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Call for Papers

Theme: Decolonizing Communicative Praxis with 'Words that Remake Life'
Type: Transdisciplinary and Interdisciplinary Workspace
Institution: Clark University
Location: Worcester, MA (USA)
Date: 9.–10.4.2017
Deadline: 15.2.2017

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In this two-part workspace, a collective of transdisciplinary and
interdisciplinary scholars will come together to deliberate on and
practice new modes of communicative praxis in academic
conference/workshops. This workspace builds upon energies to
decolonize university spaces, including during a previous workshop
organized by members of our collective, Setting Forth At Dawn: A
Workshop on the Geopolitics and Practices of Academic Writing, held
in May 2016 at Jimma University in Jimma, Ethiopia.

Workspace Setting

Scholarships from across, within, and outside disciplines have
asserted the need to move and extend beyond limited and limiting
modes of knowing crafted and maintained under the auspices of
colonial “modernity.” Enrique Dussel proposes modernity as an
alternate being in the world, with “trans” meaning beyond, while
Walter Mignolo encourages us to de-link from modernity through
increasingly conscious bio- and geo-political scholarships. Horace
Campbell prompts us to think and be through African fractal
expressions that honor geometrically balanced forms of knowing. More
recently, major scholarly associations have made calls for
decolonization within conference frameworks and proceedings.

In short, much of the efforts to decolonize knowledge have
importantly been directed at

- What knowledge(s) are destroyed/expressed/cultivated/canonized and
  how,
- Who expresses knowledge(s), and
- Methodologies through which we know.

Less sustained attention has, as of yet, been given to the direct
decolonization of academic conferences and workshops, during which
scholars transmit and communicate knowledge(s).

Traditional conference modes can suppress expressions of dissimilar
modes of knowing and communicating. In traditional academic
conferences, scholars are subject to rigid time and space controls
that often privilege more positivist and axiomatic research topics
and knowledge(s). These academic spaces often reaffirm a spatial and
metaphysical distancing between the “audience” (learners) and the
“presenter” (the knower). This enforced distancing can re-privilege
and re-center the “presenter.” This re-privileging can be
particularly problematic for scholars whose works contribute to
projects of decolonizing and/or are critical of the relationship(s)
between knowledge and power. Moreover, traditional conference modes
of communicative praxis can de-privilege (a) hesitancy, (b) the
expression of multiple subjectivities, and (c) highly
transdisciplinary scholarships. This is perhaps more acute for
emerging, independent, and non-affiliated scholars, whom have yet to
achieve the renown, prestige, and/or job security of tenured and
highly published scholars. In such settings, scholars attempt
transformative expressions through clandestine and often dis-unified
formulas, oftentimes at the fringes of academic conferences.

So, how to effect transformations of this academic format?

Scholar-intellectual-activist-artist/feminist-queer-Indigenous-postcolonial-decolonial
collectives and non-collectives have started to seek rearrangements
of the conference-style knowledge-sharing paradigms (there are, for
example, several important annual summer schools and workshop-ing
collectives that seek to decolonize colonial features of
knowledge-sharing — ADERN in South Africa and CPD-BISA in the UK, for
example). We week to build upon ongoing energies and efforts in this
area.

- Decolonizing communicative praxis:
This entails rethinking through deliberately post-colonial,
self-conscious, and relational creative communicative praxis, with an
attention to the ways in which our intellectual projects, much like
our corporeal selves, are already/always entangled within dynamic
topographies of power. Mignolo asserts, “…it is not enough to change
the content of the conversation… it is of the essence to change the
terms of the conversation.”

Drawing from ongoing efforts already underway to further challenge
the modes of academic expression—including narrative, storytelling,
poetry, prose, film, dance, music, theatre, and arts-based—we seek to
be experiential in our workspace. Through guided discussions,
interactive and embodied sessions (to be proposed by you!), a film
screening, critical readings, and the creation and circulation of
5-minute experiential videos or podcasts of participants’ thoughts at
the conclusion of our first workspace, we will address the structural
and epistemological legacies of colonialism within our universities
(as we continue to foster the energies of decolonization, with an
attention to concrete practices of decolonization). 

- Decolonizing time:
Drawing motivation from the potentials of slow scholarship alongside
recognition of the need to decolonize time in neoliberalized life
spaces, this workspace is self-consciously s-l-o-w, with time for
unstructured exchanges and with an appreciation for experimentation
and evolving knowledge(s). We extend the time of our workspace to a
supplementary gathering during late 2017.

Expressions of Interest

We will come together to reflect on our collective experiences of
decolonization as critical practice in academic work(shop)spaces and
to think through and implement novel forms of communicative praxis.
We seek to foster meaningful conversations across paradigms and
between traditions of knowledge that ‘politicize and amplify’
knowledge(s). We seek to create space for (a) reclamation projects
that continue to re-define as well as (b) critiques of pervasive
forms of “epistemicide;” those forced destructions of ways of knowing
as well as intellectual property thefts, cognitive and epistemic
marginalization(s), and cultural misappropriations. 

Toward these ends, we invite expressions of interest to collaborate
in the creation of this workspace. Given the experiential format of
the workspace, we encourage ideas and expressions of interest that
demonstrate high levels of creativity and transdisciplinarity. Such
expressions should be approximately 200 words. They will emphasize
how — politically, ethically, and practically — we can decolonize
academic workspaces in projects to decolonize epistemologies. Please
be sure to concretely describe the activity/discussion/project that
you would be interested in (co)facilitating.

If you cannot be present in person, if you choose not to fly out of
respect for our environment, or if you are geopolitically restricted
by the passport of your country of origin, please note that virtual,
simulated, and other forms of non-physical attendance are conceivable
and encouraged.

Ideas and expressions of interest should be sent to:
[email protected]

Prospective participants will be notified on a rolling basis until
the cut-off date of 15 February 2017.

A few small grants are available to subsidize partial travel
expenses. Please indicate in your email correspondence if you would
like to be considered. Adjunct, independent, and/or non-affiliated
scholars will be given priority consideration. There are no
registration costs.

The evening sessions will be family-friendly and children’s
attendance is encouraged. Conveners will work with participants to
arrange childcare during the day.

The workspace begins at 3:30pm on 9 April and concludes at 6pm on 10
April.

Support for the Workspace

This project is funded by Human Geography — A New Radical Journal and
International Development, Community & Environment (IDCE) at Clark
University. We are presently seeking additional funding and will make
updates if further funding becomes available. We hope to publish
reflections and thoughts on the two-part workspace in the journal,
Human Geography — A New Radical Journal.

[1] “Words that remake life” is a line in Patrice Nganang’s 1995
poem, (The Wrath of God) in Elobi: Poems. 


Contact:

Amber Murrey, PhD
International Development, Community and Environment (IDCE)
Clark University 
950 Main Street
Worcester, MA 01610
USA
Email: [email protected]




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