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Call for papers
Africans in Europe in the long twentieth century: Transnationalism,
translation and transfer
University of Liverpool, 30-31 October 2009

The past few years have seen a flowering of historical research on
Africans in Europe and the growth of new networks of scholarship on the
subject. Most of this work acknowledges that as colonial or ex-colonial
subjects, as migrants, and as members of a global population for whom a
common identity and fate were increasingly claimed in terms of diaspora,
Africans often moved from one mono- or plurilingual context/contact zone
into another. This could be the result of physical relocations, of a
transfer of administrative jurisdiction over them from one colonial power
to another (as after 1918), or indeed of participation in transnational
literary and political networks. But much current research remains limited
to particular national metropolitan contexts, their languages and
institutions, with the themes of transnationalism and translation
addressed largely through triangulations between Africa, Black America and
the respective country of 'settlement'. The purpose of this conference is
to bring together new research and provoke discussion around those moments
where Africans found themselves at the interface between European
cultures, asking about the implications for subjectivity and everyday life
as well as for literary and political practice of having to deal with and
through different languages and cultural practices. We invite
contributions that address experiences in any (or indeed all) European
territories, and particularly welcome empirically-grounded case studies
which address the problems of methodology and interpretation raised by the
project of studying transnational lives. Possible topics might include:


. Africans as language teachers and language learners - formal and
informal institutions

. Visual culture: self-presentations

. Multilingual families and generational power

. Communication, power and identity in international organisations and
networks

. International milieus within national borders (seamen's bars and Black
neighbourhoods)

. Languages of the shop floor
We anticipate that the conference papers will be published.
Please send abstracts by 31 August 2009 to Eve Rosenhaft, School of
Cultures, Languages and Area Studies, University of Liverpool:
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