Dr Rebecca Jones

Dr Rebecca Jones

Department of African Studies and Anthropology
Honorary Research Fellow

Contact details

Address
Arts Building
University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

I am a scholar of Nigerian print, literary and popular cultures in the Yoruba and English languages, with an emphasis on archival research and on literary and popular texts. My research sits at the intersection between literary studies and cultural anthropology; I am interested in how literary print cultures, genres, readers and writers emerge and develop, while also keeping what texts themselves say at the heart of my research.

My research to date has centred on the history of Nigerian-authored travel writing in both Yoruba and English; my monograph, At the Crossroads: Nigerian Travel Writing in Yoruba and English was published by James Currey in 2019.

Qualifications

  • BA (Hons), English (Cambridge)
  • MA, African Studies (SOAS)
  • PhD, African Studies (Birmingham)
  • PGCHE, Postgraduate Certificate in Higher Education (Birmingham)

Biography

After a BA in English from the University of Cambridge, I studied for an MA in African Studies at SOAS, University of London, and a PhD in African Studies at the Department of African Studies and Anthropology, University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡. In 2019 I was awarded a PGCHE from the University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡.

From 2012-16 I worked as a Postdoctoral Research Fellow with and on the ERC-funded project, ‘’.Ìý

From 2016-2019 I was a Lecturer in the Department of African Studies and Anthropology, where I taught undergraduate and postgraduate modules relating to African literature, culture and anthropology, and supervised undergraduate and postgraduate students.

I now work as Research and Policy Manager at the charity .

Research

A central part of my research is concerned with Nigerian travel writing in Yoruba and English. I am fascinated by the way that Nigerians have represented their encounters with difference within Nigeria, through travel writing. My book, At the Crossroads: Nigerian Travel Writing in Yoruba and English (James Currey, 2019) is the first book-length study of the history of Nigerian travel writing, and it was awarded an Honourable Mention in the African Literature Association First Book Award 2021. Ìý

As African travel writers are becoming increasingly visible and are seeking to represent the continent through their own voices, my research documents a contemporary surge of interest in travel writing in Nigeria. But At the Crossroads shows how Nigerian writers have in fact been publishing travel writing for over a century, in both Yoruba and English. Through reading travel writing, we gain an important insight into how Nigerians have represented Nigeria to itself and to the world, and also into how literary and print genres emerge and develop. My research also revises the well-worn narrative that travel writing is necessarily always the West representing the rest of the world to itself.

My broader research interests include the Yoruba language and its print and literary culture, and African-authored travel writing. I am an Editor of the travel writing journal , and an editorial board member of the blog and the Journal of African Cultural Studies.

Beyond literary culture, as a postdoctoral fellow on the ‘Knowing Each Other’ project, I researched the everyday lives of Yoruba Muslims, Christians and traditionalists. The project exploredÌýthe way in which religious differences and encounters structure the experiences, perceptions and behaviours of Yoruba individuals in their everyday social identities.

As well as managing the data from the project’s large ethnographic survey and contributing to articles exploring the results of the survey in detail, I collaborated with Dr Clyde Ancarno to develop corpus-assisted analyses of both Yoruba- and English-language responses to the survey. I was also a co-editor, with Dr Insa Nolte and Prof Olukoya Ogen, of the edited volume Beyond Religious Tolerance: Muslim, Christian & Traditionalist Encounters in an African Town (James Currey, 2017) which explores inter-religious encounters in Ede, Nigeria. Ìý

Publications

Recent publications

Book

Jones, R 2019, . African Articulations, Boydell & Brewer.

Nolte, I (ed.), Ogen, O & Jones, R (ed.) 2017, . Religion in Transforming Africa, James Currey.

Article

Nolte, I, Ancarno, C & Jones, R 2018, '', Corpora, vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 27-64.

Nolte, I, Jones, R, Taiyari, K & Occhiali, G 2016, '', African Affairs, vol. 115, no. 460, pp. 541-561.

Jones, R 2015, '', African Research and Documentation, vol. 125. <>

Jones, R 2015, '', Journal of African Cultural Studies, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 98-113.

Jones, R 2014, '', Postcolonial Text, vol. 9, no. 4, pp. 1-19. <>

Jones, R 2013, '', The Journal of History and Cultures, no. 2, 3, pp. 39. <>

Chapter (peer-reviewed)

Jones, R & Nolte, I 2017, . in I Nolte, O Ogen & R Jones (eds), Beyond Religious Tolerance: Muslim, Christian & Traditionalist Encounters in an African Town. Religion in Transforming Africa, African Studies, History of Religion, Politics & Economics, James Currey, pp. 227-256.

Chapter

Jones, R 2019, . in The Cambridge History of Travel Writing. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 283-298.

Jones, R 2019, . in Routledge Handbook of African Literature . Routledge, pp. 139-153.

Jones, R 2016, . in DR Peterson, E Hunter & S Newell (eds), African Print Cultures: Newspapers and their Publics in the Twentieth Century. University of Michigan Press, pp. 102-124.

Jones, R 2011, in D Kerr & J Plastow (eds), African Theatre: Media & performance. vol. 10, James Currey.

Book/Film/Article review

Jones, R 2015, '', Africa, vol. 85, no. 3, pp. 549-551.

Doctoral Thesis

Jones, R 2014, '', ???thesis.qualification.phd???, The University Âé¶¹¾«Ñ¡. <>