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Call for Publications

Theme: The Politics of Knowledge and Cognition
Subtitle: African Perspectives
Publication: Edited Volume
Deadline: 30.11.2022

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A flourishing area in applied epistemology today is the exploration
of the intersection between epistemology and politics. Emerging from
this discourse in recent years is the field of political epistemology
which examines and analyses the bearing and impact of the analytic
and conceptual tools and theories of epistemology on political
theory, practice, and philosophy. Michael Hannon and Jeroen de
Ridder’s The Routledge Handbook of Political Epistemology (2021),
Elizabeth Edenberg and Michael Hannon’s Political Epistemology
(2021), and Pietro Daniel Omodeo’s Political Epistemology: The
Problem of Ideology in Science Studies (2019) are examples of key
publications in this field. However, less attention has been paid to
a study and discourse of the reverse relationship of the intersection
of politics and epistemology: examining analyzing the bearing that
political theories, philosophies, and practices in different horizons
and places have on the processes and theories of knowing and
cognizing. More so, the publications mentioned above do not touch at
all on the African experience and perspectives of the intersection
between epistemology and politics, neither in the sense in which it
explores such a relationship or intersection nor in the reverse sense
just mentioned.

The Politics of Knowledge and Cognition: African Perspectives aims to
provide an in-depth analysis of the impact of African political
experiences both lived and historical, on knowledge and cognition
processes in African places. It aims to provide thought-provoking
essays on the historical, hermeneutical, phenomenological, and
broadly speaking, philosophical perspectives on how power, violence,
resource control, and other political factors in precolonial,
colonial, and postcolonial periods have persistently impacted the
knowing and cognizing processes in African communities. It also
examines the implications of this for knowledge discovery and
retrieval, and for theorizing decolonial approaches to development,
episteme and existence.

We are therefore inviting original and well-written chapters on these
and related thematic areas:

- Conceptualising the politics of knowledge and cognition
- African epistemology
- The politics of knowledge production
- Epistemic injustice
- Knowledge and decolonization
- The politics of epistemic decolonization
- Post-colonialism, politics, and misinformation
- Social media and the hermeneutics of knowledge in Africa
- Historicizing the politics of knowledge: pre-colonial, colonial,
  and post-colonial realities
- Political institutions and epistemic responsibilities
- African politics and virtue epistemology
- The politics and epistemology of ignorance
- Noocracy, gerontocracy, and epistocracy
- The epistemology of deliberative democracy
- The politics of African feminist epistemology
- The politics and epistemology of human rights and justice
- The politics and epistemology of conspiracy
- Trust and political participation
- Knowledge and propaganda
- The epistemology of protest, mass movements and populism

Notes for Contributors

Submission of chapters on any of these and related areas are invited.
At this stage, only abstracts or chapter proposals should be
submitted. The abstract should contain the title of the proposed
chapter, the author’s names and affiliation, and email address, and a
brief summary of the proposed contents of the chapter no more than
250 words. The abstract should be sent, on or before November 30,
2022, to:
[email protected]

Decision on acceptance/rejection of submitted abstracts will be made
no later than December 30, 2022. Authors of accepted abstracts will
receive further information on important deadlines. Rest assured,
there will be adequate time given to develop complete chapters.

Editors

Prof Isaac E. Ukpokolo, University of Ibadan
Dr Elvis Imafidon, SOAS University of London
Dr Peter A. Ikhane, University of Ibadan


Contact:

Dr Elvis Imafidon
Department of Religions and Philosophies
SOAS, University of London
Email: [email protected]






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