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Call for Papers

Theme: W.E.B. Du Bois and the Wings of Atlanta
Type: W.E.B. Du Bois 50th Anniversary Commemorative Conference
Institution: Clark Atlanta University
Location: Atlanta, GA (USA)
Date: 20.–23.2.2013
Deadline: 1.7.2012

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The year 2013 will mark the 50th anniversary of the passing of Dr.
W.E.B. Du Bois. On his birthday in February of that year, it is
fitting that Clark Atlanta University (CAU) celebrate his life and
scholarship: Dr. Du Bois wrote his most influential works in the 23
years he spent as a professor at Atlanta University. Serving as
faculty of the Departments of History and Economics, he taught at
Atlanta University from 1897 to 1910, and then returned from 1934 to
1944 as chair of the Department of Sociology. Dr. Du Bois also had
impact in the area of social work and as a novelist, poet and short
story writer. The W.E.B. Du Bois and the Wings of Atlanta Conference
will serve as a meeting at the crossroads of various paths of Du
Bois’s work. Conference participants will engage in an
interdisciplinary and international introspection of the life,
scholarship and activism of one of the most influential intellectuals
of the 20th century.

In a four-day conference, beginning on February 20, 2013 and
concluding on Du Bois’s birthday of February 23, Clark Atlanta
University will host panels that highlight his countless
contributions, especially those produced in the 23 years of his
tenure. Central works to be discussed include the Phylon  journal
(founded in 1940) and the Atlanta University Publications (which he
directed 1898-1914), where he covered topics including African
Americans in higher education, art, the Black church, urbanization,
health, business, economics, and race relations in Georgia. Books
published while in Atlanta are also central to the CAU discussion:
The Souls of Black Folk (1903), Black Reconstruction (1935) and Dusk
of Dawn: An Essay toward and Autobiography of a Race Concept, the
second of his three autobiographies (1940).

The Wings of Atlanta conference seeks to bring together local,
national and international scholars to explore themes in Dr. Du
Bois’s publications and collected papers in order to illuminate his
experiences at Fisk University, Harvard University, University of
Berlin, Atlanta University, Philadelphia, Massachusetts, New York,
Chicago, Ghana and other areas where Du Bois lived and worked.
Especially welcome are panels addressing the multitude of Du Boisian
intellectual legacies and implications of his myriad research
agendas.

This conference will be held as a conclusion to the year-long W. E.
B. Du Bois Major Works Seminar Series hosted by the Clark Atlanta
University Office of the President, Office of the Provost, School of
Arts and Sciences, and the Department of History. The W.E.B. Du Bois
and the Wings of Atlanta Conference, held on CAU’s campus, offers a
uniquely significant locale from which to commemorate, interrogate,
and celebrate the life and work of this exquisitely educated and
distinctly complex man.

As interest is wide but space limited, individual conference papers
will be considered, but panels of 4-6 papers will be given
preference. Panel proposals should be no more than 4 pages long and
individual paper proposals no more than 2 pages. Panel submissions
must identify the panel chair, names, phone numbers, email addresses,
and institutional affiliation information for the chair and all
panelists.

One-page proposals for undergraduate and graduate student posters are
also encouraged.

Send proposals to Dr. Stephanie Y. Evans at: [email protected]

Conference proposals will be accepted between January 1, 2012 and
July 1, 2012. Acceptance notification: August 15, 2012.

Excerpt from “Of the Wings of Atlanta,” chapter five in The Souls of
Black Folk (1903) The function of the university is not simply to
teach bread-winning, or to furnish teachers for the public schools,
or to be a center of polite society; it is, above all, to be the
organ of that fine adjustment which forms the secret of civilization.

Call for Proposals:
http://www.cau.edu/CMFiles/Docs/CAU2013DuBoisConferenceCFP.pdf


Contact:

Dr. Stephanie Y. Evans, Chair
Department of History
Clark Atlanta University
223 James P. Brawley
Atlanta, Ga 30314
USA
Phone: +1 404 880-6352
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.cau.edu/Academics_History_Main.aspx
 
 
 
 
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