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Call for Papers

Theme: Genealogies of Colonial Violence
Type: International Conference
Institution: Centre of South Asian Studies and the Centre for African
Studies, University of Cambridge
Location: Cambridge (United Kingdom)
Date: 1.–2.6.2012
Deadline: 10.4.2012

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This two-day conference seeks to move past the standard debates that
continue to dominate both public discourses and much scholarly
research regarding violence and colonialism. This conference aims to
bring together interdisciplinary researchers to suggest alternative
interpretations, theoretical approaches, and future avenues of
research relating to violence and colonialism. Proposals are welcome
from established academics, early-career researchers and graduate
students in the humanities and social sciences that work on
colonialism and its postcolonial legacies in Africa, Asia, and the
Americas. The conference will feature a keynote address by Professor
Achille Mbembe (University of Witwatersrand).

Potential avenues of exploration include, but are no means limited to:
- How can we use the colonial experience to rethink and refashion
  categories of thought dominant in the western academy and its
  established disciplines? How do colonial experiences subvert a
  notion like sovereignty?
- How ideas of the human informed colonial violence.
- Universalism, ambivalence, and the colonial encounter.
- Was, and in what ways, colonial subjugation self-validating?
- Whether the recent historiographical turn to discourses and
  representations has come at the expense of the material. How
  violence constituted relationships between colonial subjects, the
  market, and global capitalism.
- Colonialism, violence, and the production of modern political
  subjects.
- Cultural and political meanings of the excess inherent to all
  violence.
- How did foreign control of the state produce alternative
  constructions of the political? That is, how was the right to take
  life and to protect life thought beyond the boundaries of the state?
  Was death rather than the protection of life the central category of
  political thought in the colonial context?
- Ways to rethink the relationships between violence and colonial law.
- How to write an intellectual history of colonial violence.
- The legacies of colonial violence and the making of a postcolonial
  order.
- How to read state archives of violence and colonialism.
- Aesthetics, language, and violence. 

Paper proposals of no more than 300 words should be sent to Sunil
Purushotham and Derek Elliott at <[email protected]> no later
than April 10, 2012. Successful proposals will be selected shortly
thereafter and applicants notified no later than April 15, 2012.

Venue: Centre for South Asian Studies and Centre for African Studies,
7 West Road, Cambridge, CB3 9EF, United Kingdom

For more information and updates, please visit:
http://www.hist.cam.ac.uk/research/conferences/genealogies-colonial-violence
 
 
 
 
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