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Call for Papers

Theme: Legacies of Colonialism and Philosophies of Resistance
Type: 21st Annual Philosophy Conference
Institution: Philosophy Graduate Student Union, Villanova
University
Location: Villanova, PA (USA)
Date: 8.–9.4.2016
Deadline: 10.1.2016

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Millions throughout the world continue to struggle with the
consequences of our colonial histories, both in the "first" and
"third" worlds. Decolonization is thus an ongoing process that
currently has no end in sight, and it implicates intellectuals,
politicians, and citizens in all parts of the world. The conference
invites participants to join in this process by thinking collectively
about the remnants of colonialism's past and the possibility for a
decolonized future. Such a project necessarily involves a wide range
of disciplines, including philosophy, sociology, political economy,
history, cultural studies, and anthropology among others, as well as
interpenetrations among such disciplines. 

The Philosophy Graduate Student Union at Villanova University
welcomes graduate students and faculty to submit papers of
approximately 3000 words (including co-authored work), suitable for a
20 minute presentation, to be considered for our conference. Full
papers will be strongly prioritized, though abstracts are also
welcome (approx. 500 words). Authors submitting promising abstracts
will likely receive feedback along with a suggested date by which to
submit a more complete paper. 

Please send any inquiries and submissions, prepared for blind review,
by January 10, 2016 to: [email protected]

Suggested paper/panel topics:

How is theorizing about our colonial histories continually important
for understanding and affecting our present? For example, should we
consider the contemporary world colonial, postcolonial, neocolonial,
imperial, or are these historical categories no longer sufficient?

Especially taking into account the multiple racial and ethnic
divisions that comprise the binary between colonizer and colonized:
How have race relations in former colonies affected philosophies of
liberation and political projects? How have these philosophies and
these projects affected race relations?

How have the struggles of oppressed genders affected philosophies of
liberation and political projects? How have these philosophies and
these projects affected the situations and thought of oppressed
genders?

How have colonial and neocolonial regimes inherited, manipulated, and
altered sexual practices and identities?

How does and how should decolonial theory confront the policies and
power structures of neoliberalism in both the “first” and “third”
worlds?

We also encourage papers on Liberation Philosophy, Liberation
Theology, Epistemologies of Ignorance and Resistance, Feminist
Epistemologies, Philosophy of Race, and all other topics that might
enliven the discourse of decolonial thought.

Suggested figures:
Gloria Anzaldúa, Samir Amin, Homi Bhabha, Amílcar Cabral, Aimé
Césaire, Suzanne Césaire, Dipesh Chakrabarty, Vivek Chibber, Enrique
Dussel, Frantz Fanon, Édouard Glissant, Ernesto “Che” Guevara,
Ranajit Guha, Jamaica Kincaid, María Lugones, Joseph Masad, Achille
Mbembe, Albert Memmi, Walter Mignolo, Kwame Nkrumah, Jasbir Puar,
Aníbal Quijano, Edward Said, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, and others.


Contact:

Luis Alberto Salazar, Graduate Assistant
Philosophy Department
Villlanova University
800 E. Lancaster Avenue
Villanova, PA 19085
USA
Email: [email protected]




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