Les agents de la sphère publique au Sénégal
Pouvoir ou créativité ?
Published on Tuesday, January 20, 2026
Abstract
Ce colloque international et interdisciplinaire, co-organisé les 3 et 4 juin 2026 par le Groupe interdisciplinaire de recherches sur les cultures et les identités (GIRCI) de la faculté des lettres et sciences humaines de l’université Cheikh Anta Diop de Dakar et l’université de Aarhus (Danemark), travaillera la question suivante : comment appréhender l’importance de la sphère publique, des débats et des formes d’interventions créatives au Sénégal, de même que dans d’autres pays africains multilingues, caractérisés par des dynamiques entre les ethnies, mais aussi entre la vie urbaine et les structures locales comme le village ?
Announcement
Argument
This conference emerges from a collaboration between UCAD (Dakar) and Aarhus University (Denmark), with a particular emphasis on Francophone African literature. Taking into account our point of departure in the Humanities, we want to broaden the scope and open to research on the public sphere (Öffentlichkeit) opening to questions regarding media and public sphere and between tradition and contemporary debates but also intellectual/creative (individual or collective) practices. From writers like poet-president L. S. Senghor, researcher Cheikh Anta Diop, film maker and author Sembène Ousmane to journalist and writer Boubacar Boris Diop, philosopher Souleymane Bachir Diagne and Felwine Sarr, Senegal presents an excellent example of a dynamic public sphere – where women like the sculpturer Awa Séni Camara, film director Mati Diop, sociologist Fatou Sow or writers Aminata Sow Fall, Mariama Bâ, Fatou Diome, Awa Thiam and Ken Bugul, play an increasingly important role – that depends on various perspectives on social relations and relations of power in African society.
One of the results is a public space that is dense and dynamic where different positions, sensibilities and opinions are opposed, complete or eradicate each other. The battles for power and influence implying rage are the nest for a society of a complex stature which is at the same time torn by numerous conflicts and united by a spirit of consensus that is inherent in the philosophy of masla, which is, according to Massamba Gueye a “positive attitude of willingness that allows a person to negotiate in all conflicts, all situations to ensure that socially a truth unfolds (Diédhiou, 2010). If Senegal can claim to be a country of liberty of expression, of intellectual production and artistic creation, it owes this potential to a “conquest of public space” in the colonial context (Lüsebrink, 2003). This trajectory has profited from the means of writing to open to media spaces and, by this means, englobed different sub-spheres (presse, literature, culture, politics etc.), and hereby the interpenetration of these in agents’ discourses and public interventions. Thus the forms of presence in senegalese public space are multiple and diverse. This conference opens to detailed analyses and its reflections will highlight the following question:
In brief the question posed is how can we apprehend the importance of public sphere, debates and forms of creative interventions (Öffentlichkeit in German thinking with Habermas and Gadamer but also the French – creative/activist – tradition) in Senegal but also in other multilingual African countries characterized by their dynamics between ethnicities but also between urban life and the more local structure of the village… from the griot to the female blog-writer (see Hans-Jürgen Lüsebrink (2023)?
In the perspective of new developments in geopolitics, this question regarding public space, debates, media and agents should not only be considered according to strictly socio-economic factors. Along the lines of a historian like Ivan Jablonka (who cites Edgar Morin as an example; 2024) we believe that it is essential to (re-)consider the researcher and academic as a social agent contributing to valuable knowledge in the areas of ethics/values related to social relations, arts, identity, beliefs and sustainability and … last but not least creativity.
Themes and Orientations
1. Planetary understandings and ‘intellectual culture(s)’ – Between tradition and contemporary agendas.
- We need to examine both structural aspects of globalisation/geopolitics; economy and media/social media and cultural forms.
- To examine / determine the role of formal institutional structures and the role of the intellectual (and gender).
- The character of local life, tradition and practices (between public and private spheres); the griot(e) as a figure of the intellectual between social function and spiritual mediation.
Cultural life and creative forms
- Consider importance of cultural life, artists and intellectuals.
- Forms of creative practice: publishing, practices of intervention in urban space, activism / collective movements etc.
3. Relations to the North
- Society, research and education (Artistic-literary dimensions)
- Intercultural exchange and dialogue (bilingualism and ‘cultural translation’).
- Forms of Cultural Transfer
- Images of the North in African public space
- The role of African intellectuels in the public space of Northern Countries
- Intersections between African and Northern countries
Submission guidelines
languages : English and French
Please submit a 250-word abstract and a short biographical note (max. 100 words) in English or French to the organizors until february 20, 2026;
to Serigne Seye: serigne2.seye@ucad.edu.sn; Steen Bille Jørgensen; romsbj@cc.au.dk
We will get back to you regarding the acceptance of your proposal no later than 25 2026
Scientific committee
- Ibrahima Wane, UCAD
- Babacar Mbaye Diop, UCAD
- Ibrahima Diagne, UCAD
- El Hadji Malick Sy Camara, UCAD
- Rose Sène, UCAD
- Malick Diagne, UCAD
- Cheik Sakho, UCAD
- Mamadou Ba, UCAD
- Mamadou Babou Ngom, UCAD
- Serigne Seye, UCAD
- Alioune Diaw, UCAD
- Steen Bille Jørgensen, Aarhus University
- Mads Anders Baggesgaard, Aarhus University
- Simon Hartling, Copenhagen University
- Hans-Jürgen Lüsebrink, Universität des Saarlandes
Bibliography
Allen, Amy. « The Public Sphere: Ideology and/or Ideal? » Political Theory 40, no. 6 (2012): 822–29. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41703105.
Diaw, Aminata (2004). « Nouveaux contours de l'espace public en Afrique » Diogène, 206(2), 37-46. https://doi.org/10.3917/dio.206.0037.
Diédhiou, Maguette Gueye, «Sénégal: Ces mots et expressions qui font le pays. ”Masla” - Une attitude positive aujourd'hui galvaudée», Le Soleil, 14 septembre 2010.
Fraser, Nancy, « Rethinking the Public Sphere: A Contribution to the Critique of Actually Existing Democracy». In Social Text, no. 25/26 (1990): 56–80. https://doi.org/10.2307/466240.
Gadamer, Hans-Georg (1978). Die Unverständlichkeit der Wissenschaft und das Verständnis der Öffentlichkeit. Frankfurt/Main: Umwelt und Medizin Verlag -Ges.
Habermas, Jürgen (1962/1997) L'espace public. Archéologie de la publicité comme dimension de la société bourgeoise. Avec une préface inédite de l'auteur ; traduit de l'allemand par Marc B. de Launay (Original allemand: Der Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit. Untersuchungen zu einer Kategorie der bürgerlichen Gesellschaft, 1962), Paris: Payot.
Habermas, Jürgen (2022/2023) Espace public et démocratie délibérative: un tournant. Traduit de l'allemand par Frédéric Joly (Original allemand: Ein neuer Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit , 2022), Paris: Gallimard.
Lüsebrink, Hans-Jürgen (2003). La Conquête de l’espace public colonial. Prises de parole et formes de participation d’écrivains et d’intellectuels africains dans la presse à l’époque coloniale (1900-1960), