Image of a mask(Le français)

CANADIAN ASSOCIATION OF AFRICAN STUDIES (CAAS) ANNUAL CONFERENCE:

AFRICA COMMUNICATING: DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES, REPRESENTATION, POWER

INSTITUTE OF AFRICAN STUDIES
CARLETON UNIVERSITY
OTTAWA, ONTARIO
MAY 1-3 2013

Call for Papers

Keynote Speakers

Accommodation

Registration

Procedures to apply for Reimbursement

Program

Program with panel and paper abstracts

Audiovisual recordings of the conference

CAAS Conference: Special Events

CALL FOR PAPERS FOR THE CANADIAN ASSOCIATION OF AFRICAN STUDIES (CAAS) ANNUAL CONFERENCE:
AFRICA COMMUNICATING: DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES, REPRESENTATION, POWER
INSTITUTE OF AFRICAN STUDIES
CARLETON UNIVERSITY
OTTAWA, ONTARIO
MAY 1-3 2013

The “digital revolution” in Africa is increasingly a phrase found these past few years in the media, academic scholarship, and the “grey literature” produced by non-governmental organizations, donors, and private sector firms. There have been a plethora of accounts pointing to the extensive uptake of various forms of digital technologies amongst varied populations and organizations throughout Africa and the varied roles they are playing in fields as diverse as banking, agriculture, music, and social movements. These more explicitly optimistic stories of African business opportunities, development transformations and innovation, and youth-led advocacy for change have been competing with the more conventional accounts of famine, conflict, disease and poverty associated with the continent.

This growing focus on “Africa communicating” is an important corrective to dominant portrayals of Africans as victims of greed, authoritarianism and exploitation. Nonetheless, this new-found interest needs to be critically analyzed in terms of questions of representation, power and the diverse social and cultural dynamics informing the uses of SMS, internet, videos, and other digital technologies. Moreover, attention needs to also be placed on other conventional and unconventional forms of communicating by Africans, and about Africa, that may be intertwined with or overshadowed by the focus on “the new” technologies. These include films, videos, various genres of literature, television, newspapers, music, and styles of oral accounts, including those found in urban settings like “street stories.”

For the 43rd annual conference of the Canadian Association of African Studies (CAAS), we are calling for papers that explore the theme of Africa communicating, examining the particular usages and representations concerning digital technologies in Africa but also the broader ways in which differently situated Africans communicate through diverse media issues of concern, desire, opportunity, history, knowledge, freedom, and control. Hosted by the Institute of African Studies at Carleton University, some of the questions that emerge from this theme include the following: who are the different actors who are using, distributing, and profiting from these digital technologies? How extensive is the “digital divide” and how is it defined in terms of class, gender, regional and other dimensions? Who are making these claims about the “digital revolution” and what bearing do these assertions actually have in the varied uses of digital technologies by different Africans?

Is “revolution” a proper way to categorize the resulting technological and economic changes to parts of the continent? What are the social histories of these technologies? Are these technologies intersecting with forms of public memories through institutional forms (e.g., museums, archives) or informal means and, if so, with what consequences? What African companies are using or innovating with these technologies? What are the socioeconomic impacts in different sectors of these and other technologies and what are the wider political economies involved in them? Who are the institutional “voices” promoting this talk of the “digital revolution” and what impacts, if any, are these representations having in investments, politics, foreign affairs, and economic activities? How are these technologies intersecting, if at all, with current and historical forms of public culture, religious institutions and practices, cosmologies, philosophies and art?

What is the future of African print media in terms of web content and how is this shaping the types of readership, particularly in light of the digital divide? How do African novels, plays or films shape and represent the changing face of media? Are there other ways of understanding “Africa Communicating” in the second decade of the twenty-first century?

The Canadian Association of African Studies and its journal, the Canadian Journal of African Studies have long served as important platforms for scholarship on Africa. As such, and in addition to the more focused theme elaborated above, the conference welcomes papers, panels and roundtables on a broad range of topics and themes related to the continent, both disciplinary and interdisciplinary, as we seek to enable a broad and informed discussion of “Africa Communicating.” Hence the meeting will be an occasion to share, in both French and English, research on topics such as the state in Africa, civil society, migrations, the slave trades, Africa in the international arena, conflicts within the continent, linguistic practice, religious dynamics, and so on. In keeping with the bilingual nature of CAAS, paper and panel proposals in French are particularly welcomed.

