Print

Print


Greetings!

The attached CFP expands upon the themes of the previously advertised event
"Struggle and Swagg: South African Youth Today". Apologies for cross
posting.

Best Regards
Tuomas Järvenpää
[log in to unmask]

Junior Researcher
University of Helsinki / Discipline of Social and Cultural Anthropology


*“Struggle and Style: African Youth Cultures Today”*

*12 September 2014 University of Helsinki, Finland*

*Call for papers and sessions*

“Struggle and Style: African Youth Cultures Today” is an international
symposium organized by the University of Helsinki’s discipline of Social
and Cultural Anthropology in cooperation with South Africa’s Human Sciences
Research Council. The symposium seeks to address current issues concerning
youth cultures across Africa from an interdisciplinary perspective, and
warmly welcomes contributions from across the humanities and social
sciences.

This symposium expands upon the themes in the previously advertised
event *“Struggle
and Swagg: South African Youth Today”* which will form one part of the
symposium program.

*“Struggle and Style”* approaches youth as a flexible and often prolonged
period of life; according to conventional measures, such as establishing an
independent household, many Africans remain reluctantly “youthful” well
into their 30s. Yet even by more basic measurements, Africa is experiencing
a demographic “bulge” with approximately sixty per cent the population
under 24 years of age. Subject to high levels of unemployment and
relatively low levels of education, Africa’s youth are alternatively
depicted as a “ticking time bomb” ready to explode if new opportunities are
not made available, and a vital asset to be harnessed in rapidly developing
economies.

It is in the cultural sphere that African youth are increasingly exercising
their economic muscle and making their voices heard. Youth are the key
producers of popular media and style, and the key market for information
and communications technology. Youth culture, particularly popular music,
has had an important economic and social impact on African society and the
global African diaspora.

It is therefore necessary to understand African youth cultures from
perspectives that move beyond the familiar narratives of youth as a social
problem or youth as an undifferentiated statistical cohort. This symposium
seeks to work towards more nuanced understandings of the cultural lives of
young people in Africa, taking into account not just factors such as ethnic
and class differences, but questions of consumerism, gender, globalization,
media, migration, music, sexuality, spirituality, technology, pedagogy and
urbanization.

We invite individual presentations (30 minutes including discussion) and
complete sessions (90 minutes). Proposals (abstracts with approximately 250
words) with contact information should be submitted to
[log in to unmask] by *21 July 2014*. Notifications of acceptance
will sent on 25 July 2014 by email. News and updates on the program will be
available on the project blog
(http://southafricanyouthtoday,com)<http://southafricanyouthtoday.com>.
We have confirmed two international keynote speakers, *Alex
Perullo*(Bryant University, USA) and *Benita
Moolman* (Human Sciences Research Council, South Africa).

The symposium organizers regret that they are unavailable to provide funds
for the travel or accommodation costs of participants.

*************************************************************
*           Anthropology-Matters Mailing List
*  http://www.anthropologymatters.com            *
* A postgraduate project comprising online journal,    *
* online discussions, teaching and research resources  *
* and international contacts directory.               *
* To join this list or to look at the archived previous       *
* messages visit:                                             *
* http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/Anthropology-Matters.HTML   *
* If you have ALREADY subscribed: to send a message to all    *
* those currently subscribed to the list,just send mail to:   *
*        [log in to unmask]                  *
*                                                             *
*       Enjoyed the mailing list? Why not join the new        *
*       CONTACTS SECTION @ www.anthropologymatters.com        *
*    an international directory of anthropology researchers
*
* To unsubscribe: please log on to jiscmail.ac.uk, and            *
* go to the 'Subscriber's corner' page.                                  *
*
***************************************************************