AFRICAN STUDIES CENTER - UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
 

Cadbury Fellowship University of Birmingham, 11/09




Subject: Cadbury Fellowship University of Birmingham





The Centre of West African Studies at the University of Birmingham -- http://www.facebook.com/l/6bbdc;www.cwas.bham.ac.uk/> -- invites applications to contribute to the 2010 Cadbury Fellows' Workshop, which will focus on popular culture in contemporary urban Africa.

Three visiting fellows from Africa will be appointed to participate in a ten-week schedule of seminars, discussion groups, and other activities. The workshop will culminate in an international conference, 6-8 May 2010 jointly organised with Institute of Anthropological Research in Africa (IARA), University of Leuven, within the framework of AEGIS.

One aim of the Fellowship scheme is to assist new scholars to develop a research paper and bring it to publication, and the conference papers will form the basis of a special issue of Africa, the journal of the International African Institute.

Fellowships will cover return air-fare, accommodation and living costs for a period of ten weeks. The deadline for applications for fellowships is 1 November 2009.

Themes

We welcome contributions that explore the material and symbolic dimensions of urban forms of popular culture. Our central questions for the workshop are:

* How do music and broadcasting media in their material, embodied and symbolic forms participate in the constitution of African urban experience?
* How do urban public spaces and infrastructure in Africa generate specific kinds of practices, discourses and expressions in urban popular culture?

We understand "popular culture" as a zone of ambiguity, constituting a cacophony of sounds and images, and producing variegated narratives, icons and realities. We take "urban" to be a shifting and relative term, which can include small towns as well as major cities. Against this background, the workshop will explore the following themes:

  • Space, infrastructure and zones of entertainment How do zones of entertainment shape urban life worlds? How do music and media events fashion cityscapes in temporary or permanent ways? How do local, transnational and international celebrities move around African cities, towns and villages, whether physically or in the imagination? Where and when do people flock to witness musicians and media celebrities? How are these events controlled by state officials, ethnic and religious leaders and other social authorities?

  • Power and popular culture What is the place of music and broadcasting in actions of resistance, propaganda and censorship programmes? And how do producers, brokers and audiences adapt to it? How and when do politicians and religious leaders become celebrities? Where are musicians and media producers (actors, hosts, journalists) positioned on the various axes of power and authority? What kind of new social categories emerge in the margins of music and media? We can think of journalists, dubbers and translators, shop keepers, etc. Which social categories make a livelihood out of music and media production and events? And how can they achieve this?

  • Time and music/media Do music and media genres structure the rhythms of city life? What do songs and media productions reveal about memory, nostalgia and hope? How are past, present, and future imagined, expressed and brought about via popular culture? How do genres, content and celebrities produce a rift between the generations? And, conversely, in what ways do young and old collectively engage with music and media?

  • Visceral aesthetics and the city How does popular culture contribute to "the urban feel" and the imagination of urbanism? How "urban" are the aesthetics of music and media that we find in African cities and towns? Do certain music and media productions produce an "African urban style"? How do the visceral aesthetics of certain music and media genres tie in with larger, more encompassing symbolic worlds such as religion, politics, and/or the market? What kind of embodied experiences do music and media producers and audiences yearn for, appreciate, or jettison?

Structure

The Cadbury Fellows' Workshop and conference will be led by Karin Barber, Katrien Pype and David Kerr. The 10-week programme runs from 1 March 2010 to 8 May 2010. A range of events is planned, among them:

  • seminars in which participants present their on-going research
  • meetings including reading group, film screenings and visiting speakers
  • a three day visit to the Institute of Anthropological Research in Africa (Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium), where the Fellows will interact with anthropologists working on urbanism in sub-Saharan Africa- a three day working party exploring popular texts, with visitors from IARA
  • the international conference (6-8 May 2010), in which the three Cadbury Fellows and other researchers will present their work.


Who is eligible for a Cadbury Fellowship?

We are looking for younger African scholars who have something to contribute to the theme, and whose research would benefit from a residential fellowship of ten weeks at the University of Birmingham. They should be in the early stages of their academic careers and based in an institution on the African continent. They should have a PhD or be close to completing one. It is intended that the Fellows will have time to use the University¹s excellent library resources, discuss their work with academic staff at CWAS, and contribute to the intellectual life of the department by participating in academic and cultural events here.

How to apply for a Cadbury Fellowship?

Fellowships will cover return air-fare, and accommodation and living costs for a period of ten weeks. If you would like to be considered for the 2010 Fellowship, please:

  1. let us know how you learned about this programme
  2. ensure that you can get away for ten weeks from 1st March to 8th May 2010
  3. send a research project description (in English) of not more than 1,000 words on the theme, showing what research you have already done and what you would work on during the fellowship
  4. send a short c.v. (not more than 3 pages) and the names of two referees.

Deadline: 1 November 2009

Applications can be sent by e-mail to <k.pype@bham.ac.uk> or by airmail to:

Dr Katrien Pype
Centre of West African Studies
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston
Birmingham B15 2TT
UK

How to apply to participate in the conference (6-8 May 2010)

Enquiries and applications are very welcome. If you wish to present a paper, send a 250-word abstract to David Kerr <d.kerr@bham.ac.uk> by 1 February 2010. An additional, more detailed call for papers will be circulated in due course. Participants will normally be expected to cover their own travel and accommodation costs. However, funds will be available to support a small number of invited speakers.

Full information is available at:
http://www.facebook.com/l/6bbdc;www.historycultures.bham.ac.uk/events/cadbur> y/index.shtml
School of History and Cultures
Source: http://www.facebook.com/l/6bbdc;www.cwas.bham.ac.uk>

The School of History and Cultures offers a unique range of undergraduate and postgraduate study and research opportunities. It builds on the existing strengths of the Departments of Medieval and Modern History and the Centre of West African Studies (CWA)