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Call for Papers

"Caribbean Enlightenment"
Interdisciplinary Caribbean Studies Conference
University of Glasgow
Glasgow, Scotland (UK)
8-10 April 2010

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This conference aims to explore the various ways in which the site of
the Caribbean, with its writers, artists, revolutionaries, and
diverse peoples, has adapted and questioned the legacies of the
Enlightenment.

Keynote Speakers:
J. Michael Dash, Professor of French, Social and Cultural Analysis,
New York University
Charles Forsdick, University of Liverpool
Paget Henry, Professor of Sociology and Africana Studies, Brown
University
Nick Nesbitt, Centre for Modern Thought, University of Aberdeen

In a speech widely regarded as instigating the series of events that
would lead to the overthrow of the Lescot government in 1946, André
Breton’s proclamation of Haiti’s ‘inalienable enthusiasm for liberty
and its affirmation of dignity above all obstacles’ articulated the
enduring revolutionary conviction in the Enlightenment-inspired
principles of liberty, equality and fraternity. This artistic,
cultural and political expression of a universal right to freedom and
self-determination reflects the diverse and complex ways in which
Enlightenment ideals have found expression in the Caribbean. From the
Haitian Revolution of 1791-1804 to The Black Jacobins, surrealism,
négritude, and the contemporary writings of such theorists as Antonio
Benítez-Rojo, Édouard Glissant, and Wilson Harris, the interrogation
of universality has both contributed to the ongoing dissemination and
creolization of Enlightenment discourse and has subjected it to a
thorough critique. This conference aims to explore the various ways
in which the site of the Caribbean, with its writers, artists,
revolutionaries, and diverse peoples, has adapted and questioned the
legacies of the Enlightenment. Acknowledging the Caribbean’s crucial
role in the Atlantic world, the Enlightenment’s history of empire
building and slave rebellions, colonial domination and postcolonial
nation-building, the valorization of reason and its role in the
division of knowledge, will be interrogated against the dissemination
of a discourse promoting universal human rights, democracy and
equality.

This conference seeks to bring together interdisciplinary
perspectives on Enlightenment themes, both historical and
contemporary, in order to trace the spread of a universalist
discourse across the Caribbean. We hope to bring together Anglophone,
Francophone and Hispanophone perspectives that explore figurations of
the universal within the Caribbean context. Noting the region’s
national and linguistic divides, this conference will expose the ways
in which Enlightenment ideals have been adapted to express the
particular experience of the Caribbean peoples. Finally, we pose the
question: ‘Does the commitment to universalism amount to a totalizing
discourse, or can universalism be revisioned?’

We invite papers and panel suggestions that deal with any aspect of
Caribbean Enlightenment, but which may include:

Reason and rule of law
Revolutions and uprisings
Shortcomings of the Enlightenment: slavery and racism
Development of ‘improvement’ in technologies, medicine and language
Universal human rights, democracy, marxism, self-determination
Economics of Caribbean Enlightenment
The impact of surrealism
Négritude and the universal
Appraisals of the Black Jacobins
Contemporary Caribbean literature/philosophy and universality ‘revisioned’
Gendered, gay, racial, and class perspectives on universality
Religion and the Caribbean
Caribbean thought and ‘post-continental’ philosophy

Please send panel proposals and/or paper abstracts (300 words) with a
brief biographical statement (150 words) to Lorna Burns and Michael
Morris at <[email protected]> by 1st December
2009.

A limited number of postgraduate travel bursaries are available by
application. Further details & a full call for papers are available
at: http://www.gla.ac.uk/caribbeanenlightenment 


Contact:

Dr Lorna Burns
Department of English Literature
5 University Gardens
University of Glasgow
Glasgow, G12 8QQ
UK
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.gla.ac.uk/caribbeanenlightenment
 
 
 
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