative Writing Phillippa Yaa de Villiers is a Fellow, Centre of Transcultural Research, Lancaster University, and Fellow, Africa Study Centre University of Leiden, and Guest editor, special edition of Atlanta Review poetry journal, Georgia Institute of Technology. English Prof Merle Williams is the South African leader of the “Fictions of Threat” collaboration with the University of Uppsala in Sweden and the University of Sussex, UK (2013-2017). The group has received a grant of 1.541 million Swedish krona from STINT (The Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education) and has hosted an international research colloquium annually since 2014. The 2016 colloquium was themed “Cultures of Risk: Management, Speculation, Symptom”. Other colleagues involved in this project are Prof Michael Titlestad, Dr Simon van Schalkwyk and Dr Lara Buxbaum. Research articles emerging from the collaboration have been published or are forthcoming in issues of the journals English Studies in Africa, Safundi and Studia Neophilologica. When Tomorrow Comes, a visual arts exhibition co-curated by Prof Titlestad, opened at the Wits Art Museum in March 2016. Prof Merle Williams is volume editor for The Complete Fiction of Henry James, the first-ever critical edition of James’s fiction which is being produced by an international group of scholars for Cambridge University Press in Cambridge.

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Prof Chris Thurman is the project leader of “‘Our’ Shakespeare: Performance, Translation, Education” (2015-2017), a collaboration between South African and German Shakespeare scholars, theatre makers, translators and educationists co-funded by the National Research Foundation (South Africa) and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (Germany).

Conferences, symposia, public lectures/talks/seminars and visiting

speakers Hosted and organised: The Literary Humanities in the Global South: The Question of University Pedagogies. Danai Mupotsa, Barbara Boswell, Harry Garuba, Simon During, Elsie Cloete, etc. 27-28 June 2016, University of Tübingen. Conference organized by Dan Ojwang and Russell West-Pavlov. ‘Luxury Aesthetics in Africa’ Workshop on 15 November 2016. Johannesburg, SA. Speakers: Hlonipha Mokoena (University of the Witwatersrand); Alexia Smit (University of Cape Town); Simidele Dosekun (University of Sussex); Amah Edoh (MIT); Ilana van Wyk (University of Cape Town); Pamila Gupta and Joni Brenner (University of the Witwatersrand); Ndapwa Alweendo (The university currently known as Rhodes); Mehita Iqani (University of the Witwatersrand). Organised by Mehita Iqani. Radio Days Africa: Wits Journalism hosts an annual conference of radio practitioners, the largest of its

kind on the continent. The 2016 edition took place at Wits between 29 June and 1 July, and drew

around 300 participants. Details at http://www.journalism.co.za/radiodays.

AIJC: Wits Journalism hosts the annual African Investigative Journalism Conference. The 2016 edition

took place on 7 – 9 November, and drew around 450 participants. Details at

http://www.journalism.co.za/aijc/.

Taco Kuiper awards: Wits Journalism awards the largest prize for investigative journalism in the

country. The prize is awarded at an annual event with a prestigious international speaker. Details at

http://www.journalism.co.za/tacokuiper/.

Ruth First Fellowship and lecture: Wits Journalism annually awards the Ruth First Fellowship, and

fellows then deliver the results of their research at a public lecture timed to mark pioneering journalist

First’s death in August. At the 2016 event, research papers were delivered by Lwandile Fikeni, Leigh-

Ann Naidoo and Nolwazi Tusini. Details at http://www.journalism.co.za/projects-a-fellowships/ruth-

first/.

Carlos Cardoso lecture: Wits Journalism hosts the annual Carlos Cardoso Lecture to highlight media

freedom issues in Africa, it is timed to coincide with the AIJC. The 2016 event took place on 8

November, and was delivered by Rwandan journalist Bob Rugurika, director of the private radio

station Radio Publique Africaine. Details at http://www.journalism.co.za/blog/2016-carlos-cardoso-

memorial-lecture/.

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“Workshop in Sign Linguistics”. Names of Speakers: Professor Anne Baker (University of Amsterdam), Morgana Proietti (Ca Foscari University), Michiko Kaneko (Wits), Naomi Janse Van Vuuren (Wits) 09/03/2016 Name of organiser: Michiko Kaneko. In Media Studies: Cobus van Staden arranged several school seminars in 2016, most notably a roundtable on press freedom. Nicky Falkof gave two public launches for her book, The End of Whiteness. Iginio Gagliardone collaborated with Wits Journalism in the launch of a series on seminars on Internet Research. Publishing Studies hosted a number of seminars:

Christopher Fotheringham – Translation issues in publishing

Isabel Hofmeyr – Introduction to book history

Melanie Law, Programme Leader: Language Practice, School of Languages, University of North West – Onscreen copyediting

Joanne Fedler, author – marketing your books as an author

Andrew Joseph, digital publisher, Wits University Press - Digital academic publishing

Bernita Naudé, publishing director, Macmillan Publishers - Digital publishing for SA schools

Griffin Shea, PhD student and bookseller – bookselling in inner city Johannesburg Creative Writing has hosted the South African Literature series: University of Pretoria, as well as an ongoing seminar series: ZAPP – researcher on South African Poetry Project, a 3-year Indigenous knowledge research project. In 2016 the English Research Seminar series, convened by Prof Merle Williams and Dr Sonia Fanucchi, included eight seminars on various aspects of English literature presented by visiting scholars, members of staff and postgraduate students. Presented: Organised in alphabetical order by staff member name. Akpojivi, Ufuoma . 5-12 December 2016. New Social Movement and Activism: #BringBackOurGirls and

the Feminism Discourse in Nigeria. Akpojivi, Ufuoma. 25-26 August, 2016. Representation of the #BringBackOurGirls Social Movement in

Nigeria: Case Studies OF vanguard and Guardian Newspapers. Boswell, Barbara. 24/08/2016. “African Feminist Literature as Decolonial Praxis”. Decolonising

Feminism. University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa. Boswell, Barbara. 27/06/2016. “Centering African Feminist Thought in the Decolonization Project”.

