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Eighth Conference of the
Collegium for African American Research
Black Knowledges - Black Struggles - Civil Rights:
Transnational Perspectives
at the University of Bremen, Germany
March 25 - 29, 2009
CALL FOR PAPERS
Historically, Enlightenment ideas, which have been traditionally cast as the originator of
emancipation movements on a worldwide scale, have been compromised by their implication in
colonization, slavery, slave trading and the emergence and intensification of Western racism.
Since the Middle Passage, various forms of Black knowledge have provided vantage points for
reading transatlantic histories and cultures in an alternative light: to look at the modern world
through lessons from Haiti, the Black Seminoles, or the quilombo of Palmares, instead of
primarily through the ideas of Voltaire or Hegel opens up different ways of conceptualizing
knowledge, humanism, freedom and civil rights.
The Eighth Biennial Conference of the Collegium of African American Research (CAAR) in
Bremen, Germany, March 25 - 29, 2009 explores the global epistemological, political, literary,
and cultural impact of the many forms of African American diasporic knowledges and struggles
and their enduring transnational manifestations. Underscoring the ubiquity of the crossfertilization
of Black knowledge and Black struggles in a larger global arena, the conference will
consider the various connections forged through production of knowledge, like the long lasting
effects of African American movements for Civil Rights on Black cultural production, and on
transatlantic social movements, literatures and cultures in general. It will illuminate this nexus in
all its incarnations-abolition, feminisms/womanism, working-class struggles, anti-colonial
movements and the peace movements, among others-and conduits, like the African American
agents, historical and literary texts, visual culture and diverse institutions that have forged and
articulated these connections.
Recognizing that African American diasporic interactions historically have expanded to include
the Indian subcontinent, and, more recently, to reach other Asian countries like Japan and China,
mainly through the spread of Black popular culture, the conference will extend its focus beyond a
rigidly defined Atlantic milieu.
As a forum for much needed dialogues/interactions between various disciplines and national and
continental affiliations, this CAAR conference encourages contributions that would stimulate
collaboration and exchanges between Black European Studies and African American Studies, and
between African American Studies and a range of other disciplines on an international scale.
Viewing African American Studies as a global discipline, we invite proposals for panels,
workshops and papers that address the diverse kinds of mutual recognition, negotiation and
coalition-building of global African American agency, as well as antagonistic encounters borne
by racism, class structures and misogyny. In order to counter both the backlash against
multiculturalism and civil rights in the US and the recent reconfiguration of Europe as a fortress
of the West against so called invasion from the South and East, many telling cases in point might
be addressed. The symptomatic discourses around Katrina and Jena, or the debates around the
current tragedy of illegal, and lethal mass African migration to Europe's South figure here in only
exemplary fashion.
The deadline for workshop proposals is 1 June 2008. The deadline for paper proposals is 1
September 2008. Please send them to the President of CAAR,
Prof. Sabine Broeck, Sabine Broeck [broeck@uni-bremen.de]
For regular updates see:
www.caar-web.org
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