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Call for Papers

Theme: In and Out of Africa
Type: 27th Annual Graduate Student Conference in African Studies
Institution: African Studies Center, Boston University
Location: Boston, MA (USA)
Date: 29.–30.3.2019
Deadline: 22.1.2019

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Overview

In Renaissance Europe, a supposedly ancient observation about Africa
became a widely circulating bit of proverbial wisdom: ex Africa
semper aliquid novi - “out of Africa, always something new.” The
phrase was probably a mistaken reading of a classical Greek adage
about African wildlife. But however it came to be, the saying neatly
anticipated ways of treating and thinking about Africa as a source of
intercontinentally consequential developments that resonate into the
present. Today, for example, paleoanthropologists speak of the origin
of modern human beings in terms of the “Out of Africa” theory. Like
rubber and uranium before them, coltan and other minerals mined in
the Democratic Republic of Congo are key to the manufacture of
cutting-edge technologies. Club-goers and DJs incline their ears
toward Lagos or Accra to catch the latest in Afrobeats that will soon
pump through sound systems from London to New York to Goa. And as
Jean and John Comaroff have argued (2012), neoliberalism’s course in
the Global North looks poised to follow tracks laid down by
experience in Africa and the rest of the Global South.

At the same time, the continent’s history and present are equally
characterized by influxes, importations, or indigenizations of
objects and entities from elsewhere; the emphasis here is not on
movement “out of,” but rather “into,” Africa. This is the shape of
the careers of the so-called “world religions” in Africa—Islam and
Christianity especially, but also others. In a different register,
the continentally-popular game of football provides another example,
as Senegal’s much-watched campaign in the 2018 World Cup reminds us.
Likewise, as the work of James McCann (2005) has explored, one of
Africa’s most important cereal crops, maize, was a sixteenth-century
import from Mexico. Even the enormity of colonialism may be glossed
in these terms—as invasion, intrusion, incursion—a view which frames
decolonization as the emphatic putting out of imperial powers and
their trappings, and one that suggests a dialectical relationship
between “in” and “out” in the continent’s history.

The 2019 Boston University African Studies Center Graduate Student
Conference will explore the theme “in and out of Africa.” It seeks,
on one hand, to contemplate Africa as a place of transit: as an
origin, waypoint, or destination for global-scale flows,
circulations, and transmissions. This angle emphasizes the flux and
mobility of people, non- human organisms, capital, cultures,
languages, philosophies and more. But by another light the conference
theme also points to boundaries and borders, lines marking what is
“in” and what is “out.” It raises again perennial questions about
authenticity, indigeneity, and belonging. Ultimately, considering
what is, has been, and will be “in and out of Africa” raises the
question of what ought to be “in and out” of African Studies itself.

Invitation

The program committee invites graduate students to submit proposals
for papers, presentations, or performances attending to any aspect of
the theme “in and out of Africa.” We welcome submissions from any
disciplinary, interdisciplinary, or undisciplined perspective, and
particularly encourage the participation of scholars of
underrepresented backgrounds and identities. We further welcome
proposals that engage with experimental or exploratory modes of
(re)presentation and practice. Selected papers from the conference
will be published in the Boston University African Studies Center
series Working Papers in African Studies.

Possibilities for approaching the conference’s theme include, but are
not limited to:

- Human mobilities in and out of Africa: flows, (im)migration,
  diaspora
- Extraction and injection of value and commodities: natural
  resources, capital, remittances, markets
- Circulation and exchange of epistemologies, ideologies, religions,
  and spiritualities
- Studies of health, disease, and environment: factors and outcomes
  in and out of Africa
- Export and import of aesthetic values, artistic practices, and
  cultural priorities in various media: visual and plastic arts,
  music, literature, film, theater
- Food and agriculture: crops, cuisines, and tastes in transit
- Africa “in and out” of global history, modernity, and futures,
  including perspectives such as Afrocentrism, Afrofuturism, and
  Afropessimism
- Heteroglossic practices and Ajamization
- Ideologies and performances of gender and sexuality in and out of
  tradition and modernity
- Studies of empire, colonialism, decolonization, or neocolonialism
  as formations that have moved in and out of Africa
- Inter- and outer-nationalisms in Africa
- Ways of simultaneous being in and out of Africa: diasporic
  consciousness, transnational families, multinational industries

Submission Requirements

Please submit an abstract (no more than 300 words in .pdf or .doc
format) to [email protected] by Tuesday, January 22, 2019.
Note that the abstract should outline a presentation of twenty
minutes to be followed by ten minutes of questions and discussion.
Those interested in proposing presentations in alternate formats are
welcome to contact the program committee to discuss their ideas at
any time before the submission deadline. Modest travel grants (of up
to 500USD) are available to help defray the cost of conference
attendance for accepted participants who are citizens of an African
country. If you are interested in applying for a travel grant, please
submit an itinerary and budget, noting any other additional sources
of travel funding available to you, along with your abstract.

Keynote Speaker:
Prof. G. Ugo Nwokeji, University of California, Berkeley 

Conference website:
http://www.bu.edu/africa/gradconference/




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