The Literary Humanities in the Global South: The Question of University Pedagogies. University of Tübingen, Germany.

Boswell, Barbara. 14/04/2016. “Black Feminist Geography in South African Literature”. Spatial Justice and the Postcolony. University of Cape Town, South Africa.

Buxbaum, Lara. 30/06/2016. “Intimacy and Risk in The Alphabet of Birds, The Reactive and Risk”.

Cultures of Risk: Management, Speculation, Symptom. University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom.

Buxbaum, Lara. 15 April 2016. “Xenophobia and Animality in Zoo City, Zebra Crossing and Wolf, Wolf”. Stranger in a Strange Land: SAVAL/SASGLS Colloquium. UNISA, Pretoria, South Africa.

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Daniels, Glenda. 19 October, 2016. Censorship in South Africa today. Second day Plenary/keynote address, conference presentation at the Reporting Race conference: presentation at the Institute for the Advancement of Journalism. Johannesburg.

Daniels, Glenda. 23 July 2016. The Saga of the SABC. Keynote address to the Broadcast Complaints Commission of SA (BCCSA). Magaliesberg.

Daniels, Glenda. 22 April 2016. What is the master signifier in the discourse of journalists around political party membership? Sacomm roundtable. UJ.

Daniels, Glenda. 19 July 2016. Censorship and Freedom of Expression at the Institute for the Advancement of Journalism on Racism, Moderator of public panel discussion: Johannesburg.

Daniels, Glenda. 6 June 2016. SABC and Censorship. Panelist on panel discussion on Maggs on Media at eNCA. Johannesburg.

Daniels, Glenda. 18 May 2016. Media Transformation/ State of the Newsroom race and gender transformation. Panel discussion hosted by the SLLM. Wits University. Johannesburg.

Daniels, Glenda. 29 March 2016.The SA Media Landscape: Issues in the newsrooms. Seminar presented to Medill Journalism School (Chicago), students at a conference/seminar hosted by Fray Media Institute. Johannesburg.

Falkof, Nicky. 7-9 September 2016. ‘Lovers not Fighters: Black Masculinity in the Contemporary

Johannesburg Romcom’. African Studies Association of the UK Biannual Conference. University of Cambridge.

Falkof, Nicky. 30 June-2 July 2016. ‘Blood, Crime and Consumption: The “Plasma Gangs” Scare in Alexandra Township’. Cultures of Risk: A Fictions of Threat Symposium. Sussex University.

Falkof, Nicky. 14-16 June 2016. ‘Blood, Crime and Consumption: The “Plasma Gangs” Scare in Alexandra Township’. Anxiety in and About Africa. CRASSH, Cambridge. Also invited to speak on conference roundtable.

Falkof, Nicky. 2 May 2016. ‘Satanism and Family Murder in Late Apartheid South Africa’ book seminar. Invited speaker. Centre for Gender Research, University of Oslo. Invited speaker.

Falkof, Nicky. 25-27 May 2016. ‘Christian Nightmares: “Satanist Murders” in South Africa’. Promises of Monsters. University of Stavanger, Norway. Invited speaker.

Falkof, Nicky. 25 January 2016. ‘Satanism and Family Murder in Late Apartheid South Africa’ book seminar. School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Invited speaker.

Fanucchi, Sonia. 26/08/2016. “Newman’s ‘Callista’: An Apology for Ritual”. Imagining Transformation

in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. SASMARS, Stellenbosch, South Africa. Finlay, A. facilitated a media perceptions survey on gun ownership and control in South Africa for the

School of Journalism & Mass Communication at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The survey is administered by the Poynter Institute and funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Gagliardone, Iginio. 10 December 2016. “Innovation and development in communication technologies

in Africa”. Peking-Stanford-Oxford Internet Law and Policy Conference. Shenzen, China. Gagliardone, Iginio. 22-24 June 2016. “Hate speech and securitisation: an empirical investigation of

online debates, political contestation, and terrorism in Ethiopia”. Vox-Pol: Taking Stock of Research on Violent Political Extremism. Dublin, Ireland.

Gagliardone, Iginio. 22-24 September 2016. “Hate speech and political polarization in Ethiopia” ASAI. Catania, Italia.

Gqola, Pumla. (18/05/2016). “Writing Miriam Tlali: Authority, Voice and Black Feminist Imagination”.

Inaugural Lecture, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.

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Gqola, Pumla. (08-13/03/2016). Keynote Address. Women of the World Festival. Southbank Centre, London, UK.

Gqola, Pumla. (09-12/4/2016). Keynote Address. African Feminist Forum. Harare, Zimbabwe. Gqola, Pumla. (28-30/7/2016). Keynote Address. FEMRITE @20: Rethinking African Literature

Conference. Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda. Gqola, Pumla. (31 August-4 September). Keynote Address. Africa Utopia Festival. Southbank Centre,

London, UK. Houliston, Victor. 27/08/2016. “From Tragic Scene to Spectacle: St. Thomas More on the Jesuit

Schoolboy Stage”. Imagining Transformation in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. SASMARS, Stellenbosch, South Africa.

de Lanerolle, Indra 01.07.16 World Internet Project annual meeting Taipei, Republic of China.

De Lanerolle, Indra 18-20.7.16 Research Outreach Team meeting for development of Country Learning Plans for Making All Voices Count programme. Institute of Development Studies, Brighton, UK.

de Lanerolle, Indra 10.10.16 African Storytelling Guest Lecture at African Leadership University,

Mauritius.

De Lanerolle, Indra, 10.11.16 Facilitator and Presenter and Making All Voices Count South African Community of Practice on approaches to learning. Johannesburg, South Africa

De Lanerolle, Indra convened – with Lucienne Abrahams, the Director of the LINK Centre a new Internet research seminar which was attended by scholars from Media Studies, Software Engineering, the LINK Centre and others. The first meeting was held in October 2016.

