The Hopeful Continent: Africa Rising 20 Years On will be the first Anthropology Southern Africa conference hosted at the University of Namibia jointly hosted by the first conference of the Ethnological and Anthropological Society of Nigeria.

The organizers wish to inform all interested participants that due to Namibia's current third wave COVID-19 challenges, the conference will be postponed to 2nd-4th December 2021. Previous submissions will be carried over to December 2021. We dearly request your kind consideration and continued support.

The conference will be virtual and if the situation permits a blended mode will be considered.

We are now opening a new Call for Papers and Panels.

Call for Panels

The Hopeful Continent: Africa Rising 20 Years On will be the first Anthropology Southern Africa conference hosted at the University of Namibia jointly hosted by the first conference of the Ethnological and Anthropological Society of Nigeria.

Since the beginning of the 21st century, Sub-Saharan Africa has experienced two decades of virtually uninterrupted economic growth, now popularly phrased as ‘Africa Rising’. Cohosts Anthropology Southern Africa and the Ethnological and Anthropological Society of Nigeria invite multi-disciplinary panels to critically explore this broad and specific narrative of ‘rising’ in Africa and across the globe. The Hopeful Continent: Africa Rising 20 Years On will be the first Anthropology Southern Africa conference hosted at the University of Namibia jointly hosted by the first conference of the Ethnological and Anthropological Society of Nigeria. The Financial Times defined ‘Africa Rising’ as a narrative that suggests that “improved governance means the continent is almost predestined to enjoy a long period of mid-to-high single-digit economic growth, rising incomes and an emerging middle class”. The emerging narrative associated this with the democratisation of African states since the end of the Cold War, comparative peace, greater availability of mobile phones and the Internet, and an increase in African consumer spending as well as a growth in entrepreneurship. For many development specialists and influential Western commentators, this growth revival displaced a deep sense of “Afro-pessimism” that dominated the closing decades of the 20th century. The new Afro-optimism, Afro-futurism and post westernism outlooks have fostered hope that poverty can be reduced at a faster pace. In reality, the poor African masses still feel little from aggregate growth. Despite this, the term has spawned a number of spin-off ideas, such as "Latin America Rising" and "Asia Rising.” The organisers welcome panel proposals from emerging and established scholars, and from professionals working in the non- academic world. In addition, we welcome proposals for posters, film, performances and flash presentations engaging critical topics. The organisers invite parallel panels in both Portuguese and French for Lusophone and Francophone African and international scholars. The Hopeful Continent: Africa Rising 20 Years On will be the first Anthropology Southern Africa conference hosted in Namibia jointly hosted by the first conference of the Ethnological and Anthropological Society of Nigeria.

The organisers invite panels and topics that critically engage with (yet are not limited to):

  • Afro-pessimism, African Renaissance, Afro-optimism, Afro-futurism, the promises and critique of historical development, and post westernism and its translation to other global contexts;

  • the Africa rising narrative and its realities in terms of discourse; economy; youth; gender and gender based violence; climate change and the Anthropocene; natural resources and land; identity; education; new youth movements; ICTs and new technologies; the impact of Anthropolog(ies) in understandings of Africa and the emerging middle class;

  • the capture of the world’s attention through Africa’s ancient cultural heritage and original birth home of civilization;

  • the ‘undermining of the narratives by experiences of disease and conflict in some parts of the continent;

  • the last frontier for unique film stories, indigenous and other knowledge’s and content;

  • the ‘undermining’ of the narrative by experiences of disease and conflict in some parts of the continent;

  • the opening up of Anthropology for broader engagement with the African academy, both with calls for the de-colonisation of curriculum in the universities across Africa, and as many universities on the continent do not offer anthropology as a stand-alone discipline, but offer through African history, literature, languages, theology, sociology, development studies perspectives that engage with what it means to be human;

  • Anthropological and popular perspectives of queer being and becoming as (dis)located in African cultural and political systems.

 

Note that panel conveners and presenters require membership of one or more of the following associations at registration: ASnA, PAAA, EASON or IUAES. The organizers welcome more than one membership and all other disciplines are welcome to submit.

 

Conference fees:

Fees for undergraduate students: Free
PhD and Masters students should register as “employed/unemployed/ part-time” pay the special rate fee of: US$20

ASnA, PAAA, EASON or IUAES members: US$70

All other interested: US$ 100

Paper proposals must have a title, name and affiliation of the author, and an abstract of max. 250 words. Panels must have two proposers, and we encourage these to be across countries. Each panel must have a title and a minimum of two papers.
Deadline for submission of proposals: 11 October 2021.

Acceptance letters: 01 November 2021.
The programme will be released on 10th November 2021.

All submissions, correspondence and enquiries pertaining to the conference MUST be sent to the official conference email address: ASnAeasonwcaanam@gmail.com