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Western Ways and Nigerian Means: University Librarianship in Nigeria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2022

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Extract

I must emphasise at the outset that the views expressed here are those of someone who had never visited Nigeria, or indeed the African Continent, until last year. I am all too conscious of the fact that much of what I say will be self-evident to many of you, who must know that Continent from the inside, and possibly naive, or even completely wrong.

If my views have any value this must in fact be due to this, to the newness to me of Africa, to my uncontaminated, if you like virgin, state, to my hitherto clearly circumscribed Library vision. British and Germanic speaking libraries of Europe pretty, well sums up my library experience, a thoroughly parochial background in the context of the Third World. I was, as it turned out, only superficially prepared for what one of my new-found colleagues in Zaria termed “cultural shock”, the impact of Nigerian life on the raw European visitor.

Type
Documentation
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 1975

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Footnotes

1

This article was read as a paper to the Standing Conference on Library Materials on Africa in the lunchtime lecture series on 11 March 1975.

References

2 University Grants Committee. Report of the Committee on Libraries. London, H.M.S.O. 1967, p 151.

3 This situation is forcefully described by the editor of OUP, Nigeria, W. Mitchell, in his article: “Publishing in Nigeria—from the aspect of the non-indigenous publishing house” (Nigeria Libraries: Bulletin of the Nigerian Library Association, Vol. 8, no. 3, pp. 189—201.)