Georgetown Environmental History
  • Home
  • EH@G Blog
  • Coming Up
    • Conferences >
      • Past Conferences >
        • 2016 Conference
        • 2017 Conference
  • People
  • PhD
    • Student Publications
    • Courses
  • Contact

To Attend 04/23: African Environments and their Populations

4/18/2016

0 Comments

 
This Saturday, April 23, the Georgetown University History Department is proud to host the annual spring workshop of the African History Series of the Georgetown Institute for Global History, on the subject of African Environments and their Populations. The all-day workshop features Nancy Jacobs (Brown University), Sandra Swart (Stellenbosch University) and guest panelists.

Workshop Description: Humanistic approaches to the study of environments over the last several decades opened intellectual space for new fields of humanities and social science research on topics like climate change. Indeed, the anthropocentric approach dominates both environmental and climate studies in disciplines ranging from history to anthropology to critical theory. Consensus is growing around the value of concepts like the Anthropocene and the place of the humanities and social sciences in contributing to the research agenda undergirding policy about the environment and the changing climate. But, these developments have generally unfolded in isolation from other developments in the humanities and related fields that take seriously the study of non-human populations of environments, often in changing climate regimes. Scholars in a number of humanistic disciplines have recognized the need to study animals, pathogens, and even trees through humanities approaches. New thematic fields of research (and journals) are emerging for these approaches, of which the best known is Animal Studies. We seek to put into conversation traditionally anthropocentric approaches to the study of African environments—including under new and historical climate regimes—with emerging humanities approaches to the many other kinds of non-human populations that also live in African environments. We hope some of these connections will emerge in individual papers, while others will develop as we draw out links between papers during the workshop.

Please RSVP here. Contact Prof. Kathryn de Luna to receive copies of the pre-circulated papers.

Read on for the schedule of the day's events ->
Workshop Schedule:
8:45-9:00 Welcome 

9:00-10:00 Opening Keynote
Nancy Jacobs, Brown University 
Animal Studies and African Studies in Conversation

10:00-11:00  Panel One
Of Game and Wildlife: Meanings and Contests 
Tom Robertson, Worcester Polytechnic 
Boundary Making and the Origins of Namibia’s Contentious Community-Based Natural Resource Management Programs 
  
Dylan Atchley Proctor, Boston University School of Medicine 
Women prefer elephant, men gorilla: Tasting the Anthropocene in the Congo River Basin
Allison Hahn, CUNY—Baruch College 
Conflicting Standards of Human-Wildlife Conflicts in Narok, Kenya 
  
11:00-11:15 Morning Coffee and Tea Break 
  
11:15-12:15 Panel Two
Ideologies of Environmental Exploitation and Development 
Andrea E. Williams, Colorado State University 
“Civilizing through Cork: A Social Sustainable Enterprise in French Colonial Algeria” 
  
Keri Lambert, Yale University 
Tapping Ghanaians: Kwame Nkrumah’s Rubber Scheme, 1957-68 
  
Geoffrey Traugh, New York University 
Cash Cows: The Business of Cattle Keeping in Malawi, 1960s-1980s 
  
12:30-2:00 Lunch Break 
   
2:00-3:00 Panel Three
Arachnida, Insecta, & Ovis: African Environments and their Many Populations 
Admire Mseba, University of the Free State 
Locusts and Power: Pestilence and the Making of a Colonial Society in Northeastern Zimbabwe 
  
Ben Hurtwiz, George Mason University 
Sheep and Shepherds in the Cape Region of South Africa 
  
Christopher R. Conz, Boston University 
“Urging the People to Clean up their Country:” People, Sheep, and Psoroptes in Lesotho, c. 1900-1930s 
 
3:00-3:30 Afternoon Coffee and Tea Break 
 
3:30-4:30 Closing Keynote 
Sandra Swart, Stellenbosch University

This workshop is sponsored by Georgetown University's Office of the Vice President for Global Engagement and by the Georgetown Institute for Global History through the Department of History. Have questions about African History Series Spring Workshop? Contact the Georgetown Institute for Global History.
0 Comments



Leave a Reply.


    ​Past Events

    December 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    July 2019
    October 2017
    September 2017
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015

    Categories

    All
    Conferences

    RSS Feed

  • Home
  • EH@G Blog
  • Coming Up
    • Conferences >
      • Past Conferences >
        • 2016 Conference
        • 2017 Conference
  • People
  • PhD
    • Student Publications
    • Courses
  • Contact