Inggs, Judith. 15-17/09/2016. “The Re[a]d Diary: exploring the fluidity of meaning and interpretation across texts and images”. 8th Congress of the European Society for Translation Studies, University of Aarhus, Denmark.

Iqani, Mehita. 16 November 2016. “Happy birthday Mama Winnie! Nostalgia and the power of

historical images on the Twitter feed of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela”. Black Portraitures III. Johannesburg, SA.

Iqani, Mehita. 27-29 July 2016. “Happy birthday Mama Winnie! Nostalgia and the power of historical images on the Twitter feed of Winnie Madikizela-Mandela”. IAMCR Annual Conference 2016. Leicester, UK.

Iqani, Mehita. 14-16 April 2016. “Race, taste and the transnational celebrity: A critical analysis of the online self-promotion of Irene Major”. Kern Conference on Visual Communication. Rochester, NY. Invited speaker.

Janse van Vuuren, N. 3/10/2016. “SASL Curriculum at the University of the Witwatersrand”. Workshop

on Designing and Improving SASL Acquisition Curricula. Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa.

Janse van Vuuren, N. 3/10/2016. “SASL – SAQA Unit Standards”. Workshop on Designing and Improving SASL Acquisition Curricula. Stellenbosch University, Stellenbosch, South Africa.

Kaneko, Michiko. 4-7/01/2016. “Neologism in South African Sign Language”. Theoretical Issues in Sign

Language Research,12. La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia. Kaneko, Michiko. 4-7/01/2016. “Onomatopoeic Mouth Gestures in Creative Sign Language”.

Theoretical Issues in Sign Language Research,12. La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia.

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Kunene Nicolas, R., Ahmed, S., Ntuli, N. (2016). Spontaneous gestures in lexical items of Zulu speaking

children. Oral presentation. International ISGS 7 Conference, Paris, July, 18-22, 2016.

Kunene-Nicolas, R., Ntuli, N. (2016). The role of gesture in two Bantu languages and a non-standard language variety. Oral presentation. International ISGS 7 Conference, Paris, July, 18-22, 2016

Sparaci, L., Brookes, H., Kunene-Nicolas, R., Capirci, O., Hadian-Cefidekhanie, A., Colletta, J.M. (2016). Preliminary data on representational gesture in Romance & Bantu languages using PinG. Oral presentation. International ISGS 7 Conference, Paris, July, 18-22, 2016.

Kunene Nicolas, R, Amiroodeen, R, Bhowan T. (2016). Lexical Assessment of Zulu children in early acquisition. LSSA/SAALA/SAALT Annual Joint Conference 2016. 4-7 July 2016, University of the Western Cape, South Africa

Kunene Nicolas, R & Judin, S. (2016). Predicate Comprehension and Production in the early acquisition period of isiZulu. LSSA/SAALA/SAALT Annual Joint Conference 2016. 4-7 July 2016, University of the Western Cape, South Africa

Coertze, N & Kunene Nicolas, R . (2016). A Multimodal Comparative Study of Oral Narratives: Typical and Atypical populations. LSSA/SAALA/SAALT Annual Joint Conference 2016. 4-7 July 2016, University of the Western Cape, South Africa

Law-Viljoen, Bronwyn. 11 May 2016. ‘Time Tracks: On Oral Poetry’. Africa Week, Wits University,

Johannesburg. Panel moderator with Keorapetse Kgositsile, Lebo Mashile, Richard Quaz Roodt, Koleka Putuma, David wa Maahlamela and Modiegi Njayayana.

Law-Viljoen, Bronwyn. 7 September 2016, ‘From Papers to Page’. Open Book Festival, Cape Town. Panel discussion with Nancy Richards (moderator), Michela Wrong and Steven Robins.

Law-Viljoen, Bronwyn. 8 September 2016, ‘Author as Curator’. Open Book Festival, Cape Town. Panel discussion with Steve Kretzman (moderator), Bongani Madondo and Nick Mulgrew.

Law-Viljoen, Bronwyn. 8 September 2016, ‘Switching Courses’. Open Book Festival, Cape Town. Panel discussion with Yewande Omotoso (moderator), Michela Wrong and Laurie Kubuitsile.

Ligaga, Dina. 26-30 September, 2016. Presence, agency and African women on digital media in Kenya.

ASAUK. Mexico City, Mexico. Ligaga, Dina. 7-9 September, 2016. Popular culture and the emergent digital public in Kenya. ASAUK.

Cambridge University, UK. Ligaga, Dina. 7-9 September, Presence, agency and African women on digital media in Kenya. ASAUK.

Cambridge University, UK.

Milani Tommaso M. Queering critique: Discourse, body, affect. Keynote address at the 6th International Conference on Critical Approaches To Discourse Across Disciplines (CADAAD), Catania, 5-7 September 2016.

Milani Tommaso M. Homotopias: Discursive and ambivalent time/space nexus points. Keynote address delivered at the 9th International Gender and Language Association Conference (IGALA) “Time and Transition: Gender, Sexuality, Discourse and Language”, Hong Kong, 19-21 May 2016.

Milani Tommaso M. Organizer with Erez Levon (Queen Mary University of London) of the panel Sexual Politics Revisited: Language, Queer Theory and (Anti)Normativity, 9th International Gender and Language Association (IGALA) Conference, Hong Kong, 19-21 May 2016. Speakers: Holly Cashman (University of New Hampshire), Mie Hiramoto (National University of Singapore), Lucy Jones (University of Nottingham), Erez Levon (Queen Mary University of London), Phoebe Pua (National University of Singapore).

Milani Tommaso M. Organizer with Michelle Lazar (National University of Singapore) of the panel Language, Gender and Sexuality: Southern Perspectives, 9th International Gender and Language Association (IGALA) Conference, Hong Kong, 19-21 May 2016. Speakers: Rodrigo Borba (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro), Scott Burnett (University of the Witwatersrand,

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Johannesburg), Brian W. King (City University, Hong Kong), Michelle Lazar (National University of Singapore).

