Janice R. Levi
Visiting Assistant Professor of History
Associations
History
Pettengill Hall, Room 111
About
ABOUT
My research centers on migration histories, historical methodologies, and intercultural encounters from the medieval to modern eras in Africa. I am currently working on a book manuscript which studies the oral and ritual histories of a Jewish community in western Ghana and how these narratives were tethered to the history of Jewish presence (physical and dialectic) throughout Northwest Africa. The project specifically contributes to our understanding of historical silences, legacies, and preservation and to uncovering the history of human migration and cultural interaction under duress.
The research was funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s Social Science Research Council, West African Research Association, the U.S. Dept. of Education’s Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship, University of California, Los Angeles, among many others.
I am also interested in quotidian and isochronous methods of anti-colonial resistance among Ghanaian women and African migrants in Western Ghana, which will be the basis of my next project.
EDUCATION
Ph.D. History, University of California, Los Angeles
MA, History, University of California, Los Angeles
MA, African Studies, Indiana University
BA, History, University of Oklahoma
TEACHING
Winter 2025
HIST 219 – African Women as History Makers: from the Archive to the Zinkpo
Fall 2024
HIST 105 – Africa: Special Topics in African History, 1500-1900
HIST 301P – South Africa: The Rise and Fall of Apartheid