Abbia (journal)
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's general notability guideline. (July 2019) |
Discipline | Area studies |
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Language | English, French |
Publication details | |
History | 1962–1982 |
Publisher | Ministry of Information (Cameroon) |
Frequency | Quarterly |
Standard abbreviations | |
ISO 4 | Abbia |
Indexing | |
ISSN | 0001-3102 |
LCCN | sn86013488 |
OCLC no. | 241303153 |
Abbia: Cameroon Cultural Review (fr: Abbia: Revue Culturelle Camerounaise) was an academic journal covering the culture of Cameroon. It was established by Bernard Fonlon and Marcien Towa in 1962 and ran until 1982. Its influence was discussed by Milton Krieger in 1996[1] and 2014[2] as well as the contributors to Fonlon's Festschrift 1989.[3] The journal exemplified Fonlon's beliefs about the importance of French-English bilingualism (see his article in Abbia V 4 1963 'A case for early bilingualism').
When the full text was made available in 2019[4] as part of the journal 'Vestiges- Traces of Record', Loreto Todd provided an introduction.[5] This stressed the importance of Fonlon's contribution throughout Abbia's history and identified as particularly noteworthy his recogntion of Cameroonian Pidgin as a significant language in its own right and the way that the political tide was turning in Cameroon as the country changed from Federation to united Republic. In 2024 these changes still have huge signifciance.
References
[edit]- ^ Krieger, Milton (1996). "Building the Republic through letters: "Abbia: Cameroon Cultural Review," 1963–82, and its legacy". Research in African Literatures. 27 (2): 155–177. JSTOR 3820169.
- ^ Krieger, Milton (2014). Cameroon's contemporary culture and politics prospects and problems. Project MUSE. ISBN 9789956790272. OCLC 934794271.
- ^ Lyonga, Nalova (1989). Socrates in Cameroon: the life and works of Bernard Nsokika Fonlon. University of Yaoundé. OCLC 24347680.
- ^ "Appendix to Vol 5. Abbia: Full text". Vestiges: Traces of Record. 5. 2019.
- ^ Todd, Loreto (2019). "Bernard Fonlon and Abbia: an Introduction". Vestiges: Traces of Record. 5: 1–4.