Milani Tommaso M. Invited discussant on the panel “Heterogeneities in representation: Mimicry and media” organized by Jannis Androutsopoulos and Ana Deumert at Sociolinguistics Symposium 21, 15-18 June 2016.

Milani Tommaso M. Invited discussant on the panel “Multimodality, language and gender in the ‘new’ South Africa” organized by Quentin E. Williams and Amiena Peck at 9th International Gender and Language Association (IGALA) Conference, Hong Kong, 19-21 May 2016.

Milani Tommaso M. Queering diversity. Invited talk delivered at University of Gothenburg, 7 April 2016.

Milani Tommaso M. FAQ on academic publishing. Invited workshop held at University of Gothenburg, 6 April 2016.

Milani Tommaso M. Multilingualism: Quo Vadis? Invited talk delivered at University of Gothenburg, 4 April 2016.

Milani Tommaso M. Queer performativity. Invited talk delivered at Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianopolis, 22 March 2016.

Milani Tommaso M. Gender and Language: Where are we now? Invited talk as part of the Roundtable “Gender Studies: Theories and Applications”. Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianopolis, 21 March 2016.

Milani Tommaso M. Queering Israeli homonationalism: Re/deterritorializations in the making. Invited talk delivered at Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, 18 March 2016.

Raphaely C. presented at the “Removing Legal Barriers to Prison Health and Rights” training

conference about human rights abuses that take place in SA prisons. (15 March 2017) Ripero-Muñiz, Nereida. 23-26/05/2016. “Inclusion and exclusion among Somali Women in Nairobi and

Johannesburg: Hostility, Cosmopolitanism and Cultural Translocality”. Inclusion and Exclusion in Sub-Saharan Africa: Migrants’ Challenges in Comparative Perspective, Centre for the Study of Governance Innovation, University of Pretoria

Ripero-Muñiz, Nereida. 16-20/05/2016. “Metropolitan Nomads: challenges on the field”. Symposium Using Art-based Methods in participatory Research. Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations (CTPSR), Coventry University.

Robuschi, Luigi (14-16/06/2016). “Adapt or Die: The Birth of the Cultural and Political Myth of Venice”.

“Adaptation in the Arts: Theory and Practice”, Emery Community Arts Center, University of Maine at Farmington, Farmington (ME), USA

Ojwang, Dan. (23/05/2016). “Multiculturalism and the Language Question in South African

Universities,” Public lecture at the Intercultural Education and the Refugee Crisis Ringvorlesung, Eric Fromm Institute, University of Tubingen, Germany.

Ojwang, Dan. (13/06/2016). “Ethnography and the Emergence of East African Fiction in English,” Inaugural Lecture: Eric Auerbach Visiting Chair of Global Literary Studies, University of Tubingen, Germany.

Peterson, Bheki. “African Print Cultures”, Maropeng, Cradle of Mankind, 20-23 June 2016. Peterson, Bheki. (October & November 2016). National book launches of Bheki Peterson, Janet

Remmington and Brian Willan (eds), Sol Plaatje’s Native Life in South Africa: Past and Present (Johannesburg: Wits University Press, 2016).

Peterson, Bheki. (08/06/2016). “Students Rising: Reflections on student and youth struggles since 16 June 1976.” History Workshop Colloquium. University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.

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Thorpe, Kathleen. (4/4/2016). “Cultural Studies - Home for the Foreign Languages?“. International

Cultural Studies Conference. University of Yaoundé I, Yaoundé, Cameroon. University of Yaoundé I

Thorpe, Kathleen. (21/6/2016). „Erinnerungskultur und Vertreibung in Schwitzers Die gestohlene Erinnerung.“ Grenzen und Migration. Afrika und Europa. Universität zu Köln, Cologne, Germany. Universität zu Köln, Philosophische Fakultät

Thurman, Chris. 14/10/2016. “Shakespearean Singularity”. World Literatures – Shakespeare and

Cervantes. Humboldt-Stiftung, Bonn, Germany. Thurman, Chris. 01/10/2016. “Shakespeare: We need new names” (Keynote address). Decolonising

Shakespeare. University of KWaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa. Thurman, Chris. 27/08/2016. “Introducing Coriolanus to South Africa’s classrooms (and stages)”.

Imagining Transformation in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. SASMARS, Stellenbosch, South Africa.

Thurman, Chris. 06/07/2016. “Singular Shakespeares: Towards a new model for Will-in-the-world”. Shakespeare – Religion, Psychology, Anthropology. Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa.

Thurman, Chris. 06/02/2016. “‘Our virtues lie in the interpretation of the time’: Possibilities for teaching Coriolanus in South Africa today”. IEB English Conference. Birchwood Conference Centre, Johannesburg, South Africa.

Van Der Spuy, A. ‘The Origins of Language: Our Best Conjectures’. Invited talk delivered at The

Parkviews Society, July 2016. Van Schalkwyk, Simon. 30/06/2016. “Risk Society and its Doubles: Analysts, Janissaries, and Gamblers

in Don DeLillo’s The Names, Moshin Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist and Joseph O’Neill’s Netherland”. Cultures of Risk: Management, Speculation, Symptom. University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom.

Van Staden, Cobus. Chinese in Africa/Africans in China Research Network Conference: Nairobi August

2016 Van Staden, Cobus. Africa-China Journalists Forum, Johannesburg, October 2016 Van Staden, Cobus. Public lecture on Japanese pop culture fandom at University of Pretoria’s Centre

for Japanese Studies, March 2016 Van Wyk, Barry. (18-20/08/2016). “Snapshots of Africa in Chinese Media Beyond Xinhua”.

Convergences and Divergences: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Media and Communications in Africa-China Engagement”, the 4th Chinese in Africa/Africans in China Conference. The Aga Khan University, Nairobi, Kenya.

