James Stuart (linguist) explained
James Stuart (1868–1942) was a civil servant of the Colony of Natal and Zulu linguist; also a collector of Zulu oral tradition. He compiled five school readers containing Zulu poetry and narrative.
Webb's notes were posthumously edited and published by Colin Webb (historian) and John Wright.
Works
- Stuart . James . 1913 . History of the Zulu Rebellion, 1906, and of Dinzulu's arrest, trial and expatriation . London . Macmillan and Co. .
- Stuart . James . 1 . 1924 . zu . uBaxoxele . London . Longmans, Green and Co. .
- Stuart . James . 1 . 1924 . zu . uHlangakhula . London . Longmans, Green and Co. .
- Stuart . James . 1 . 1925 . zu . uKhulumethule . London . Longmans, Green and Co. .
- Stuart . James . 1 . 1925 . zu . uThulasizwe . London . Longmans, Green and Co. .
- Stuart . James . 1 . 1926 . zu . uVusezakithi . London . Longmans, Green and Co. .
Bibliography
- Andrzejewski . B. W. . Pilaszewicz . S. . Tyloch . W. . Literatures in African Languages: Theoretical Issues and Sample Surveys . Cambridge University Press . 1985 . 978-0-521-25646-9 . 525.
- Book: Hamilton . Carolyn . 1994-08-01 . James Stuart and "the establishment of a living source of tradition" . University of Witwatersrand .
- Book: Hamilton . Carolyn . 1998 . Terrific majesty: The powers of Shaka Zulu and the limits of historical invention . Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England . Harvard University Press . “The establishment of a living source of tradition”: James Stuart and the genius of Shakan despotism . 130–168 .