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Call for Papers

"Developing Africa: Development Discourse(s) in Late Colonialism"
International Workshop
Department of African Studies, University of Vienna
Vienna (Austria)
13-15 January 2011

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"Development" played various and at times contradicting roles in the
discursive and non-discursive practices of late colonialism. It both
served to legitimize European control and to underpin African
endeavours for social and political emancipation.

This workshop aims at exploring discourses of development during the
period when development first came to play a central role in shaping
the relations between Africa and Europe, that is between the end of
World War I and decolonization (1918-ca.1960).

We invite contributions which explore how various actors - both
European and African - conceptualized development in an African
context. Contributors are encouraged to discuss a wide range of
sources, from fictional and academic texts to political statements
and administrative documents, from mass media to letters and diaries.
The intended geographical scope is similarly open, including the
whole of Africa and the respective colonial empires (British, French,
Portuguese, Belgian, Italian, and Spanish). Both metropolitan and
colonial angles on development discourses are welcome.

Preferably, contributions should try to take a longer-term
perspective instead of restricting themselves to a short period of
time. They should map changes within development discourse and try to
arrive at a preliminary periodisation. Contributors are invited to
compare their findings to the widely held assumption that development
in the early decades of the 20th century, probably up to the 1930s,
was mainly used in a narrow economic sense, closely related to the
exploitation of natural resources, whereas later, development turned
into a more extensive concept enabling and justifying the profound
penetration and transformation of colonial societies.

The questions that will guide our workshop are the following:

1) How did the meaning of development change over time?
2) How were discursive and non-discursive social, cultural, and
   political practices related to each other?
3) Who were the subjects of the discourse (both in the sense of those
   who shaped the discourse and those who were defined by it)?

We hope that answering these and related questions will enable us to
analyse and compare various discursive representations of development
- and possibly to get a clearer idea of how closely the various
discursive strands were related to each other and, in turn, whether
their commonalities justify speaking of development discourse in the
singular.

Scholars interested in presenting a paper at the workshop are welcome
to submit a 500-word abstract stating their topic, their geographical
focus, the time-span they cover, the sources and methodology they use
for their analysis, and preliminary hypotheses regarding the above
questions. The abstract and a short biographical sketch should be
sent to <[email protected]> by 31 July 2010. Participation
will be confirmed by 31 August 2010. Draft versions of the papers to
be presented have to be submitted by December 15 2010.

Limited funds are available to subsidize scholars' participation at
the meeting.

The contributions to this workshop will be published in 2011.


Contact:

Dr. Gerald Hödl and Dr. Martina Kopf
Project "Colonial Concepts of Development in Africa"
Department of African Studies
University of Vienna
Spitalgasse 2, Hof 5
A-1090 Vienna
Austria
Tel.: +43 (0)1 4277 43208
Email: [email protected]  or  [email protected]
Web: http://www.univie.ac.at/colonial-development
 
 
 
 
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