Africa-China Journalists Forum. Richard Poplak, Kevin Bloom, Cobus van Staden, Bob Wekesa, Shi Yi,

John Grobler, Phillip de Wet, Hu Jianlong, et al. (10/11/2016). Africa-China Reporting Project,

Wits Journalism

Virga, Anita. (21-23/04/2016). “Identità e alterità della Sicilia di Capuana”. AAIS Conference. Baton

Rouge (LA), USA. Vladislavić , Ivan. 3 May 2016. ‘Jozi Literary Allstars’. Reading at David Krut Books, Johannesburg, with

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Harry Kalmer, Fred Khumalo, Kleinboer, Yewande Omotoso and James Whyle. Vladislavić , Ivan. 21 May 2016. ‘Ultimately, literature is nothing but carpentry’. Panel discussion with

Claire Robertson and Michele Magwood, Kingsmead Book Fair, Johannesburg. Vladislavić , Ivan. 25 June 2016. Internationaler Literaturpreis 2016. Fest der Shortlist, Haus der

Kulturen der Welt, Berlin. Reading and conversation on literary materials with Thomas Brückner, Michael Krüger and Thomas Böhm.

Vladislavić , Ivan. 13 July 2016. University of the Free State Book Festival, Bloemfontein. Long table discussion on the work of Willem Boshoff, chaired by Francis Halsell, with Johann Rossouw, Katja Gentric, Helene Smuts, Josef van Wyk and the artist. 14 July 2016. ‘How is Africa represented?’ University of the Free State Book Festival,

Bloemfontein. Panel discussion, chaired by Francois Smith, with Ingrid Winterbach, Chika Unigwe and Wilfried N’Sonde.

Vladislavić , Ivan. 14 July 2016. ‘The Other 80s’. University of the Free State Book Festival, Bloemfontein. Panel discussion chaired by Johann Rossouw, with Kirby van der Merwe and Jacob Dlamini.

Vladislavić , Ivan. 6-17 September 2016. German book tour to promote the German translations of Double Negative (A1 Verlag) and Exploded View (Osburg Verlag). The tour included the following events with German translator Thomas Brückner and others:

Vladislavić , Ivan. 7 September 2016. Frankfurt Literaturhaus, reading and public discussion. Vladislavić , Ivan. 8 September 2016. Zürich Literaturhaus, reading (with Miriam Japp) and public

discussion. Vladislavić , Ivan. 9 September 2016. Münster Volkshochschule, reading and public discussion. Vladislavić , Ivan. 10 September 2016. International Literature Festival Berlin, performance at Berliner

Festspiele with Thomas Brückner and Günter Baby Sommer. Vladislavić , Ivan. 16 September 2016. Tübingen University. Postgraduate workshop on translation

chaired by Russell West-Pavlov, with Thomas Brückner and Mark Sanders. Vladislavić , Ivan. Katie Kitamura, interview in BOMB Magazine, No. 135, Spring 2016, pp. 72-8.

Peter Beilharz and Sian Supski, ‘Ivan Vladislavić – A Tale in Two Cities’, interview in Thesis Eleven, Vol. 136, No. 1, October 2016.

Wekesa B. was lead organizer for the, The fourth Chinese in Africa/Africans in China Research Network

(CAAC RN) conference: Interdisciplinary approaches to media and communications in Africa-China engagement, August 18-21 2016, Aga Khan University, Kenya, Nairobi

Wekesa B. presented a paper entitled: African agency in Africa-China media engagements: The case of Wits China Africa Reporting Project, August 18-21 2016, Aga Khan University, Kenya, Nairobi

Wekesa B. presented a paper entitled, An African agency conceptual approach in the analysis of Agenda 2063, SDGs and FOCAC, Oxfam Africa China Dialogue Platform, September 28, Ethiopia, Addis Ababa

Wekesa B. presented a paper entitled, Media-based approach to investigating China's presence in Eastern Africa hydrocarbons sector, April 21-12 2016, University of Dundee, UK, Dundee

Wekesa B. presented a paper entitled: Chinese media and diplomacy in Africa: Theoretical pathways, January 14-16 2016, University of Nottingham, UK, Nottingham

Williams, Merle. 06/02/2016. “Protean Form in Washington Square: Linguistic Experimentation and

the Anticipation of Life”. IEB English Conference. Birchwood Conference Centre, Johannesburg, South Africa.

Williams, Merle. 16/04/2016. “The ‘Mistake’ of ‘Not Living All You Can’: Memory and Lost Possibility in The Awkward Age and The Ambassadors”. Henry James and Memory. British Library Conference Centre, London.

Williams, Merle. 11/07/2016. “Tracing the Foreign and the Other: From The Ambassadors to Foreign

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Bodies”. Commemorating Henry James – Commemoration in Henry James. Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, USA.

Williams, Merle. 30/06/2016. “Traces of Literary Speculation: From The Aspern Papers to The Messiah of Stockholm” Cultures of Risk: Management, Speculation, Symptom. University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom.

Wittke, Philina. (22/6/2016). „Schmuggler und Schwalben. Grenzübertritte in der deutschen

Migrationsliteratur.“ Universität zu Köln, Cologne, Germany. Universität zu Köln, Philosophische Fakultät

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Grants and Fellowships Received

Name Department Grant for 2017

ADLER M Mellon P/G Mentoring-M Adler ENGLISH R 141 500,00

AKPOJIVI, U Institute of International Education

MEDIA STUDIES -$2500

BUXBAUM L NRF POST-DOC ENGLISH R 45 000,00

FALKOF N 2017 SELLSCHOP MEDIA STUDEIS R 140 401,00

GAGLIARDONE, IGINIO

UNESCO/OXFORD UNIVERSITY MODERN LANGUAGES

R 251 942,00

GAGLIARDONE, IGINIO

UNESCO/DELFT MODERN LANGUAGES

R 666 808,00

GAYLARD GP GAYLARD MELLON 2010 ENGLISH R 150 000,00

HOFMEYR CI ISABEL_H MELLON PROGRAMME AFRICAN LITERATURE

R 93 403,00

IQANI, M SELLSCHOP MEDIA STUDIES

Third Year

KUNENE-NICOLAS

NRF-COE GRANT LING-LINGUISTICS R 149 940,00

LIGAGA D NRF POST-DOC ENGLISH R 131 447,00

MILANI TM INTERPART WORKSHOP 2016/7 LINGUISTICS R 435 062,00

MOJI P Mellon P/G Mentoring-M Adler MODERN LANGUAGES

R 28 300,00

NEWFIELD DR NRF IKS ENGLISH R 250 000,00

PETERSON BK NARRATIVE ENQUIRY FOR SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION

