Africa research Rhine-Main

Eine Gruppe von Menschen in einer afrikanischen Landschaft. Bild: Nourou Soulemane Yorou

Photo: Nourou Soulemane Yorou

In the African Studies Rhine-Main alliance, Goethe University Frankfurt, Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz (JGU) and TU Darmstadt are pooling their expertise in the field of African research. The work of the alliance is characterized by its strong interdisciplinary nature and combines the disciplines of Anthropology and African Studies as well as Egyptology, Linguistics, Film and Literature Studies, Geography, Botany and Economics, among other subject areas. The pivotal institute that serves the African Studies Rhine-Main alliance, which was formed in May 2016, is the Centre for Interdisciplinary African Studies (ZIAF) in Frankfurt, where many of the various aspects of the project are coordinated. In 2021, the universities in Mainz and Frankfurt introduced the joint bachelor program “Afrikanische Sprachen, Medien und Kommunikation” (African Languages, Media and Communication). As part of this study program, students can learn two African languages and analyze narratives and discourses connected to Africa, including the history of research on Africa. Students can choose this program as major or minor subject.

Since 2021, the collaborative project CEDITRAA (Cultural Entrepreneurship and Digital Transformation in Africa and Asia) funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) has been investigating the digital transformation of cultural production in West Africa and East Asia. For the first time, this interdisciplinary project combines African and Asian sciences and research centers in Frankfurt and Mainz, namely the ZIAF and the IZO (Interdisciplinary Centre for East Asian Studies) of Goethe University and the Georg Foster Forum of Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz. In 2025, the project has entered its second phase. Plans for a larger joint collaborative project on cultural industries are currently underway. 

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