Nani Bwabongo
- Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal), Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars), Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar), Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar), Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard), Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus), Cyrille Baudoin Koudh (composer), Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard), Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum), Moussa Haissam
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Cyrille Baudoin Koudh (composer) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130792 , vital:36479 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-02
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Cyrille Baudoin Koudh (composer) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130792 , vital:36479 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-02
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
Dikalo
- Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal), Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars), Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar), Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar), Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard), Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus), Priscilia Ngando (composer), Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard), Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum), Moussa Haissam
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Priscilia Ngando (composer) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130836 , vital:36486 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-03
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Priscilia Ngando (composer) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130836 , vital:36486 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-03
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
A Mbo Da Mondjo
- Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal), Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars), Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar), Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar), Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard), Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus), Moussa Haissam,Penda Dalle (composers), Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard), Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum), Moussa Haissam
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Moussa Haissam,Penda Dalle (composers) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130882 , vital:36494 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-08
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Moussa Haissam,Penda Dalle (composers) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130882 , vital:36494 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-08
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
Divine
- Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal), Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars), Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar), Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar), Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard), Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus), Priscilia Ngando (composer), Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard), Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum), Moussa Haissam
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Priscilia Ngando (composer) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: English , French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130891 , vital:36495 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-09
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Priscilia Ngando (composer) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: English , French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130891 , vital:36495 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-09
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
Je Chante
- Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal), Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars), Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar), Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar), Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard), Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus), Priscilia Ngando (composer), Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard), Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum), Moussa Haissam
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Priscilia Ngando (composer) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130896 , vital:36496 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-10
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Priscilia Ngando (composer) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130896 , vital:36496 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-10
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
Pour Mieux t'Aimer
- Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal), Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars), Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar), Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar), Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard), Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus), Moussa Haissam, Nana Mouskouri, Priscilia Ngando (composers), Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard), Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum), Moussa Haissam
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Moussa Haissam, Nana Mouskouri, Priscilia Ngando (composers) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130846 , vital:36488 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-04
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Moussa Haissam, Nana Mouskouri, Priscilia Ngando (composers) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130846 , vital:36488 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-04
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
Mumi Na Muto
- Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal), Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars), Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar), Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar), Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard), Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus), Danger Ngando Konne, Moussa Haissam (composers), Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard), Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum), Moussa Haissam
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Danger Ngando Konne, Moussa Haissam (composers) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130873 , vital:36492 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-07
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Danger Ngando Konne, Moussa Haissam (composers) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130873 , vital:36492 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-07
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
Osipope
- Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal), Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars), Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar), Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar), Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard), Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus), Moussa Haissam, Danger Ngando Konne (composers), Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard), Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum), Moussa Haissam
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Moussa Haissam, Danger Ngando Konne (composers) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130783 , vital:36478 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-01
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Moussa Haissam, Danger Ngando Konne (composers) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130783 , vital:36478 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-01
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
Bomane Mba
- Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal), Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars), Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar), Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar), Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard), Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus), Danger Ngando Konne, Moussa Haissam (composers), Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard), Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum), Moussa Haissam
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Danger Ngando Konne, Moussa Haissam (composers) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130864 , vital:36490 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-06
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Danger Ngando Konne, Moussa Haissam (composers) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130864 , vital:36490 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-06
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
Hi Life Asta
- Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal), Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars), Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar), Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar), Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard), Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus), Moussa Haissam (composer), Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard), Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum), Moussa Haissam
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Moussa Haissam (composer) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130851 , vital:36489 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-05
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
- Authors: Priscilia Ngando (lead vocal) , Mevio-Mayo, Dany Mouanga, Mouasso (rhythm guitars) , Aubin Sandjo, Scorpionkabambay, Mouche Bass (bass guitar) , Dany Mouanga, Eric Sefu (solo guitar) , Aubin Sandjo, Paul Balong (keyboard) , Abel Massock, Fabo Claude, Nono (chorus) , Moussa Haissam (composer) , Aubin Sandjo (drum, percussion, keyboard) , Alhadji Mallam Issa (talking drum) , Moussa Haissam
- Date: 2000
- Subjects: Popular music , Popular music--Africa, West , Africa Cameroon Yaounde f-cm
- Language: French
- Type: sound recordings , field recordings , sound recording-musical
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/130851 , vital:36489 , International Library of African Music, Rhodes University, Grahamstown, South Africa , SDC47-05
- Description: Popular songs from Cameroon, featuring female vocal accompanied by keyboard, chorus, guitar, percussion and talking drum, playing West and Central African rhythms
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2000
The pattern-richness of graphical passwords
- Vorster, Johannes, Van Heerden, Renier, Irwin, Barry V W
- Authors: Vorster, Johannes , Van Heerden, Renier , Irwin, Barry V W
- Date: 2016
- Language: English
- Type: text , article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/68322 , vital:29238 , https://doi.org/10.1109/ISSA.2016.7802931
- Description: Publisher version , Conventional (text-based) passwords have shown patterns such as variations on the username, or known passwords such as “password”, “admin” or “12345”. Patterns may similarly be detected in the use of Graphical passwords (GPs). The most significant such pattern - reported by many researchers - is hotspot clustering. This paper qualitatively analyses more than 200 graphical passwords for patterns other than the classically reported hotspots. The qualitative analysis finds that a significant percentage of passwords fall into a small set of patterns; patterns that can be used to form attack models against GPs. In counter action, these patterns can also be used to educate users so that future password selection is more secure. It is the hope that the outcome from this research will lead to improved behaviour and an enhancement in graphical password security.
