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Call for Papers

Theme: South-South
Subtitle: Intellectual History across Middle East and South Asia,
1857–1948
Type: Interdisciplinary Workshop
Institution: Center for International History, Columbia University
Location: New York, NY (USA)
Date: 20.–21.10.2016
Deadline: 15.7.2016

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Despite historiographical overtures to the global, and spirited
polemics decrying area studies’ analytical limits, something called
South Asia and another thing called the Middle East persistently
structure — and stricture — scholarly inquiry in the academy and
beyond. Accounts of Indian or Arab intellectual production in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries often confine themselves to
non-European confrontations with European epistemologies, capital,
and guns. With the critiques of Orientalism, modernization theory, and
Westernization having complicated triumphalist narratives of this
encounter, serious attention to south-south intellectual histories
remains rare. Early modernists are often the most cogent critics of
the modernist scholars’ Eurocentrism, tracing connections between the
Middle East, South Asia, and elsewhere that bypass Europe. Yet
Europe’s hegemony in the modern world’s political economy and
imagination did not preclude profound inter-connections between the
non- European world. In fact, the conditions of global European
capital made new engagements between the colonized and peripheral
world necessary.

This workshop highlights the content and conditions of South Asian
and Middle Eastern thought in tandem. Reading a European archive
alongside one in languages like Hindi, Urdu, Arabic, Persian and
Ottoman, cities like Beirut, Calcutta, Delhi, Mecca, Cairo, and
Bombay and educational spaces like Aligarh Muslim University, Nadwat
al-ʿUlama, Osmania University, Cairo University, the American
University of Beirut and the Oxford Majlis, exposes new historical
networks and challenge existing modes of analysis.

The workshop aims to raise a set of interdisciplinary historical,
historiographical and theoretical questions: What kinds of
significant geographies are produced, traversed and imagined in the
nineteenth century and after between the Middle East and South Asia?
Does the presence of a shared Islamicate past adequately explain
Indian and Arab Muslim affiliations? How are the Jewish, Christian,
Zoroastrian and Hindu intellectual communities part of this
Islamicate? How is modernist thought or critiques of secularism or
theories of anti-colonialism related in this unwritten history of
Asian intellectual interaction? What role did political economy of
colonialism play in restructuring the conditions of the early
modern’s “connected histories”? What new networks of intellectual
exchange and new patterns of racialization emerged? How do we
historically recuperate these South-South histories without
succumbing to the follies of the post-colonial states?

Keynote Speakers:
Kavita Datla (Associate Professor of History, Mt. Holoyoke)
Umar Ryad (Associate Professor of Islamic Studies, Universiteit
Utrecht)

Submission of Abstracts

The workshop will bring together early career scholars—graduate
students and pre-tenured faculty — across discipline to participate in
this two day intensive workshop. We encourage applications from
outside Europe and US.

We invite abstracts of 300 words and brief scholarly biography to
[email protected] no later than 15 July 2016. Acceptance
notifications will be sent by 15 August 2016. We encourage faculty to
seek funding from their institutions; limited travel subsidies and
accommodation will be provided to graduate presenters. We will make
all efforts to especially fund scholars from outside US and EU.

Organizers:
Roy Bar Sadeh (Graduate Student, History, Columbia University)
Esmat Elhalaby (Graduate Student, History, Rice University)


Contact:

Roy Bar Sadeh
Center for International History
503 Fayerweather Hall
Department of History
Columbia University
New York, NY 10027
USA
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://cih.columbia.edu/south-south/




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