Panel on "African studies: scholars and programs" European Conference on African Studies (ECAS5)

Ana Lúcia Sá (Centre of African Studies - ISCTE- Lisbon University Institute), Elisio Macamo (University of Basel) & 
Eduardo Costa Dias (ISCTE- Lisbon University Institute)  is assembling a panel, entitled “African studies: scholars and programs” for the upcoming 5th European Conference on African Studies (Lisbon, June 27-29, 2013) and is interested in additional presenters. His panel description follows: ECAS 5: African dynamics in a multipolar worldJune 27-29 2013 ECAS 5 LisbonPanel 071: African studies: scholars and programs http://www.nomadit.co.uk/ecas/ecas2013/panels.php5?PanelID=2041
The panel examines the epistemological and methodological assumptions of the African Studies, by identifying its current academic tendencies, questioning the scientific production and the extent to which “non-African” and “African” are valid categories in the African Studies.

Based on the idea that the understanding of the purposes of the African Studies is shaped and conditioned by the enunciation spaces from which the African realities became understandable, the panel examines the epistemological and methodological assumptions of this area of studies. The main objective of the panel is to identify the current academic tendencies in confrontation that have been developing in several contexts. In this perspective, the panel aims to shed a light onto existing debates, within the interdisciplinary space of the African Studies, about changes and proposals coming from the African societies, considering idiosyncratic models of analysis. It also aims to question the scientific production of the African Studies built from geopolitical frameworks of knowledge and the extent to which “non-African” and “African” are valid categories in the African Studies. This discussion, central to this panel, opens the debate about the supposedly universal suitability of the epistemological and methodological assumptions that ground the African Studies, interrogating if is always in relation to these categories that each researcher stands. It also extends the discussion to the legitimacy of essentialist and primordialist positions and questions the conditions in which it is possible to produce authoritative knowledge about African realities.

11.01.2013 | by franciscabagulho | african studies