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2016
- Authors: Vorster, Johannes , Van Heerden, Renier , Irwin, Barry V W
- Date: 2016
- Language: English
- Type: text , article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/68322 , vital:29238 , https://doi.org/10.1109/ISSA.2016.7802931
- Description: Publisher version , Conventional (text-based) passwords have shown patterns such as variations on the username, or known passwords such as “password”, “admin” or “12345”. Patterns may similarly be detected in the use of Graphical passwords (GPs). The most significant such pattern - reported by many researchers - is hotspot clustering. This paper qualitatively analyses more than 200 graphical passwords for patterns other than the classically reported hotspots. The qualitative analysis finds that a significant percentage of passwords fall into a small set of patterns; patterns that can be used to form attack models against GPs. In counter action, these patterns can also be used to educate users so that future password selection is more secure. It is the hope that the outcome from this research will lead to improved behaviour and an enhancement in graphical password security.
- Full Text: false
- Date Issued: 2016
Mr Edwin in template.pdf
- Authors: Edwin Donald Frauenstein
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/11260/1878 , vital:38890
- Full Text:
- Authors: Edwin Donald Frauenstein
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/11260/1878 , vital:38890
- Full Text:
“We’ve Tamed the World by Framing It”: Islam, ‘Justifiable Warfare,’ and situational responses to the war on terror in selected post-9/11 novels, films and television
- Authors: Sulter, Philip Eric John
- Date: 2017
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/5544 , vital:20940
- Description: This thesis explores geopolitically diverse fictional responses to 9/11 and the War on Terror. Drawing on Judith Butler’s (2009) notion of the “frames of war,” Jacques Derrida’s (2005) conception of the ‘friend’/‘enemy’ binary, and Mahmood Mamdani’s (2004) critique of the ‘good’ Muslim, ‘bad’ Muslim dichotomy (delineated in 2001 by President George W. Bush) I examine how selected examples of contemporary literature, as well as a popular television series, depict the War on Terror; and analyse how these differently situated texts structure their respective depictions of Islam and Muslims. In the first chapter, I focus on how The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2007), a novel by the Pakistani author, Mohsin Hamid, problematises the ‘good’ Muslim, ‘bad’ Muslim binary, and argue that the protagonist’s decision to leave the United States in the wake of 9/11 represents an important political comment on global perceptions of American foreign policy and the human cost of millennial capitalism. Chapter 2 is an investigation of two novels: The Silent Minaret (2005) and I See You (2014), by the South African writer, Ishtiyaq Shukri. By situating his characters in a variety of geopolitical spaces and temporal realities, Shukri encourages the reader to discard the structuring frames of nation, race, and religion, and links the vulnerability and violence implicit in the War on Terror to a longer history of conquest, colonialism, and apartheid. In the process, Shukri illustrates the importance of understanding repressive local contexts as interwoven with global and historical power dynamics. Chapter 3 is a study of the popular American television series, Homeland (2011—), created by Alex Gansa and Howard Gordon, and focuses on the manner in which the Central Intelligence Agency’s “Overseas Contingency Operations” are portrayed by the show. I argue that Homeland initially problematises the ‘friend’/‘enemy’ binary, but subsequently collapses into a narrative in which these two polarities are construed by prevailing American attitudes towards Islam and the notion of the War on Terror as a necessity. This thesis concludes that texts that characterise the War on Terror as a global phenomenon, and situate it within a broad historical discourse, are able to subvert the singularity ascribed to the 9/11 attacks, as well as the epochal connotations of the ‘post-9/11 ’ literary genre. I argue that the novels I have chosen scrutinise the ways in which perceptions are framed by dominant forms of media, historiography, and political rhetoric, and not only offer unique insights on the repercussions of the global War on Terror but attempt to conceive of humanity in its totality, and therefore destabilise the ontological and reductive operation of the frame itself.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2017
- Authors: Sulter, Philip Eric John
- Date: 2017
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/5544 , vital:20940