AFRICAN LITERATURE R 538 320,00

PUMLA GQOLA NIHSS CATALYTIC RESEARCH PROGRAMME - Rape & the South African Feminist Imagination

AFRICAN LANGUAGES R 85 000,00

ROBUSCHI, L Andrew W. Mellon Foundation: Research Grant

ITALIAN STUDIES R30.000,00

THURMAN CJ NRF HSGR -96156 ENGLISH R 59 000,00

WILLIAMS MA WILLIAMS MELLON 2010 ENGLISH R 91 034,00

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Conference Funding

COWLING, L. IALJS-12 JOURNALISM R 20 000,00

DANIELS, G IAMCR2017 MEDIA STUDIES R 20 000,00

MOJI, P ICLA-21 MODERN LANGUAGES

R 17 508,00

VAN STADEN, C

IAMCR2017 MEDIA STUDIES R 20 000,00

Virga, A AAIS/CSIS Joint Conference

MODERN LANGUAGES

R 15 000,00

NRF Ratings

New

Falkof, N Professor

Daniels, G Dr

Re-rating

Horn, PRG Professor

Inggs, Judith Professor

Previous

Akpojivi, U Dr

Gqola, P Professor

Hofmeyr, CI Professor

Horn, AC Professor

Houliston, V Professor

Iqani, M Professor

Ligaga, DA Dr

Mhlambi I Professor

Milani, T Professor

Muponde, R Professor

Newfield, D Professor

Ojwang, D Professor

Peterson, B Professor

Thurman, CJ Professor

Titlestad, MF Professor

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Research Thrusts African Languages

Members of the department are in involved in research in the discourse of popular culture, media,

ethnomusicology and computational linguistics individually. Each member of the department has

found a niche with each sub-discipline and pursuing either to fulfil degree requirements or for

academic growth.

African Literature

African literary studies; African intellectual histories; literatures of the Indian Ocean world; literatures

of the African Diaspora; postcolonial literary and cultural theory; cultural studies.

Creative Writing

Creative writing is engaged in research on the place of creative writing in the academy; the

relationship of oral to literary forms of creative work; contemporary South African literature.

The interaction of languages within the creative process.

The teaching of creative writing.

Creative writing and/as research.

Creative writing and translation.

English

The department is particularly strong in Southern African literature, with Michelle Adler and Chris

Thurman particularly concerned with the earlier periods, and Barbara Boswell, Lara Buxbaum, Gerald

Gaylard, Sofia Kostelac, Clea Schulz and Michael Titlestad specializing in post-apartheid and

postcolonial studies. Sofia Kostelac and Robert Muponde are authorities in Zimbabwean literature,

attracting a growing number of PhD students from Zimbabwe. Gerald Gaylard has a particular interest

in Ivan Vladislavic, who is also the School’s writer-in-residence; so too has his former PhD student,

Kirby Mania, Senior Lecturer in the ADU of the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, which

is closely associated with our department. Barbara Boswell is well known for her work on gender, race

and sexuality especially in black women’s writing. Gender studies links many of these individual

research projects.

Merle Williams, Lara Buxbaum and Hazel Frankel work in the area of trauma studies, linked often but

not exclusively to the holocaust. Merle Williams does research into contemporary Hebrew poetry and

fiction. It may be worth noting that the late Joseph Sherman was a leading international authority on

Yiddish literature.

Chris Thurman, Colette Gordon and Victor Houliston are active in Shakespeare studies, especially in

colonial and postcolonial contexts, where Chris Thurman is particularly well known. Both he and

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Colette Gordon have a special expertise in Shakespeare in performance, education and contemporary

culture. Victor Houliston is a leading figure in the growing field of early modern British Catholic

studies.

Merle Williams works on Henry James and Shelley, and is highly regarded internationally in both these

areas. Robyn Pierce specialises in William Blake, Sonia Fanucchi in nineteenth-century fiction, and

Simon van Schalkwyk in American poetry.

Michael Titlestad is one of the most prolific scholars in the country, with a wide range of expertise,

most notably maritime literature, where he is in great demand internationally. Natalie Paoli is doing

research into contemporary East European literature.

Journalism

Research on transparency, accountability and open data (Network Society Programme, Indra de

Lanerolle)

Relevant publications

Wilson, C. and de Lanerolle, I. ‘Test It and They Might Come: Improving the Uptake of Digital Tools in

Transparency and Accountability Initiatives’ IDS Bulletin. Volume 47 Issue 1 Published: 24 January

2016 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/1968-2016.110

De Lanerolle, I., Walker, T., Kinney, S. ‘Sometimes it is about the tech: choosing tools in South African

and Kenyan transparency and accountability initiatives.’ Research Report published by Institute of

Development Studies, Brighton.

De Lanerolle was appointed as a member of the Making All Voices Count Research Outreach Team by

the Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, Brighton, one of the leading development

research institutions in the world. In this role he supported innovation in uses of new technologies in

transparency and accountability in South Africa providing research and learning support. He also

developed a learning programme which is being implemented in 2017.

Research on Mobile phones access and use

Following a quantitative study on Internet access and use in South Africa published in 2012, de

Lanerolle led a new qualitative research project which investigates mobile phone use amongst South

Africans on low incomes. The study is being done in partnership with researchers at UCT and Rhodes

and will be completed in 2017.