In 2013, the CAAS annual conference will overlap with the annual meeting of the Canadian Association for Latin American and Caribbean Studies (CALACS), which will also be held at Carleton from May 3-5. On Friday May 3rd special events will be organized together by CAAS and CALACS to discuss the current situation in Haiti and Canada’s presence in this country as well as the Haitian presence in Canada. We encourage submissions that promote scholarly collaboration between Africa and Latin America and the Caribbean.

The deadline for submitting paper proposals and panel proposals is February 25, 2013.

For information on submitting paper and panel abstracts, conference registration payment (on-line or by cheque), requests for funding for graduate students in Canada, as well as information regarding accommodations please send an e-mail to caasacea@carleton.ca and go to the CAAS site which will be updated regularly.

We invite different types of proposals:

-Individual 15-minute papers: Individual paper proposals accepted by the CAAS 2013 program committee will be organized into panels of 4-5 speakers, with one of the speakers likely being asked to be the chair of the panel. Proposals will include a 200-word abstract, the name and affiliation of the presenter, and an email address.

-90-minute panels: Panels will be composed of 4 to 5 presentations, followed by a discussion. Please do not include more than 4 presentations should a formal discussant be invited. Proposals will include a 200-word abstract describing the theme of the panel, a list of participants (including the chair and, if available, the discussant) and 200-word abstracts for each presentation. For each participant (chair, presenters, discussant), please also provide the affiliation and an email address.

-Symposia: Symposia will be composed of at least 2 panels of 90 minutes each. Symposia panels will be presented one after the other and in the same location, as much as possible. Proposals will include a 200-word abstract describing the theme of the symposium, a list of participants (including the chair(s) and, if available, the discussants) and 200-word abstracts for each presentation. For each participant (chair, presenters, discussant), please also provide the affiliation and an email address.

-Round-tables: Round-tables will be 90 minutes and less formal than panels. Participants will not propose formal communication but will rather address a specific theme or issue to be submitted by the organizers of the round-table. Proposals will include a 200-word abstract describing the theme of the symposium and a list of participants (including the president, the chair and the discussants). For each participant (chair, presenters, discussant), please also provide the affiliation and an email address.

Please submit your proposal to: caasacea@carleton.ca.

Information on registration costs will be coming in January 2013.

The organizing committee, the Executive Committee of the association, and all of its members look forward to welcoming you to Carleton University in Ottawa in May 2013.

Keynote Speakers

The organizing committee is pleased to let you know that we have some outstanding African scholars who will be participating on plenary panels for this year’s CAAS conference.  Although they come from diverse disciplinary backgrounds,  all of their research speaks directly to the conference theme of “Africa Communicating: Digital Technologies, Representation, Power.”

The speakers and the titles of their presentations are:

1. Gado Alzouma (American University of Nigeria) , “The Rhetoric of ICT4D in Africa”

2. Monica Chibita (Uganda Christian University), “New media, new representations? Assessing media literacy in Eastern and Northern Uganda”

3. Michel TJADE EONE (l’Université de Yaoundé),  « l’Afrique dans le temps global de la communication : du local au planétaire »

4. Harry Garuba (University of Cape Town), “Playing with Modernity: The 419 Advance Fee Fraud and the Colonial-Modern Imaginary”

5. Naffet Keita (Université de Bamako), «Més(usages) et tendances récentes en matière de communication au Mali:  le « pouvoir » du téléphone portable en « temps de crise »

6. Wisdom Tettey (University of British Columbia),  “Mobile Phones, Democratic  Citizenship, and the Changing Ecology of Political Communication in Ghana”

In addition, on the overlap day with the annual CALACS (Canadian Association for Latin American and Caribbean Studies) conference, Friday May 3rd, we are co-organizing a plenary panel on Haiti.