- Description: This thesis explores geopolitically diverse fictional responses to 9/11 and the War on Terror. Drawing on Judith Butler’s (2009) notion of the “frames of war,” Jacques Derrida’s (2005) conception of the ‘friend’/‘enemy’ binary, and Mahmood Mamdani’s (2004) critique of the ‘good’ Muslim, ‘bad’ Muslim dichotomy (delineated in 2001 by President George W. Bush) I examine how selected examples of contemporary literature, as well as a popular television series, depict the War on Terror; and analyse how these differently situated texts structure their respective depictions of Islam and Muslims. In the first chapter, I focus on how The Reluctant Fundamentalist (2007), a novel by the Pakistani author, Mohsin Hamid, problematises the ‘good’ Muslim, ‘bad’ Muslim binary, and argue that the protagonist’s decision to leave the United States in the wake of 9/11 represents an important political comment on global perceptions of American foreign policy and the human cost of millennial capitalism. Chapter 2 is an investigation of two novels: The Silent Minaret (2005) and I See You (2014), by the South African writer, Ishtiyaq Shukri. By situating his characters in a variety of geopolitical spaces and temporal realities, Shukri encourages the reader to discard the structuring frames of nation, race, and religion, and links the vulnerability and violence implicit in the War on Terror to a longer history of conquest, colonialism, and apartheid. In the process, Shukri illustrates the importance of understanding repressive local contexts as interwoven with global and historical power dynamics. Chapter 3 is a study of the popular American television series, Homeland (2011—), created by Alex Gansa and Howard Gordon, and focuses on the manner in which the Central Intelligence Agency’s “Overseas Contingency Operations” are portrayed by the show. I argue that Homeland initially problematises the ‘friend’/‘enemy’ binary, but subsequently collapses into a narrative in which these two polarities are construed by prevailing American attitudes towards Islam and the notion of the War on Terror as a necessity. This thesis concludes that texts that characterise the War on Terror as a global phenomenon, and situate it within a broad historical discourse, are able to subvert the singularity ascribed to the 9/11 attacks, as well as the epochal connotations of the ‘post-9/11 ’ literary genre. I argue that the novels I have chosen scrutinise the ways in which perceptions are framed by dominant forms of media, historiography, and political rhetoric, and not only offer unique insights on the repercussions of the global War on Terror but attempt to conceive of humanity in its totality, and therefore destabilise the ontological and reductive operation of the frame itself.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2017
“The stranger at home” : representations of home and hospitality in three South African post-transitional novels
- Authors: Dass, Minesh
- Date: 2014
- Subjects: South African fiction (English) -- History and criticism , Wicomb, Zoë -- Criticism and interpretation , Shukri, Ishtiyaq, 1968- -- Criticism and interpretation , Vladislavić, Ivan, 1957- -- Criticism and interpretation , Home in literature , Hospitality in literature
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:2325 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1016355
- Description: This thesis examines the representation of home and hospitality in Zoë Wicomb’s Playing in the Light, Ishtiyaq Shukri’s The Silent Minaret, and Ivan Vladislavić’s Double Negative. It attempts to trace the un-homeliness of the central characters and to account for their feelings of discomfort. As such, it argues that the home is incapable of being inviolable because the invasion of the public is always a possibility. The implication is that master narratives such as race, history and politics are always entering the space one constructs as private. That said, this study also argues that the home and those things with which it is most closely associated, such as belonging, comfort and safety, may actually hide a form of violence. By this I mean that in the desire for homeliness, one may exclude others from one’s home. Consequently, this argument draws on Jacques Derrida’s writings on the aporia of conditional and unconditional hospitality to investigate what ethical possibilities might, somewhat unexpectedly, be created by the un-homely home. The study is therefore an exploration of the potentials that inhere in a certain kind of un-homeliness, the most important of which is the chance to respond ethically to the alterity of the other. In sum, there is a necessity to extend hospitality beyond condition and beyond limit, and this ethical imperative is at odds with the desire for comfort and safety. The way in which post-transitional novels explore these issues of hospitality and home is the primary focus of this study.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2014
- Authors: Dass, Minesh
- Date: 2014
- Subjects: South African fiction (English) -- History and criticism , Wicomb, Zoë -- Criticism and interpretation , Shukri, Ishtiyaq, 1968- -- Criticism and interpretation , Vladislavić, Ivan, 1957- -- Criticism and interpretation , Home in literature , Hospitality in literature
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:2325 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1016355
