Dianna Bell always wanted to live a rich, fulfilling life. The first graduate of the Florida State University Department of Religion’s history and ethnography of religion doctoral program has made her home in Cape Town, South Africa, nearly 4,000 miles down the coast from the region that first captivated her during her studies. Today, Bell travels the continent, roughly three times the size of the U.S., using her passion to amplify native African studies, bringing crucial research to the forefront.
As the assistant to legendary human rights activist Albie Sachs, who was appointed to the new Constitutional Court of South Africa by Nelson Mandela in 1994 and played a key role in establishing the country’s new government, Bell conducted preliminary research for The Albie Collection, a Ford Foundation-funded biographical project documenting Sachs’ life’s work, and the two have remained good friends.
But that’s not all. Bell presently works as an acquisitions and publishing manager at Brill Academic Publishing and as an editor of African studies for Pluto Press, a London-based independent publisher. These additional roles reflect her conviction that many of the best African studies scholars reside on the continent as members of the communities they research.
“There are thousands of academic journals published in Africa without publishing houses behind them, creating challenges in dissemination, visibility, and attracting high-quality manuscripts,” Bell said. “They have great editorial teams with high ambitions and low access to resources. The African Journals Initiative through Pluto Journals supports impressive journals throughout the continent to promote native scholars’ research.”
Before moving to Africa, Bell, a Utah native, earned a bachelor’s degree from Brigham-Young University in 2003 and master’s from the University of Idaho in 2008, both in sociocultural anthropology.