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Ireland, slavery, anti-slavery, empire 

Symposium: University College Dublin, 28-30 October, 2013

 

Confirmed Keynotes:

Richard Blackett, Vanderbilt University

Nini Rodgers, Queens University, Belfast

 

Call for Papers:

Nini Rodgers' Ireland, Slavery and Anti-Slavery, 1612-1865 (2007)
demonstrated that slavery has had 'a dramatic impact both on the Irish who
emigrated across the Atlantic and upon the economy at home'. As
significantly, for black abolitionists, Ireland occupied an important site
both as a place of literal freedom and as a vehicle through which complex
questions of race, freedom, equality, empire and political subjectivity
might be explored. This symposium offers the opportunity to further these
discussions, and also to open debate on sometimes neglected relationships
between Ireland and Latin America, Brazil, Africa or India, and to the
related complexities, ambivalences and contradictions that the context of
empire introduces to discussions of slavery and anti-slavery more broadly.  

'Ireland, slavery, anti-slavery, empire' invites papers or panels from
across the humanities and social sciences, and from Hispano, luso, franco
and Anglophone areas of scholarship, focused on the relationship between
Ireland, slavery, and ethical culture in the context of empire(s) from the
17th into the early 20th century. We also welcome papers on the memory,
representation and challenges of that relationship in the 20th and 21st
centuries. Topics might include, but are by no means limited to:

 

Revolution or rebellion

Slavery in Irish writing or Ireland in Black writing

The archive

sovereignty

The Congo

The Caribbean, Africa, Indian, Latin America and Ireland 

Missionaries

emancipation

Collection and curation

Labour

War and military service

American slavery

Religion 

Black activism and imperial space

Death

Travel writing/Exploration

The raced/gendered body

Slavery, empire and visual culture

Whiteness

Emigration/colonisation

Kinship

Remembering or forgetting slavery, including contemporary slavery, and
empire.

 

Abstracts of c 200 words, and a brief biography,  should be sent to
Fionnghuala Sweeney, Maria Stuart or Fionnuala Dillane ([log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask])  by 16 June, 2013. Papers
should be in English and of 20 minutes duration. Offers to chair or respond
are also welcomed.

 

 

 

 

 

Dr Fionnghuala Sweeney

Director of Studies, CAS

Latin/ American Studies
University of Liverpool
L69 7WW
UK.

+44 151 7943325