Edmund Abaka Explained
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Edmund Abaka is a photographer[1] and historian of Africa at the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida.[2] [3]
He is a graduate of the University of Cape Coast in Ghana and received his master's from the University of Guelph in Canada. He received his PhD from York University in 1998.[4]
He is a Fulbright scholar.[5]
Selected publications
- "Kola is God's Gift": Agricultural Production, Export Initiatives and the Kola Industry of Asante and the Gold Coast, c. 1820–1950. Ohio University Press, Athens, 2005. (Western African Studies)[6] [7]
- Culture And Customs of Ethiopia. 2007
- House of Slaves and "Door of No Return": Gold Coast/Ghana Slave Forts, Castles & Dungeons and the Atlantic Slave Trade. University of Wisconsin Press[8]
- W. E. B. Du Bois on Africa (edited with Eugene F. Provenzo)
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Dr. Edmund Abaka – KROMA Art Space & Studios. kromamiami.com.
- Web site: Edmund Abaka. as.miami.edu.
- Web site: Prof. Edmund Abaka donates to History Department – UCC :: University of Cape Coast. ucc.edu.gh. October 2016 .
- Web site: International Standard Name Identifier entry.
- Web site: Edmund Abaka – Fulbright Scholar Program. cies.org.
- Web site: Edmund Abaka. ohioswallow.com.
- EDMUND ABAKA. "Kola is God's Gift": Agricultural Production, Export Initiatives and the Kola Industry of Asante and the Gold Coast, c. 1820–1950. (Western African Studies.) Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press. 2005. Pp. xv, 173. Cloth $44.95, paper $24.95 (review). Trevor. Getz. June 1, 2006. The American Historical Review. 111. 3. 935–936. 10.1086/ahr.111.3.935-a.
- House of Slaves and 'Door of No Return': Gold Coast/Ghana Slave Forts, Castles & Dungeons and the Atlantic Slave Trade by Edmund Abaka (review). Kwame. Essien. July 18, 2018. Ghana Studies. 19. 1. 203–205. 10.1353/ghs.2016.0010. 164992921.