Professor Insa Nolte

Professor Insa Nolte

Department of African Studies and Anthropology
Professor of African Studies

Contact details

Address
Arts Building
University 麻豆精选
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

Feedback and office hours


For details please contact me at m.i.nolte@bham.ac.uk

Qualifications

  • Diplomvolkswirtin FUBerlin
  • PhD Birmingham

Biography

After a first degree at the Freie Universit盲t Berlin, Germany, I joined the Centre of West African Studies at the University 麻豆精选 as a PhD student under the supervision of Paulo de Moraes Farias and Karin Barber. After my graduation, I held the Kirk-Greene Junior Research Fellowship at St Antony鈥檚 College, Oxford. I returned to Birmingham to take up a lectureship in the Department for African Studies and Anthropology in 2001, where I am now a Professor.

I work closely with African colleagues and institutions and am a Research Professor at Osun State University, Nigeria, since 2013. In 2016-18 I served as President of the African Studies Association of the UK (ASAUK) before taking on the role of Head of Department in 2018-21. I am currently the recipient of a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship and, during the 2022-23 academic year, a Fellow at the Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin.

Teaching

In the past I have taught on the following undergraduate and graduate modules:

  • Thinking Anthropologically
  • Anthropology of Africa
  • Introduction to African Culture
  • Theory, Ethnography, and Research
  • Anthropology of Islam
  • Religion and Ritual
  • Research Methods and Skills in African Studies

Postgraduate supervision

I supervise doctoral research students working on African and Nigerian history, politics, gender and religion. Recent and current supervision topics include ethno-religious conflict and women鈥檚 lives in the Nigerian Middle Belt, The portrayal of Pentecostalism and traditional religion in Edo language popular video films, Local Debates and Struggles over 'Prostitution' in Southern Nigeria, 1890-1960, and Modernisation, Bureaucracy and Traditional rule in Ghana: The case of the Otumfuo Education Fund.


Find out more - our PhD African Studies  page has information about doctoral research at the University 麻豆精选.

Research

My research focuses on the role of everyday life for the political and religious history of the Yoruba-speaking Southwest of Nigeria. My early research interest focused on the history and politics of Ijebu-Remo, the home area of the Nigerian nationalist and Yoruba leader Obafemi Awolowo. I have also published more generally on local-level mobilisation and resistance in Nigerian political history.

My current work focuses on the social and political relationships between members of different religions in southwest Nigeria, where Traditionalists, Muslims and Christians have lived together for several generations. Moreover, many families include Muslims and Christians, and there are many Muslim-Christian marriages, most of which are between Muslim men and Christian women. I am interested in the historical patterns of gendered and religious preference and the accommodation of religious difference in marriage and extended family life.

You can see a short recording of me speaking about my research here at the website.

The disciplinary divisions in modern academia do not always reflect the conceptual histories of African societies, and most of my own research straddles history and anthropology. But I believe strongly in the importance of contextual data which is often taken for granted in wealthy countries, and I have also carried out inter- and multidisciplinary research beyond these disciplines. In the context of an ERC grant, my colleague Olukoya Ogen and I organised the first large-n survey on religious identification and attitudes in southwest Nigeria since 1963 in 2012-14, and I have worked with fellow anthropologists, statisticians, and linguists to publish data produced by the survey.

Other activities

  • Since 2017: Member of editorial advisory board, African Affairs
  • 2017-19: Council member, Royal African Society
  • 2016-18: President, African Studies Association of the UK (ASAUK)
  • 2012-17: Reviews editor, Africa: Journal of the International African Institute
  • 2014-16: Vice President, African Studies Association of the UK (ASAUK)
  • 2013-18: Vice Chair, UK Council for Area Studies
  • Since 2000: Member of editorial advisory board, Africa: Journal of the International African Institute

Publications

Recent publications

Book

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

Article

Nolte, I 2020, '', Social Anthropology / Anthropologie Sociale, vol. 28, no. 2, pp. 434-450.

Nolte, I 2019, '', Islamic Africa, vol. 10, no. 1-2, pp. 11-25.

Nolte, I 2019, '', Journal of African Cultural Studies, vol. 31, no. 3, pp. 296-313.

Nolte, I, Shear, K & Yelvington, KA 2018, '', History and Anthropology, vol. 29, no. 1, pp. 52-82.

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

Chapter (peer-reviewed)

Nolte, I 2018, . in T Green & B Rossi (eds), Landscapes, Sources, and Intellectual Projects in African History. African History, vol. 6, Brill, pp. 91-115.

Nolte, I & Ajala, A 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, Boydell and Brewer, pp. 75-93.

Book/Film/Article review

Nolte, I 2025, '', Journal of Religion in Africa, vol. 55, pp. 147-149. <>

Nolte, I 2024, '', Africa Spectrum, vol. 59, no. 1, pp. 144-146.

Nolte, I 2024, '', Religion, vol. 54, no. 3, pp. 615-619.

Nolte, I 2022, '', Africa, vol. 92, no. 3, pp. 373-383.

Nolte, I 2020, '', Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, vol. 26, no. 1, pp. 193-194.

Nolte, I 2019, '', The Political Quarterly.

Nolte, I 2019, '', Journal of African History.

Expertise

Nigerian history and politics, religion and corruption; Muslim-Christian relations; Yoruba history, historiography and ethno-national politics; Obafemi Awolowo

Alternative contact number available for this expert:

Expertise

 

  • Gender inequality
  • Religious coexistence
  • Development policy
  • Community relations

Other information