- Description: This thesis examines the representation of home and hospitality in Zoë Wicomb’s Playing in the Light, Ishtiyaq Shukri’s The Silent Minaret, and Ivan Vladislavić’s Double Negative. It attempts to trace the un-homeliness of the central characters and to account for their feelings of discomfort. As such, it argues that the home is incapable of being inviolable because the invasion of the public is always a possibility. The implication is that master narratives such as race, history and politics are always entering the space one constructs as private. That said, this study also argues that the home and those things with which it is most closely associated, such as belonging, comfort and safety, may actually hide a form of violence. By this I mean that in the desire for homeliness, one may exclude others from one’s home. Consequently, this argument draws on Jacques Derrida’s writings on the aporia of conditional and unconditional hospitality to investigate what ethical possibilities might, somewhat unexpectedly, be created by the un-homely home. The study is therefore an exploration of the potentials that inhere in a certain kind of un-homeliness, the most important of which is the chance to respond ethically to the alterity of the other. In sum, there is a necessity to extend hospitality beyond condition and beyond limit, and this ethical imperative is at odds with the desire for comfort and safety. The way in which post-transitional novels explore these issues of hospitality and home is the primary focus of this study.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2014
Drum message, calling people to come
- Kasadi Celestin (Performer), Composer unknown
- Authors: Kasadi Celestin (Performer) , Composer unknown
- Subjects: Indigenous music , Talking drum message , Chondo slit drum , Jadotville (Likasi) , Kabinda , Belgian Congo (Democratic Republic of Congo)
- Type: Sound , Music
- Identifier: vital:15404 , MOA29-08 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1017710 , MOA29
- Description: Talking drum messages with Chondo slit drum accompaniment , This recording is held at the International Library of African Music. For further information contact ilamlibrary@ru.ac.za , This recording was digitised by the International Library of African Music , Original format: 15ips reel , Equipment used in digitisation: Studer B 67 Tape Recorder; Nagra III , Software: Sound Forge V.6 , Sample rate: 44100Hz 16Bit Stereo
- Full Text: false
- Authors: Kasadi Celestin (Performer) , Composer unknown
- Subjects: Indigenous music , Talking drum message , Chondo slit drum , Jadotville (Likasi) , Kabinda , Belgian Congo (Democratic Republic of Congo)
- Type: Sound , Music
- Identifier: vital:15404 , MOA29-08 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1017710 , MOA29
- Description: Talking drum messages with Chondo slit drum accompaniment , This recording is held at the International Library of African Music. For further information contact ilamlibrary@ru.ac.za , This recording was digitised by the International Library of African Music , Original format: 15ips reel , Equipment used in digitisation: Studer B 67 Tape Recorder; Nagra III , Software: Sound Forge V.6 , Sample rate: 44100Hz 16Bit Stereo
- Full Text: false
The unattainable "betterlife" : the discourses of the homogenised South African black emerging middle-class lifestyle in Drum magazine
- Authors: Hardy-Berrington, Michelle
- Date: 2011
- Subjects: Lifestyles -- South Africa , Blacks in mass media , Journalism -- South Africa , Drum (Magazine)
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:8448 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/1426 , Lifestyles -- South Africa , Blacks in mass media , Journalism -- South Africa , Drum (Magazine)
- Description: Drum and YOU are two general interest magazines which share the same publisher, language (English), format, and are compiled by many of the same journalists and editors. The greatest distinction between the two publications is that Drum is aimed at a specifically black readership while YOU caters for a general, cosmopolitan South African readership. With various commonalities in the production of Drum and YOU, what do the differing commodities, discourses and cultural repertoires presented in Drum in comparison to YOU communicate about the conceived black audience/s by the magazines'producers? In contrast to the dominant body of research on Drum magazine, which has been dedicated to pre-1994 editions, the investigation undertaken in this research focuses on post-apartheid editions of Drum under the commercial ownership of Media24. This also provides a unique opportunity to compare and contrast Drum and YOU which has not been extensively explored in the past. A theoretical study on some of the credible, plausible discourses circulating in Drum drew from Laden's (1997; 2003) research on black South African middle-class magazines and Steyn's (2001) studies on narratives of whiteness including colonial and apartheid policy discourses. Other theory considered to identify types of discourses included those on self-stylisation, excorporation and the historic, cultural influence of Drum in black South African identity formation. Critical discourse analysis is employed to discern the distinction and boundaries between the conceived black middle-class readerships of Drum and YOU. A multifarious content is present in Drum magazine for the diverse post-apartheid black middle-class of South Africa. Discourses of the African traditional and conservative feature side-by-side with contemporary, liberal and Western discourses; while the cultural repertoires of the bourgeois middle-class are presented beside the more modest commodities of the lower-income working class. This communicates an increasingly integrated South African consumer culture and a willing bourgeois solidarity amongst middle-class groups, creating a larger consumer class for advertisers and marketers in South Africa. In comparison to YOU, the discourses of the conservative-African-traditional provide a distinctive feature of Drum. However, this discourse is limited to realms which do not threaten the prevailing magazine culture of consumerism and the dominant global culture of Western science and reason. The other great distinction from YOU is Drum’s prominent educating and didactic function, offering an aspirant lifestyle by marketing a range of Western technologies and commodities. This is in addition to suggesting options for desirable social conduct and socially-responsible behavior.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2011
