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Call for Papers

Theme: Concepts and Connections
Type: Global Decolonization Workshop
Institution: School of Advanced Study, University of London
   Department of History, New York University
Location: Paris (France)
Date: 6.–7.7.2017
Deadline: 5.5.2017

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The Global Decolonization Workshop (GDW) is a new collaboration
between the School of Advanced Study, University of London and the
Department of History, New York University. It seeks to forge a
global forum for knowledge exchange in the interdisciplinary field of
decolonization studies. The theme of the University of London in
Paris (ULIP) workshop of the GDW on 6-7 July is ‘Concepts and
Connections.’  The fields of decolonization and postcolonial studies
have hitherto been defined by a focus on the post-war dissolution of
the modern empires of France and Britain.  Consequently, the Cold War
‘last wave’ in Asia, Africa, and the Caribbean has been privileged.
Meanwhile, the earlier, ‘first and second waves’ of decolonization in
the Americas, Eastern and Southern Europe, Russia, and parts of the
Middle East play little, if any role in most general historical
accounts of decolonization. A symposium held at the University of
London in March, 2015, however, has confirmed Latin America’s
vanguard role in the global history of decolonization. The July Paris
meeting of the GDW will explore and debate the connections among and
key concepts animating the three waves of decolonization.

We seek papers that address any of the following:

- Key concepts of independence and decolonization movements
- Intellectual history of independence and decolonization leaders
- Connections among empires before decolonization
- History of inter-imperial and anti-colonial warfare
- Connections between global, imperial and local political concepts
- Historical narratives of decolonization in the various ‘waves’
- Translation and traffic in colonial and anti-colonial discourses
- Archival sources of decolonization studies
- Memory of colonialism and decolonization (monuments, museums, etc.)

Please submit a 200-word abstract, paper title, and one-page
biographical note to Professor Philip Murphy
([email protected]) or Dr. Mark Thurner
([email protected]) by 5 May 2017.


Contact:

Dr Mark Thurner
Institute of Latin American Studies
School of Advanced Study
University of London
Senate House
Malet Street
London, WC1E 7HU
United Kingdom
Email: [email protected]




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