When:
Saturday, April 11, 2015
All day
Where:
Audience: Faculty/Staff - Student - Public - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students
Cost: Free
Contact:
Program of African Studies
(847) 491-7323
Group: Program of African Studies
Category: Academic
"Africa Mispercieved: Beyond Africa as a Laboratory"
The Program of African Studies graduate student seminar (AfriSem) invites graduate student papers with innovative theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of Africa and African communities engaging wth the theme -beyond Africa as a laboratory.- Interested participants should submit abstracts by email to: m-bocchese2010@nlaw.northwestern.edu Please include your name. affiliation, and contact details.
Researchers often approach the study of Africa with their horizon of possible inquiries limited by the dominant narratives of the region in both the academy and popular media alike. Africa is often positioned as a place in need of interventions, a source of data, or the unruly exception in case study comparisons. This conference - titled "Africa Misperceived: Beyond Africa as a Laboratory" - aims to bring totether uaduate students working to counter these trends through innovative theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of Africa and African communities, whether they are located on the continent or beyond its geographic boundaries.
We are interested in novel studies of aspects of society, governance, healthcare, and education that provide a grounded understanding of lived experiences in the region. We welcome papers that consider community involvement and collaboration in research projects through the production, collection, or dissemination of data. Papers from all disciplines in the Humanities and Social Sciences are encouraged, covering all time periods. We are particularly keen on accepting papers with multi-disciplinary approaches to qualitative and'or quantitative studies, archival, or archaeological studies of Africa.
Potential Panel Topics Include (but are not limited to):
History of Science and Medicine in Africa
Contemporary Art in Africa
Deconstructing the State: Sub-National Analysis
The Sociological Implications of Ongoing Economic Change
Contemporary Urban Development and Culture in Africa's Cities
Navigating State-Society Relations in Africa 4.Politics as Performance
This conference is primarily a forum for graduate students to present their research (in various stages of development) to a cross-disciplinary audience. A limited number of travel grants are available on a first-come basis. Please contact Marco Bocchese with any additional questions: m-bocchese2010@nlaw.northwestern.edu