- Authors: Hardy-Berrington, Michelle
- Date: 2011
- Subjects: Lifestyles -- South Africa , Blacks in mass media , Journalism -- South Africa , Drum (Magazine)
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: vital:8448 , http://hdl.handle.net/10948/1426 , Lifestyles -- South Africa , Blacks in mass media , Journalism -- South Africa , Drum (Magazine)
- Description: Drum and YOU are two general interest magazines which share the same publisher, language (English), format, and are compiled by many of the same journalists and editors. The greatest distinction between the two publications is that Drum is aimed at a specifically black readership while YOU caters for a general, cosmopolitan South African readership. With various commonalities in the production of Drum and YOU, what do the differing commodities, discourses and cultural repertoires presented in Drum in comparison to YOU communicate about the conceived black audience/s by the magazines'producers? In contrast to the dominant body of research on Drum magazine, which has been dedicated to pre-1994 editions, the investigation undertaken in this research focuses on post-apartheid editions of Drum under the commercial ownership of Media24. This also provides a unique opportunity to compare and contrast Drum and YOU which has not been extensively explored in the past. A theoretical study on some of the credible, plausible discourses circulating in Drum drew from Laden's (1997; 2003) research on black South African middle-class magazines and Steyn's (2001) studies on narratives of whiteness including colonial and apartheid policy discourses. Other theory considered to identify types of discourses included those on self-stylisation, excorporation and the historic, cultural influence of Drum in black South African identity formation. Critical discourse analysis is employed to discern the distinction and boundaries between the conceived black middle-class readerships of Drum and YOU. A multifarious content is present in Drum magazine for the diverse post-apartheid black middle-class of South Africa. Discourses of the African traditional and conservative feature side-by-side with contemporary, liberal and Western discourses; while the cultural repertoires of the bourgeois middle-class are presented beside the more modest commodities of the lower-income working class. This communicates an increasingly integrated South African consumer culture and a willing bourgeois solidarity amongst middle-class groups, creating a larger consumer class for advertisers and marketers in South Africa. In comparison to YOU, the discourses of the conservative-African-traditional provide a distinctive feature of Drum. However, this discourse is limited to realms which do not threaten the prevailing magazine culture of consumerism and the dominant global culture of Western science and reason. The other great distinction from YOU is Drum’s prominent educating and didactic function, offering an aspirant lifestyle by marketing a range of Western technologies and commodities. This is in addition to suggesting options for desirable social conduct and socially-responsible behavior.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2011
Agreement and coordination in XiTsonga, SeSotho and IsiXhosa: an optimality theoretic perspective
- Authors: Mitchley, Hazel
- Date: 2016
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/3423 , vital:20491
- Description: This thesis provides a unified Optimality Theoretic analysis of subject-verb agreement with coordinated preverbal subjects in three Southern Bantu languages: Xitsonga (S53), Sesotho (S33), and isiXhosa (S41). This analysis is then used to formulate a typology of agreement resolution strategies and the contexts which trigger them. Although some accounts in the Bantu literature suggest that agreement with coordinate structures is avoided by speakers (e.g. Schadeberg 1992, Voeltz 1971) especially when conjuncts are from different noun classes, I show that there is ample evidence to the contrary, and that the subject marker used is dependent on several factors, including (i) the [-HUMAN] specification on the conjuncts, (ii) whether the conjuncts are singular or plural, (iii) whether or not the conjuncts both carry the same noun class feature, and (iv) the order of the conjuncts. This thesis shows that there are various agreement resolution strategies which can beused: 1) agreement with the [+HUMAN] feature on the conjuncts, 2) agreement with the[-HUMAN] feature on the conjuncts, 3) agreement with the noun class feature on both conjuncts, 4) agreement with the noun class feature on the conjunct closest