
Professor Carolyn Hamilton is the South African Research Chair in Archive and Public Culture at the University of Cape Town. Her initial work on the history of pre-industrial southern Africa prompted her early interrogation of the notion of archive, and her turn to questions of critical method. These concerns underpin her interest in roles and forms of public deliberation and of public institutions concerned with history and culture in increasingly unsettled democracies, and the operations of power in and through archives. Her publications include Terrific Majesty: the Powers of Shaka Zulu and the Limits of Invention (1998, Harvard), co-editorship of the Cambridge History of South Africa (2012), and of collections of essays including Babel Unbound: Rage, Reason and Revolutions in Public Life (2020, Wits University Press); Tribing and Untribing the Archive (2 vols. 2016. UKZN Press); Uncertain Curature: In and out of the Archive (2014, Jacana); Refiguring the Archive (2002, Kluwer) and The Mfecane Aftermath (1995, Wits University Press). She is the director of the Five Hundred Year Archive, a digital humanities project. A former trustee of the Nelson Mandela Foundation, she has been a founding board member of a number of activist archives and has experience in the production of Open Reports on topics of public concern.