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Call for Papers

Theme: Philosophy and Area Studies
Type: Asixoxe – Let’s Talk! SOAS Conference on African Philosophy
Institution: Department of the Languages and Cultures of Africa,
School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London
Location: London (United Kingdom)
Date: 28.–29.4.2016
Deadline: 1.4.2016

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The annual Asixoxe - Let's Talk! African Philosophy conference has,
since its establishment in 2014, been a steady source of highly
original research in the domain of African Philosophy. Asixoxe is an
expression in the southern African languages Ndebele and Zulu. It
means “let’s talk!” Bearing this title the conference places emphasis
on the spoken word, togetherness and friendship as the social basis
of our scholarly engagement with African Philosophy. At the same
time, through the succession of two click sounds, the word asixoxe
iconically represents the way human speech adds a specific rhythm to
time and to thought.

This year's conference is organized jointly by SOAS and the
University of Bayreuth: the two-day event at SOAS will be followed by
a day's workshop hosted by the Department of Literatures in African
Languages of the University of Bayreuth. The SOAS conference will
take place in the SOAS Russell Square campus, opening at 9:00 on 28th
April and closing at 18:00 on 29th April 2016.

We invite papers on the specific focus of this year's Asixoxe, which
is Philosophy and Area Studies; however, we also welcome papers on
other topics related to African philosophy. The question of the
relationship of African Philosophy to Area Studies translates into
fundamentally different methods of approaching African thought,
namely identitarian approaches as opposed to comparative ones. Since
its inception in the middle of the 20th century, African Philosophy
has been riddled with issues of identity. The discipline has
predominantly been constructed and understood within an identitarian
paradigm: African Philosophy is seen as the ultimate expression of a
distinct African (or otherwise defined local, e.g. Akan, Bantu, etc.)
identity and defined in opposition to an "other", almost always
"Western philosophy", itself understood as an essentialized,
monolithic body of thought characterized by certain key qualities.
Most typically, these distinctions copy the binaries known from other
forms of essentialized difference (e.g. gender): emotive, intuitive,
collective, counter-rationalistic is opposed to critical, analytical,
logic, rational. A major part of the debate on African Philosophy
stays within the limits of reinforcing or questioning these binaries,
or arguing for a grey zone between both extremes.

The researchers in African Philosophy at SOAS and at Bayreuth have
for many years now discussed the relevance of the identitarian
perspective for African Philosophy and explored the potential of a
comparative approach: bringing African Philosophy into a productive
dialogue with the Western tradition, a dialogue which leaves no party
unchanged and which challenges equally African philosophical ideas
and European ones. Rebecca Stacey's (SOAS) seminal paper identifies
two alternatives to an Area Studies approach: namely "Comparative
Philosophy" and "Global/World Philosophy", the former striving to
bring two or more philosophical traditions into a balanced
communication and the latter aiming at an inclusion of multiple local
philosophical traditions under a globally constructed unitarian
philosophical discipline.

The conference envisages to develop this reflection further. The
debate on African Philosophy epitomizes the dilemmas related to Area
Studies when the concept is applied to disciplines which have to deal
with ways of meaning-making which depend on the conceptualizations by
the people or discourses which are studied. These disciplines cannot
treat who and what they study as "objects" but must develop a
fundamentally ethical approach to these, based on mutual respect as
well as the willingness of the researcher to see and challenge
his/her position of power. Ultimately, this reflection addresses the
question: is Area Studies a viable concept for such discourse-based
disciplines, or does it inevitably involve the violent imposition of
Western standards upon a region?

Asixoxe is open to all those who are passionate about philosophy and
about Africa, including university students at all levels of their
academic development. Indeed, the conference aspires to foster the
synergy of fresh scholarly minds and ripe expertise in creating a
platform for their exchanges and thus nurturing the growth of the
discipline of African Philosophy. The conference has already produced
significant contributions to the field. Selected papers from the
first run in 2014 are being published as a special issue of the
Journal of African Cultural Studies and the 2015 papers are currently
being edited for publication in a volume in 2017.

We cordially invite you to participate in the event. Please confirm
your participation and submit the titles of your papers by 1st April
2016 to <[email protected]>. SOAS students do not have to submit
abstracts of their papers, but participants who are not current
students of SOAS are asked to send abstracts of 100-200 words. Each
speaker will be given 20 minutes for the presentation, with
subsequent 10 minutes for questions and discussion. We envisage a
subsequent publication of selected papers from the conference. There
is no registration fee for presenters and other participants.

Venue:
Russell Square Campus
School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London


Contact:

Alena Rettová, Benedetta Lanfranchi and Miriam Pahl
Department of the Languages and Cultures of Africa
School of Oriental and African Studies
University of London
Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square
London WC1H 0XG
United Kingdom
Email: [email protected]




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