to the verb, and 5) agreement with the noun class feature on the conjunct furthest from the verb. Not all of these strategies are used by all languages, nor are these strategies interchangeable in the languages which do use them – instead, multiple factors conspire to trigger the use of a specific agreement strategy within a specific agreement featural context. I show that these effects can be captured using Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 2004). The analysis makes use of seven constraints: RES#, MAX[+H], MAX[-H], DEP[-H], MAXNC, DEPNC, and AGREECLOSEST. The hierarchical ranking of these constraints not only accounts for the confinement of particular strategies to specific agreement featural contexts within a language, but also accounts for the cross-linguistic differences in the use of these strategies. I end off by examining the typological implications which follow from the OT analysis provided in this thesis.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2016
- Authors: Mitchley, Hazel
- Date: 2016
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MA
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/3423 , vital:20491
- Description: This thesis provides a unified Optimality Theoretic analysis of subject-verb agreement with coordinated preverbal subjects in three Southern Bantu languages: Xitsonga (S53), Sesotho (S33), and isiXhosa (S41). This analysis is then used to formulate a typology of agreement resolution strategies and the contexts which trigger them. Although some accounts in the Bantu literature suggest that agreement with coordinate structures is avoided by speakers (e.g. Schadeberg 1992, Voeltz 1971) especially when conjuncts are from different noun classes, I show that there is ample evidence to the contrary, and that the subject marker used is dependent on several factors, including (i) the [-HUMAN] specification on the conjuncts, (ii) whether the conjuncts are singular or plural, (iii) whether or not the conjuncts both carry the same noun class feature, and (iv) the order of the conjuncts. This thesis shows that there are various agreement resolution strategies which can beused: 1) agreement with the [+HUMAN] feature on the conjuncts, 2) agreement with the[-HUMAN] feature on the conjuncts, 3) agreement with the noun class feature on both conjuncts, 4) agreement with the noun class feature on the conjunct closest to the verb, and 5) agreement with the noun class feature on the conjunct furthest from the verb. Not all of these strategies are used by all languages, nor are these strategies interchangeable in the languages which do use them – instead, multiple factors conspire to trigger the use of a specific agreement strategy within a specific agreement featural context. I show that these effects can be captured using Optimality Theory (Prince and Smolensky 2004). The analysis makes use of seven constraints: RES#, MAX[+H], MAX[-H], DEP[-H], MAXNC, DEPNC, and AGREECLOSEST. The hierarchical ranking of these constraints not only accounts for the confinement of particular strategies to specific agreement featural contexts within a language, but also accounts for the cross-linguistic differences in the use of these strategies. I end off by examining the typological implications which follow from the OT analysis provided in this thesis.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2016
Bioconditioning and nitrogen fertility effects of selected cyanobacteria strains on two degraded soils in the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
- Authors: Maqubela, Mfundo Phakama
- Date: 2009
- Subjects: Nostoc , Cyanobacteria , Soil fertility -- Testing , Soils -- Nitrogen content , Cyanobacteria -- Biotechnology
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD (Soil Science)
- Identifier: vital:11959 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/558 , Nostoc , Cyanobacteria , Soil fertility -- Testing , Soils -- Nitrogen content , Cyanobacteria -- Biotechnology
- Description: Some cyanobacteria strains have biofertilization and bioconditioning effects in soils. The objective of this study was to identify cyanobacteria with potential to improve the N fertility and structural stability of degraded soils and evaluate their effectiveness in soils of the Eastern Cape, South Africa. Isolation and characterization of the indigenous cyanobacteria strains with desirable properties was first to be undertaken because their effects are known to differ from strain to strain. Cyanobacteria strains 3g, 3v, and 7e were identified from 97 strains isolated from selected soils. Nostoc strains 3g and 3v had greater ability to produce exocellular polysaccharides (EPS) but low potential to fix atmospheric N2 (4.7 and 1.3 nmol C2H4 μg chl-1 h-1, respectively). On the other hand, strain 7e had the highest capability to fix atmospheric N2 (16.1 nmol C2H4 μg chl-1 h-1) but had the least ability to produce EPS. Evaluation of the strains was done in glasshouse studies starting with Nostoc strain 9v isolated from a Tanzanian soil, followed by the indigenous strains isolated from soils in Hertzog and Qunu, South Africa. Inoculation was done by uniformly applying cyanobacteria on the surface of potted soils at a rate of 6 g m-2. First harvest and soil sampling took place after six weeks, and the top 25 mm of the soil was mixed, replanted, and sampled again after a further six weeks (second harvest). Inoculation with Nostoc strain 9v increased soil N by 40 percent and 17 percent in Guquka and Hertzog soils, respectively, and consequently increased maize dry matter yields by 40 and 49 percent. Soil C increased by 27 percent and 8 percent in Guquka and Hertzog soils, respectively, and this increase was significantly associated with that of soil N (R2 = 0.838). Higher contents of soil C, soil N and mineral N, however, were found in non-cropped soils. Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) revealed coatings of EPS on soil particles and fragments of non-cropped inoculated soils, with iii other particles enmeshed in networks of filaments, in contrast to cropped and/or non-inoculated soils. The proportion of very stable aggregates was increased by inoculation but cropping with maize reduced the aggregate stability. Inoculating Hertzog soil with indigenous strains 3g and 7e increased the nitrate N in the first cropping by 49 percent and 69 percent respectively, in cropped soils. In the second cropping increases in mineral N were 41 percent and 43 percent in 3g and 7e inoculated soils, respectively. Maize dry matter yields were higher on inoculated soils both in the first and second harvest in response to the improved N status of the soil. Increases in aggregate MWD in cropped soil as determined by fast wetting, mechanical breakdown and slow wetting were 85 percent, 33 percent, 33 percent, respectively, for 3g inoculation, 64 percent, 41 percent, and 41 percent, respectively, for 7e inoculation and 60 percent, 24 percent, 50 percent for inoculation with 9v. In non-cropped soil, increases in MWD as determined by fast wetting, mechanical breakdown and slow wetting were 11 percent, 0 percent, 7 percent, respectively for 3g inoculation, 21 percent, 11 percent, and 7 percent, respectively for 7e inoculation, and 25 percent, 36 percent, and 19 percent for strain 9v inoculation. Scanning electron microscopy observations, which were confirmed by chemical results, revealed that inoculated soils had high EPS and filaments that encouraged soil aggregation and improved aggregate stability. Results of this study show that cyanobacteria strains isolated and selected for their ability to fix atmospheric N2 and produce EPS improved the fertility status and aggregate stability of degraded soils from South Africa.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2009
- Authors: Maqubela, Mfundo Phakama
- Date: 2009
- Subjects: Nostoc , Cyanobacteria , Soil fertility -- Testing , Soils -- Nitrogen content , Cyanobacteria -- Biotechnology
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD (Soil Science)
- Identifier: vital:11959 , http://hdl.handle.net/10353/558 , Nostoc , Cyanobacteria , Soil fertility -- Testing , Soils -- Nitrogen content , Cyanobacteria -- Biotechnology
- Description: Some cyanobacteria strains have biofertilization and bioconditioning effects in soils. The objective of this study was to identify cyanobacteria with potential to improve the N fertility and structural stability of degraded soils and evaluate their effectiveness in soils of the Eastern Cape, South Africa. Isolation and characterization of the indigenous cyanobacteria strains with desirable properties was first to be undertaken because their effects are known to differ from strain to strain. Cyanobacteria strains 3g, 3v, and 7e were identified from 97 strains isolated from selected soils. Nostoc strains 3g and 3v had greater ability to produce exocellular polysaccharides (EPS) but low potential to fix atmospheric N2 (4.7 and 1.3 nmol C2H4 μg chl-1 h-1, respectively). On the other hand, strain 7e had the highest capability to fix atmospheric N2 (16.1 nmol C2H4 μg chl-1 h-1) but had the least ability to produce EPS. Evaluation of the strains was done in glasshouse studies starting with Nostoc strain 9v isolated from a Tanzanian soil, followed by the indigenous strains isolated from soils in Hertzog and Qunu, South Africa. Inoculation was done by uniformly applying cyanobacteria on the surface of potted soils at a rate of 6 g m-2. First harvest and soil sampling took place after six weeks, and the top 25 mm of the soil was mixed, replanted, and sampled again after a further six weeks (second harvest). Inoculation with Nostoc strain 9v increased soil N by 40 percent and 17 percent in Guquka and Hertzog soils, respectively, and consequently increased maize dry matter yields by 40 and 49 percent. Soil C increased by 27 percent and 8 percent in Guquka and Hertzog soils, respectively, and this increase was significantly associated with that of soil N (R2 = 0.838). Higher contents of soil C, soil N and mineral N, however, were found in non-cropped soils. Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) revealed coatings of EPS on soil particles and fragments of non-cropped inoculated soils, with iii other particles enmeshed in networks of filaments, in contrast to cropped and/or non-inoculated soils. The proportion of very stable aggregates was increased by inoculation but cropping with maize reduced the aggregate stability. Inoculating Hertzog soil with indigenous strains 3g and 7e increased the nitrate N in the first cropping by 49 percent and 69 percent respectively, in cropped soils. In the second cropping increases in mineral N were 41 percent and 43 percent in 3g and 7e inoculated soils, respectively. Maize dry matter yields were higher on inoculated soils both in the first and second harvest in response to the improved N status of the soil. Increases in aggregate MWD in cropped soil as determined by fast wetting, mechanical breakdown and slow wetting were 85 percent, 33 percent, 33 percent, respectively, for 3g inoculation, 64 percent, 41 percent, and 41 percent, respectively, for 7e inoculation and 60 percent, 24 percent, 50 percent for inoculation with 9v. In non-cropped soil, increases in MWD as determined by fast wetting, mechanical breakdown and slow wetting were 11 percent, 0 percent, 7 percent, respectively for 3g inoculation, 21 percent, 11 percent, and 7 percent, respectively for 7e inoculation, and 25 percent, 36 percent, and 19 percent for strain 9v inoculation. Scanning electron microscopy observations, which were confirmed by chemical results, revealed that inoculated soils had high EPS and filaments that encouraged soil aggregation and improved aggregate stability. Results of this study show that cyanobacteria strains isolated and selected for their ability to fix atmospheric N2 and produce EPS improved the fertility status and aggregate stability of degraded soils from South Africa.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2009
Cosmopolitanism and the unfollowable routines and rituals in Ishtiyaq Shukri’s The Silent Minaret:
- Authors: Dass, Minesh
- Date: 2017
- Language: English
- Type: text , article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/142531 , vital:38088 , DOI: 10.1080/02564718.2017.1290382
- Description: This article explores how Ishtiyaq Shukri’s The Silent Minaret critiques the limited and severely uneven forms of hospitality that characterise post-9/11 Britain. It also examines how the text gestures towards the possibility of a non-violent, inclusive cosmopolitanism. The piece begins by relating recent debates surrounding the “War on Terror”, as well as Britain’s decision to leave the European Union to the novel’s major concerns. It then turns to the novel, and summarises incidents in which the principal character, Issa Shamshuddin, is traumatised and harmed by the Islamophobia and anti-immigration policies evident in the London portrayed in the text. Next, it turns to an analysis of the strange and irreproducible rituals of Issa’s neighbour, Frances. The article concludes that that these unfollowable rituals posit how a truly cosmopolitan society would function.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2017
- Authors: Dass, Minesh
- Date: 2017
- Language: English
- Type: text , article
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/142531 , vital:38088 , DOI: 10.1080/02564718.2017.1290382
- Description: This article explores how Ishtiyaq Shukri’s The Silent Minaret critiques the limited and severely uneven forms of hospitality that characterise post-9/11 Britain. It also examines how the text gestures towards the possibility of a non-violent, inclusive cosmopolitanism. The piece begins by relating recent debates surrounding the “War on Terror”, as well as Britain’s decision to leave the European Union to the novel’s major concerns. It then turns to the novel, and summarises incidents in which the principal character, Issa Shamshuddin, is traumatised and harmed by the Islamophobia and anti-immigration policies evident in the London portrayed in the text. Next, it turns to an analysis of the strange and irreproducible rituals of Issa’s neighbour, Frances. The article concludes that that these unfollowable rituals posit how a truly cosmopolitan society would function.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2017
Manyanga drum rhythms I
- Husuni Isike Salumu Athman and Ramadhani Khuluwa (Performer), Rasomangila (Composer)
- Authors: Husuni Isike Salumu Athman and Ramadhani Khuluwa (Performer) , Rasomangila (Composer)
- Subjects: Drum rhythms , Bell , Baraza Ndono , Tabora District , Tanganyika (Tanzania)
- Type: Sound , Music
- Identifier: vital:15400 , MOA29-04 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1017706 , MOA29
- Description: Drum rhythm tune accompanied by 3 conical drums, 1 globlet drum and small bells , This recording is held at the International Library of African Music. For further information contact ilamlibrary@ru.ac.za , This recording was digitised by the International Library of African Music , Original format: 15ips reel , Equipment used in digitisation: Studer B 67 Tape Recorder; Nagra III , Software: Sound Forge V.6 , Sample rate: 44100Hz 16Bit Stereo
- Full Text: false
- Authors: Husuni Isike Salumu Athman and Ramadhani Khuluwa (Performer) , Rasomangila (Composer)
- Subjects: Drum rhythms , Bell , Baraza Ndono , Tabora District , Tanganyika (Tanzania)
- Type: Sound , Music
- Identifier: vital:15400 , MOA29-04 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1017706 , MOA29
- Description: Drum rhythm tune accompanied by 3 conical drums, 1 globlet drum and small bells , This recording is held at the International Library of African Music. For further information contact ilamlibrary@ru.ac.za , This recording was digitised by the International Library of African Music , Original format: 15ips reel , Equipment used in digitisation: Studer B 67 Tape Recorder; Nagra III , Software: Sound Forge V.6 , Sample rate: 44100Hz 16Bit Stereo
- Full Text: false