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Call for Papers

"Building an African Presence in the Early 20th Century
World"
International Conference
Columbia University
New York, NY (USA)
30 April - 1 May 2010

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In the early twentieth century, the west came under fierce
scrutiny as artists, intellectuals, students, and statesmen
sought to repair what they perceived to be an ailing
civilization overtaken by imperial greed, war, and “The
Machine.” “Africa,” once labeled the “dark continent” and
expropriated from History, figured prominently in this quest
and began to shine brightly as artists and intellectuals
turned their attention to it as a source of revitalization
and renewal, as a way to heal psychic scars and guide a
traumatized postwar Europe. Africa emerged from these
scholarly and artistic productions as a kind of object that
the west could use to repair their own narrative and imagine
their future anew. While their objectification of Africa was
not intended to work in the service of black or African
culture, it was seized upon and reinvented first by African
Americans eager to return Africa to History and to establish
their own authority within the universal and by Africans as
they pursued their own political agendas as members of
colonial empires. The new information and representations
about Africa that emerged in the early part of the century
enabled both groups to contribute to the process of building
an African presence in the world and making an African
contribution toward the larger project of creating a truly
universal civilization.

The conference works from the premise that these political
and cultural transformations and the efforts of peoples of
European and African descent operated within single analytic
framework. The result of their efforts was the
reconstitution of Africa within a world context. The
conference seeks papers that consider how to reframe this
historical period with Africa located at the center of what
scholars have previously approached as a strictly western or
European discussion, and the ways that Africans and people
of African descent rearticulated and reimagined Africa
within this global discussion about the future of
civilization and humanity. It seeks papers that (a) consider
the changing political and cultural landscape of this period
and the ways that civilization, humanity and race figured
within this conversation and how Africa and black culture
were revised in relation to the new world order that was
being articulated; (b) explore how Africans and people of
African descent contributed to this discussion, and inserted
Africa into World-History narrative and the political
economy of the new world order; (d) consider the questions
and issues raised by the movements as well as the places,
events and circumstances that gave rise to connections and
transactions; (f) investigate the ways in which different
groups reached across national and imperial boundaries and
created unity as women, men, workers, and as racialized and
colonized subjects; and (g) explore how these different
groups of people conceptualized the world, western
civilization, modernity, citizenship, gender, and social and
political rights are also encouraged.

Papers should be approximately 20 minutes long. Paper
proposals should include title of the paper, name,
affiliation, email and a 250 word abstract. Proposals must
be submitted by September 1, 2009 to:
[email protected]

Conference conveners:
Prof. Mamadou Diouf (MEALAC/History)
Dr. Jinny Prais (Fellow, CGT)


Contact:

Jinny Prais
Committee on Global Thought
Columbia University
3 Claremont Ave., Suite 101
Mail Code 5780
New York, NY 10027
USA
Phone: +1 212 851 7293
Email: [email protected]

 
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