Research on tech hubs and innovation in journalism and media

In preparation for the launch of a new journalism and media innovation lab being started at the new

Wits Tshimologong Digital Innovation Precinct in conjunction with the Johannesburg Centre for

Software Engineering, Indra visited a number of tech hubs, incubators and accelerators in California

and East Africa.

Research on media and public debate

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Lesley Cowling was awarded a research fellowship at the Archive and Public Culture Research Initiative

at UCT, to co-edit (with Prof Carolyn Hamilton) a book on The Public Life of Ideas. The project is part

of an ongoing research collaboration, hosted by APC, around public intellectual life and media and

public debate, which includes scholars from Wits, Rhodes and UCT.

Research on media histories project

Lesley Cowling participated in a Mellon-funded workshop on African Print Cultures, jointly run by

Derek Peterson of the University of Michigan and Prof Isabel Hofmeyr of Wits. There is an agreement

in principle to collaborate with UJ, UCT and UP on a media histories project arising from that workshop,

with potential seed funding from NIHSS.

Bob Wekesa published a journal paper (January 2017), New Directions in the study of Africa-China

media and communications engagements, Journal of African Cultural Studies, Taylor & Francis,

Abingdon, UK

Bob Wekesa published journal paper (2016), Deborah Brautigam’s Will Africa Feed China?: A critical

media-centric review, African East-Asian Affairs, Centre for Chinese Studies, Stellenbosch University,

Stellenbosch, South Africa

Bob Wekesa published book chapter (2016), Building blocks and themes in Chinese soft power toward

Africa, in China's media and soft power in Africa, Palgrave Macmillan, USA, New York

Ruth Hopkins contributed an article on her investigation into a G4S run prison in Mangaung for the

report: "Dirty Profits 5: Report on companies and financial institutions benefitting from violations of

human rights” for the organisation Facing Finance.

Finlay, A (ed) 2016. Global Information Society Watch: Economic, social and cultural rights and the

internet. Association for Progressive Communications, Montevideo, 2016.

Finlay, A. and Brown, D. 2016. Key considerations: Economic, social and cultural rights and the internet.

Report. Global Information Society Watch (ed. Finlay, A). Association for Progressive Communications,

Montevideo, 2016.

Wits Journalism has developed an approach to masters research which is based on long-form

narrative journalism, coupled with a framing essay. In 2016, three master’s projects were completed

in this form.

Linguistics

The Linguistics department has a dynamic research focus on Linguistics. There are four main focus

areas: Phonology of Southern Bantu and Optimality Theory; Morphology and Syntax; Language

Gender and Sexuality and Language development of South African Bantu Languages.

LINK Centre

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The scholarly focus of LINK is on ICT policy and regulation and its relationship to socio-economic

development through the digital transformation of social and economic sectors. These issues are of

interest across a broad audience ranging from policy-makers and regulators to user communities in

major industry sectors, including the broad electronic communications sector (telecoms, broadcast

and Internet sub-sectors), and the user sectors (banking and finance, travel and tourism, small

enterprise, government services, scientific research agencies and universities, the community sector,

other).

The research direction for LINK in 2016-2020 is to conduct and publish research with respect to the

realm of ICT-enabled and ICT-mediated social and economic change (digital transformation). Research

themes include ICT policy, regulation and governance; information society, knowledge economy,

digital transformation and e-development; ICT evolution in the public and commercial sectors, with

research and publishing projects operating in each of these thematic areas. These themes for research

and interrogation are relevant to building the public discourse on the information society and

development issues. They are further relevant to public policy advocacy, as well as to postgraduate

teaching and research programmes across the spheres of public policy, innovation studies, media

studies, and the economics, business and engineering sciences. LINK works with other scientific (CSIR

Meraka), academic institutions (CCRED, UJ) and sector regulators (ICASA, SSCOM, CRAN) to enhance

the diffusion and sharing of knowledge and to mutually build the research capacity of all partner

institutions.

Media Studies The department of Media Studies aims to be the premier location for the critical study of media and culture in the global south. Our individual research strands feed into this overarching agenda.

Glenda Daniels’ research examines the media and democracy relationship in South Africa, keeping track of international trends, and with a focus on the news media, journalism, freedom of expression, censorship, the state of the newsroom, transformation race and gender in the latter as well as social media and fake news.

Ufuoma Akpojivi researches Citizenship, Media Policy, Democratization, Social Movement and Digital Activism, Media Practices in Emerging Democracies.

Cobus van Staden write on Asia-Africa relations, diplomacy, mediation of the state, popular cinema and TV

Iginio Gagliardone works on Africa’s media system; Communication and nation building; hate speech online; information societies in the Global South; China-Africa relations.

Dina Ligaga’s work examines representations of femininity across media through the lens of popular culture. Through the methodology of transmediation, I look at representations on radio drama, tabloid press and online cultures.

Mehita Iqani’s work continues to explore questions of aspiration, equality and identity in relation to consumer cultures in the global south. I examine how these themes manifest in media discourses across various genres.

Nicky Falkof writes on Race, particularly whiteness; gender, particularly masculinity; risk, anxiety, moral panic and cultures of fear; spatial politics in the global south city

Modern Languages

French

Francophone Afropeanism and South African Afropolitanism

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Defining cosmopolitan identities through the notion of Afropolitanism [African + Polis (meaning City

in Ancient Greek)] and Francophone Afropeanism [African + European] and considers these identities

through of material lived existence of subjects in the cities of Paris and Johannesburg.

Foreign language pedagogy and teaching and learning cultures

Multilingualism, foreign language pedagogy and trans-inter cultural dynamics in the foreign language

classroom. The evolution of teaching and learning cultures, the changing role of literature and cultural

canons in relation to emerging identities.

The poetics of sensation in JMG Le Clézio’s fiction

Le Clézio’s fictional writing as a sensory journey through existence, in order to bear witness to human

experience as a whole.

