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Call for Papers

Theme: Patrimony, Memory and Identity in West Africa
Type: International Conference
Institution: Institut Français de Recherche en Afrique – Nigeria
   University of Ibadan
Location: Ibadan (Nigeria)
Date: 3.–5.7.2012
Deadline: 30.10.2011

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IFRA (Institut Français de Recherche en Afrique) is launching a new
multi-annual research programme on Patrimony, Memory and Identity in
West Africa with a particular – but not exclusive – focus on Nigeria.
An international conference will take place at the University of
Ibadan from July 3-5, 2012. This project is intended to link up
Nigerian and West African Scholars to the many international research
teams that are currently working on the concepts of
patrimonialisation and identity.

Presentation

For some times, the concept of patrimony, interpreted in a variety of
subfields within the Social Sciences and the Humanities, has occupied
a significant place in research programs on Africa. The making of
patrimonies and the way they interact with the present – the process
of patrimonialisation – studied in a time-sensitive perspective, may
provide alternative understanding of contemporary Africa. Studies on
Africa have focused on violence, armed conflicts, rebellions,
religious and ethnic extremisms, corruption etc. Such analyses have
not taken into consideration the complex and multidimensional nature
of such events From the local to transnational spaces including the
physical ,inner and mental territories, processes of
patrimonialisation, on the other hand, are windows in the making of a
collective memory, imaginary, identities, and trajectories of nation-
building. Several ‘case studies’ abound that call for deeper
analysis. This project intends to promote a collective, international
effort to explore some of the many processes of patrimonialisation
that occur in West Africa, with Nigeria as a center- point of the
investigation. The programme aims at studying processes of
patrimonialisation that would provide alternative understandings of
the way national, sub-national and transnational identities are being
built in contemporary Nigeria and West Africa.

Axes structuring this programme

1. Processes of patrimonialisation in Africa: Review of achievements
   and theoretical implications for the study of contemporary Africa:

This axis aims at reviewing current trends in research on processes
of patrimonialisation in Africa. Scholars will explore the concept of
patrimony from global and comparative perspectives. They will look at
theoretical implications of the study of patrimonies and processes of
patrimonialisation in the understanding of contemporary Africa,
especially with regards to the understanding of the dynamics of
identity. They will identify and explore an array of specific
processes of patrimonialisation of particular interest to understand
contemporary Nigerian society.

2. Contested patrimonies and memories: History, culture and politics
   in post-colonial West Africa:

Processes of Patrimonialisation are anchored in history but deeply
informed by present experiences. In fact, patrimonies are defined in
such ways as to serve the interest of those who lay claims to them.
As such, various stakeholders with conflicting interests struggle
over the meaning of the same categories of patrimony. Such is the
case with the question of repatriation of artifacts looted in the
capital of coastal African States by European colonial expeditionary
forces in the last decade of the 19th century and kept today in
various Western public and private collections. Scholars are invited
to revisit, in a comparative way, the historical trajectories of
these collections, their shifting meanings, and interpretations and
to question the legal and political context of these contestations.
Researchers are also encouraged to document other instances of
contested patrimonies such as festivals, masquerades, social
practices, artworks, trade guilds, sacred spaces or objects,
traditions, archaeological sites, and to look at the role of museums
and cultural authorities resolving or reinforcing contestations, etc…

3. Environment as patrimony: From local practice to global concern:

The patrimonialisation of the tropical environment has been the
subject of several recent studies looking mainly at francophone
Africa, but little has been written about similar processes in
Nigeria. In a country characterized by its dense, largely built up
urban environment consisting of colossal infrastructural and
developmental projects, can the natural environment still be
considered a form of patrimony by government and communities? How do
local practices of management of the environment cooperate with or
struggle against governmental and international ‘conservational’
policies in an era of concern regarding global warming or threatened
biodiversity? Has natural patrimony been sacrificed in the name of
industrial development? Has environmental thematic entered the field
of Nigerian politics? Scholars are also invited to produce original
papers looking at the issues of oil spillage and mismanagement of
natural patrimony, conservation of sacred natural spaces and
spiritual evolution in the perception of the natural environment
related to the spread of Islam and Christianity, tourism policies,
change and continuities in the management of national parks and
reserves from the colonial period, etc.

4. Patrimony and identity in Nigeria:

As we enter in the second decade of the twenty-first century, more
than fifty years after the independence of Nigeria, are there forms
of patrimony that emerged as crucial parts of the Nigerian identity?
Here, we invite scholars to reflect on patrimonialisation as a tool
to create national identities in a postcolonial context. For
instance, we would welcome essays dealing with the evolution and
spread of foodways and cuisines in the sub-region, in a historical
perspective, and their role in forging or contesting national
identities. Recent studies suggest that patrimonies can be thought of
as by-products of consumption. Indeed, luxury or culturally valued
items can become part of national patrimony and identity-building
processes. We welcome scholarly, interdisciplinary reflections on the
emergence of categories of material culture, brands, local or
imported items that have become deeply intertwined with the Nigerian
identity. Scholars are also invited to reflect on the video and the
music industries as patrimony and their role in creating popular
cultures and youth sub-cultures, propagating and exporting values and
imaginaries that have contributed to the making of the modern
Nigerian person. Other relevant studies on patrimonies and identity
in Nigeria will be welcome.

Besides the above questions, we welcome papers on patrimony and
policy making, on the question of the patrimonial status of land and
its reform, as well as innovative papers on the emergence of new
forms of identity-related forms of patrimonies in West Africa and
Nigeria in particular.

The deadline for submitting paper proposals is October 30, 2011.

Proposals should include:
1. A 600-word abstract and title,
2. The author's name (with Last name underlined),
3. Postal Address,
4. Telephone number,
5. Email address,
6. Institutional affiliation.
Please submit all abstracts to:
Gérard Chouin <[email protected]> with copy to Mr. Martin
Mbella <[email protected]>

Updates about the conference will be regularly posted on our website
and facebook page: www.ifra-nigeria.org


Contact:

Gerard Chouin
Institut Français de Recherche en Afrique – Nigeria
Institute of African Studies
University of Ibadan
Ibadan, Oyo State
Nigeria
Phone: +234 7060581845
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.ifra-nigeria.org
 
 
 
 
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