__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Decolonising the Humanities in the African Academy
Type: International Conference
Institution: Faculty of Arts, Obafemi Awolowo University
Location: Ile-Ife (Nigeria)
Date: 7.–10.8.2022
Deadline: 30.4.2022

__________________________________________________


The theme of ‘decolonisation’ has returned with renewed vigour since
Biodun Jeyifo pronounced “arrested decolonization” from the
exhaustion and implosion of nationalism, buoyed, until the mid-1980s,
by radical independence struggles across Africa. Decolonisation in
Africa was political liberation followed by economic liberalisation
and, consequently, dependency. Whereas the humanistic disciplines
were established to decolonise the mind, à la Ngugi wa Thiong’o, the
focus on transnationalism and the globalisation of knowledge
continues to relegate and disqualify indigenous methods. Ironically,
the present state of affairs strongly indicates the complicity of the
humanities with colonisation. The global designs of knowledge
production that Walter Mignolo argues constitute the basis of
coloniality alongside the repressive regimes of power in Latin
America have resonance in the African context.

More recently, Achille Mbembe has regenerated excitement around the
discourse of decolonisation through his latest book, Out of the Dark
Night: Essays on Decolonization. Central to his project is the
unrelenting questioning of the Eurocentric academic models that have
remained dominant despite regular curriculum review in many African
academic institutions. This condition necessitates painstaking and
self-conscious efforts to imagine a new mission and identity for
African academes that transcend reactionary monadism. It is not
surprising that Mbembe echoes the Senghorian concept of the
civilisation of the universal in which African humanism, yet again,
is to provide “the message of joy in a great universal future
equitably open to all peoples.” The political project of
decolonisation is thus inseparable from the freedom to be, think, and
act based on basic human convictions in Africa.

By decolonisation, we are not advocating an uncritical return to
indigeneity but epistemic sovereignty defined by what Chen Kuan-hsing
in Asia as Method calls deimperialisation of production, culture, and
thought—a pluriversal epistemic practice. Along these lines, we seek
comprehensive engagement with the history of the humanities in
Africa, the history of ideas, and the history of the university. We
view the humanities as a primary site for thinking about the
institutions of knowledge, the practice of thought and its social
impact, the development of culture, and the techniques of research
and rigorous reflections about human life and relations in Africa.

This conference will explore multiple pathways to decolonising the
humanities in African academy. We welcome comparative decoloniality
that brings humanistic decolonisation in Latin America and Asia in
conversation with Africa.

The subthemes for the conference include but are not limited to the
following:

- Histories of the Humanities Disciplines in Africa
- The Place of the Humanities in the University and the Society
- The Humanities and the African Idea of History
- Deprovincialising Epistemic Traditions
- Exploring Alternatives to Eurocentric Academic Models
- Rethinking Tradition and Modernity
- Decolonising Colonial and National Archives
- Decolonising African Literature
- Decolonising Theories in the Humanities
- Decolonising Gender Studies in Africa
- Afrofuturism and African Futures
- African Humanism
- African Feminism
- The Impact of African Philosophical Thought
- Language and Human Development in Africa
- Language and Identity in Africa
- Language Ideology and Glocalisation
- Education and Knowledge Systems
- Popular Art Forms
- Indigenous Knowledge, Technologies and Production Capacity
- Judicial Practices and Justice Systems
- Liberation Humanities
- From Liberation Struggles to the Arab Spring
- Neoliberalism and Neocolonialism
- The Limits of Postcolonial Theory in Africa
- The Economy of Literary Awards and Prizes
- Failed States, Infrastructural Crisis, and Knowledge Capital
- Social Instability, Institutional Constraints, and Knowledge
  Production
- Public Protests and Discursive Contestations
- Youth Movements and Culture
- Technological Transformations and the Humanities
- The Human as Category and Status
- Music, Circulation, and Identity
- Ethnicity, Ethnology, and Conflict
- Climate Change and the Environment
- What is Africa, Today?
- Migration and Displacement
- The New Imperialism in Africa
- Decolonising the Study of Religions in Africa: Promise and Pitfalls
- Religious Discourse and Practice and the Legitimation of Empire
- Privileging African Lives: Religious Studies as Political
  Theology/Political Philosophy


Submissions

We invite scholars and graduate students to submit abstracts for
individual paper presentations, panels or round tables. Panel and
round table abstracts of not more than 350 words are due April 30,
2022 while individual abstracts of not more than 250 words are due
May 31, 2022.

To propose a paper, panel or roundtable for the conference, kindly
fill out the electronic form below:
https://forms.gle/xZZxnt9PUjKAcaav5

The organisers will notify participants whose abstracts are accepted
on or before June 30, 2022.

We encourage such participants to register and take advantage of our
early bird options.


Conference Registration Fees

Participants from Nigeria:
N20,000.00 (Early bird) / N25,000.00 (On-site)

Graduate students from Nigeria:
N10,000.00 (Early bird) / N15,000.00 (On-site)

Participants from Africa:
$75.00 (Early bird) / $80.00 (On-site)

International participants:
$100.00 (Early bird) / $120.00 (On-site)

Deadline for early bird registration:
July 15, 2022.


Confirmed Speakers

Prof. Sabelo Ndlovu-Gatsheni
University of Bayreuth, Germany

Prof. Kwesi Prah
Centre for Advanced Study of African Societies, Cape Town /
University of Zululand, South Africa

Prof. Oyeronke Oyewumi
Sony Brook University, New York


Contact:

Faculty Conference Planning Committee
Faculty of Arts
Obafemi Awolowo University
Ile-Ife, Nigeria
Email: [email protected]




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
https://interphil.polylog.org

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

__________________________________________________

Reply via email to