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Conference Announcement

Theme: Languages of Citizenship in Translation
Subtitle: Conversations Across Africa and the Indian Ocean
Type: Interdisciplinary Conference
Institution: Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and
Humanities (CRASSH), University of Cambridge
Location: Cambridge (United Kingdom)
Date: 16.–17.3.2012

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A conference convened by Felicitas Becker (Cambridge University) and
Joel Cabrita (SOAS) with the support of CRASSH, the School of Oriental
and African Studies at the University of London and the Arts &
Humanities Research Council.

Convener:
Felicitas Becker (History, University of Cambridge)
Joel Cabrita (SOAS)

Location: CRASSH, Alison Richard Building, 7 West Road, Cambridge

Citizenship is most easily thought of as something conferred by
bounded nation-states, bestowing formalised rights and obligations on
recipients with homogeneous legal status. In this sense, it was
limited to a privileged few in many parts of the world until the
dissolution of empires in the mid-twentieth century. But despite the
rarity of legal citizenship in colonial empires, African colonial
territories were alive with groups that sought to establish
allegiances and entitlements in the places where the dramatic social
changes that preceded and accompanied colonisation had deposited
them. They often drew on religious languages, Christian, Muslim as
well as indigenous, but also on secular, political thought, and
combined them with stories of migration that asserted that foreign
origins were an asset, not a shortcoming. These eclectic ‘languages
of citizenship’ crossed regions and boundaries before, during and
after colonialism, due to the circulation of voluntary and
involuntary migrants, activists, pilgrims and scholars within Africa
and in the Indian Ocean region. This conference, then, builds upon
efforts to connect analyses of the African continent to the wider
Indian Ocean sphere.

Exploring such languages offers a way of examining the history of
Indian Ocean Africa and Asia that avoids too strict periodisation
into pre/post/colonial and the boxing up of history into the
territorial units created by colonialism. A focus on text and
rhetoric helps balance continuity and transformation over time.
Nevertheless we also hope to explore the limits of language and its
relationship to ‘non-language’; not only to non-verbal but kindred
phenomena such as performance, but also to pressures and experiences
that remain unacknowledged and unexpressed. The questions that may be
asked include, but are not limited to:

- How did oral, vernacular understandings of entitlement and
  belonging shape African citizens’ engagement with state-based
  political discourses?
- How did recently-emancipated slaves in early colonial Africa
  redeploy both Christian and Muslim terms to help them claim
  citizenship?
- How did other servile and marginal groups pursue similar aims at
  this and other times?
- How did place-specific and trans-regional allegiances oppose the
  ambitions of big men, colonial intermediaries and nation-builders?
  How did the two co-exist and transform each other?
- How did Africans use print and other media to formulate mobile
  languages of citizenship?
- How did women, who often faced particular difficulties establishing
  entitlements, use arguments about gender and sexuality bound up with
  languages of citizenship?

Speakers include:
Sana Aiyar, Ned Bertz, Jim Brennan, Mark Frost, Jon Glassman, Tim
Harper, Patrick Harries, Isobel Hofmeyr, Matthew Hopper, Emma Hunter,
Preben Kaarsholm, Pier Larson, Sumit Mandal, Sujit Sivasundaram and
Megan Vaughan.

Conference website:
http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/1705/


Contact:

Ruth Rushworth
Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities
University of Cambridge
Alison Richard Building
7 West Road
Cambridge CB3 9DT
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 1223 766838
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/1705/
 
 
 
 
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