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Call for Papers

Theme: Chinweizu, Africa and the Rest of the World
Type: 1st Outstanding African Thinkers Conference on Chinweizu
Institution: Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana
   Centre for Critical Thinking and Resourceful Research in Africa
(CECTRRA)
Location: Accra (Ghana)
Date: 6.–9.11.2017
Deadline: 30.4.2017

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The Nigerian intellectual Chinweizu demonstrates before our very eyes
that a life of total commitment to knowledge and scholarship and
devoid of other entanglements is possible in Africa. This devotion to
knowledge and thinking has paid handsomely and, the for the past 40
years after his emergence on the intellectual scene at the world
level with his famous book The West and the Rest of Us (1975),
Chinweizu has turned out many outstanding, thought-provoking works
that will, no doubt, command a more detailed discussion at a
conference. Apart from The West and the Rest of Us (1975), Chinweizu
has published a sizeable number of works that demand a scholarly
forum such as can be afforded by a conference to debate and critique
his works in a manner that will enrich the intellectual history of
black Africa. These works include Invocations and Admonitions (1986);
Towards the Decolonisation of African Literature (1983–Co-authored);
Decolonising the African Mind (1987); Energy Crisis and other poems
(1978); Voices from Twentieth-century Africa (1988); Anatomy of
Female Power: A Masculinist Dissection of Matriarchy (1990). In
addition to these works are scores of articles, book chapters and
essays on education, pan-Africanism, endogenous knowledge, Nigerian
nationalism, etc., and several others that discuss the state as well
as the future of the black world scattered across reputable journals
and the print media.

This multidisciplinary conference sets out to critique, problematize
as well as justify some of his claims on and about Africa in a manner
that will reveal the weight and worth of his writings and provide a
platform for other emergent thinkers on the African intellectual
scene. It will create space for scholars from a wide range of
disciplines — African Studies, Philosophy, History, English Language
and Literary Studies, Economics, Political Science, Gender Studies,
and Cultural Studies, etc., to address the works of Chinweizu.

The conference will address a number of questions under a number of
themes including the following:

I. Chinweizu, the West and the Rest of Us:

- What are the myths, masks and masquerades that have defined and
  directed the relationship between the West and Africa and what role
  has the works and writings of Chinweizu played to highlight these?

- How is the European and African other constructed and constituted;
  what role has Chinweizu played in interpreting these binary
  locations and how can this knowledge be applied to constitute a
  better future?

II. Chinweizu, Decolonisation and De-Westernization

- What are the demands of decolonisation on Africa and what are the
  imperatives for these African concepts, ideas, ideals, values,
  institutions and state formations? Should decolonisation in Africa
  take the forms of such projects in other former colonies or the
  world or are there peculiar African demands for the project? How has
  the works of Chinweizu addressed this?

- Which paradigm for knowledge and development is possible and
  desirable in African context – in Art, sciences, the humanities,
  politics and economics and how does the works of Chinweizu address
  these?

III. Chinweizu and the Question/Challenge of African Arts

- In the arts and humanities, how do the writings of Chinweizu
  question and direct African intellectual traditions and how, for
  instance, does his idea of literature sometimes referred in literary
  circles as ―Chinweture‖ add to constitute a relevant voice in the
  effort to conceptualise an African theory of arts and literature?

- What is the state of the language question in African Literature
  and how does the works of Chinweizu motivate or respond to this?

- What are the challenges affecting African Philosophical Enquiry and
  how has African Philosophy animated African arts and humanities? Do
  the writings of Chinweizu suggest anything on this?

- What are the Challenges of Scientific Rationality in Africa and how
  does the works of Chinweizu address this?

IV. Chinweizu, the Past and the Challenge of African Modernity

- Assuming that all these charges that Africa heaps on the West is
  true, what proposals do Africanist scholars make for a more
  equitable world other?

- Which thoughts for an African future is desirable from the past and
  how do the works of Chinweizu suggest this?

- What role can be assigned to pan-Africanism in the effort to
  achieve a post-colonial African future and what is the position of
  Chinweizu on this?

V. Chinweizu and the Gender Question in Africa and Beyond

- How does the work of Chinweizu intervene in the Gender Question?

- What contributions do Chinweizu’s works make to Gender/Women’s
  studies in Africa?

VI. Westernization, Arabization and (Re-)Africanization of Africa

- How do we make sense of the unequal relationship between Africa and
  the rest of the world as made evident by the twin contesting forces
  of Westernization and Arabization on the African continent?

- Where is black/sub-Saharan African civilization and how can the
  values of this civilization defend and re-define African Humanity?
  Do African endogenous religious belief have any role in contemporary
  Africa? How have the works of Chinweizu addressed this question?

- Is it desirable to have an African superpower through arms and
  ammunition as a counter force to the forces of recolonization, and
  does the African ethic support this?

VII. Chinweizu, the Intellectual and the African Public Sphere

- What do the works of Chinweizu communicate about and for Africa in
  the global public sphere?

- How do Chinweizu's works engage with Africa's place in global media
  and what political communication issues could be drawn in this
  regard? -Which paradigm for knowledge and development is possible
  and desirable in the African context in the arts, sciences, the
  humanities, politics and economics, and how do the works of
  Chinweizu address these?

VIII. Chinweizu, Race, Reason and Human Nature

- Do reason and knowledge have colour? If so, which colour?

- How racial or even geographical can truth and knowledge be, and how
  does the effort of Chinweizu all these years serve to bring these
  aspects of knowledge to the fore?

- Which aspect of Human nature suggests/generates/regenerates racism
  and which theory of Human nature does it defend?

- Is Human nature influenced by environment and geography/Culture?
  How does the works of Chinweizu address this?

Panel proposals are also desired on any of the works of Chinweizu,
such as The West and the Rest of Us (1975); Towards the
Decolonisation of African Literature (1983–co-authored); Decolonising
the African Mind (1987); Anatomy of Female Power: A Masculinist
Dissection of Matriarchy (1990).

Abstracts and panellists can also go beyond these suggested themes to
address other issues that dominate African/Africanist scholarship
such as African Political Economy, Development Discourse in Africa,
the Challenges of State Formation, Globalization and Glocization,etc

Abstracts/panel proposals of not more than 250 words should be sent
to any of the followings email address on or before April 30, 2017 to:
oatconfere...@gmail.com

Notification for Approval of Abstracts and panels will be sent on or
before May 15, 2017.

Abstract Submissions should indicate the sub-themes under which the
abstracts should be considered and Panel proposers are encouraged to
forward along names of intending panellists.

Papers presented at the conference will be published in a number of
remarkable journals and publishing companies. Conference participants
will be required to pay a nominal conference registration fee. 

Key Note Speaker:
Professor Ihechukwu Madubuike
Former Nigerian Minister of Education and Co-Author with Chinweizu 

Convener:
Professor Lawrence Ogbo Ugwuanyi
Centre for Critical Thinking and Resourceful Research in Africa
(CECTRRA)


Contact:

Dr. Sharon Adetutu Omotoso
Dr. Obadele Kambon
Prof. Lawrence Ogbo Ugwuanyi
Email: oatconfere...@gmail.com
Web: http://www.cectrraafrica.org




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