Thomas Mofolo

The impact of Mofolo’s writing on Negritudinist writers; South-South dialogue; Francophonie

German

We engage in intercultural and multicultural studies, besides looking at German canonical texts from

a South African perspective and interpreting South African literature through a comparative literature

lens. We also participate in and convene European Literature courses at Honours and Masters levels,

as well as cross-teaching in the English Department. Besides, we co-supervise or supervise research

projects from Honours to Doctoral level in other disciplines, such as English, translation, as well as

Migration and Anthropology. We are interested in postcolonial approaches to German literature,

including narratology, as well as cultural studies methodologies, in analysing advertising strategies for

example. We work on transculturalism as a way of overcoming old paradigms in cultural studies, such

as universalism and particularism. We also reflect on teaching methodologies for German as a foreign

language by engaging with other universities in order to keep abreast of developments both nationally

and internationally. We have strong links with other African scholars in order to create a network and

to reflect our position as German Studies and German Foreign Language Teaching in Africa. We are

interested in and encourage research in multilingualism.

Spanish

Areas of research focus on: gender, migration, diaspora studies, Somalia, human geography, narrative

and ethnographic methods.

The Project Metropolitan Nomads seeks to visually document the daily life of Somali migrants in

Johannesburg. The project is supported by ACMS; the aim is to expand this visual research to other

cities in Southern Africa.

Publishing Studies Publishing Studies is a multi-disciplinary research area, and research projects reflect the variety of

issues of concern to students and publishers of all types of materials. Research projects include: what

makes a bestseller in South Africa, diversity in young adult novels, sustainability of small publishers,

copyediting skills, application and assessment, various book history topics, relationship between

publishers and departments of education, African language reading materials available for Foundation

phase education, consumer behaviour, exhibition catalogue publishing in SA art institutions, South

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African books translated into German and their reception in Germany, teaching and curriculum

development of an academic programme with a professional focus.

Other departments that have been involved with supervision of publishing students include English, African Literature, Creative Writing, German, Translation, Education and the business school. Because Publishing Studies is such a broad academic area, there is huge scope for inter-departmental work. SA Sign Language We are passionate about writing the first book on SASL linguistics in the near future. We are also running small projects on SASL literature (poetry and storytelling). Translation Studies

The department has a wide range of research interests covering the disciplines of translation and

interpreting as well as interdisciplinary fields such as literary translation and postcolonial studies. On

a more practical and empirical level, members of staff are currently engaged in research on translator

and interpreter training and recent developments in the study of process models in relation to

interpreting. In the interdisciplinary field of literature and translation studies members of staff are

involved in research on the application of literary theory to African literature, postcolonial translation

studies, stylistics, cognitive approaches to translation and the translation of comic books and graphic

novels. Another strand of research pursued in the department is the study of children’s and youth

literature as well as the translation of that literature into other languages, including African and

European languages.

Steps taken to grow next generation of scholars The School continues to develop the potential among its younger staff and young emerging scholars

at postgraduate and senior undergraduate level. The School is cognisant of the importance of ensuring

succession planning within and across disciplines and therefore has over a period of years given

preference to the appointment of younger, emerging scholars and provided them with the

opportunity for academic growth and development. Academic staff members are kept informed of all

the grant and funding opportunities available and encouraged to apply for these as well as for teaching

buy-outs to afford them time to finish their postgraduate degrees and/or develop their publication

profile. Three of the School’s committees (the Research and Postgraduate Committee, the Teaching

and Learning Committee and the Transformation Committee) continue to investigate ways in which

the School can promote the development of younger scholars. All departments actively identify and

encourage promising students to continue to postgraduate studies.

The School has a School Promotions Committee, whose remit is, in the first instance, to consider the

senior promotions (at Associate Professor and Professor levels). The committee plays a developmental

role and mentoring in assessing the quality and timing of applications. It has decided to extend the

developmental and mentoring role to academic staff at all levels. This will assist the HoS in the

development of the next generation of scholars.

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An important aspect of the School’s focus on developing young scholars has been the roll-out of its

Teaching Assistant Programme which was launched in 2013 for PhD students keen to enter a career

in academia. This is the third year of the programme and has made a successful contribution in this

area. The School had 8 Doctoral Teaching Assistants in 2016, 3 in English, 3 in Media and 2 in

Linguistics. The doctoral Teaching Assistants have been assisted in the development of teaching,

assessment and mentoring skills. The TA experience has been an informative one that has enhanced

pedagogical practice within the School. The School is hopeful it will be able to extend this programme

for a further six years.

School Writing Retreats have been significant in supporting the trajectories of staff and have also been

used to encourage the doctoral assistants in the writing of their PhDs and to provide a forum for

research discussions.

Particular focus areas in departments are as follows:

Creative Writing

Enlisted one honours student to poetry research project, which resulted in MA scholarship.

Awarded Honours scholarship to one Honours student.

Encouragement of students to publish in Wits University online creative journal Itch.

Support and encouragement of lecturer Phillippa Yaa de Villiers in application for PhD degree at University of Lancaster.

Attendance of Phillippa Yaa de Villiers at CLTD teaching and supervision workshops. Linguistics Kunene Nicolas R sent Ms Nonhlanhla Ntuli to France (University of Grenoble Alpes) and (GLADD) Lab

at the Institute of Cognitive Sciences and Technologies (ISTC) of the National Council for Research

(CNR) of Italy under the IRSES Grant for training April – November 2016

Media Studies Students are given mentoring and assistance at every level of teaching, from Honours tutoring support to hiring advanced postgrads for Wits Plus and sessional lecturing to close work with Teaching Assistants. Strong postgraduates at all levels are offered the opportunity to publish with their supervisors or to do so alone with supervisory support if they feel capable. New structures and curricula introduced at Honours level to support increased research quality. Media Studies developed the school-wide MA proposal workshop and provides a strong impetus alongside colleagues from elsewhere in SLLM for creating a more formal support structure for postgraduates. Skilled third years and postgrads are actively recruited for further study. Staff support students financially where possible, offering paid employment appropriate to developing scholars (teaching/research/admin assistance) and/or grants from RINC or other funds when necessary.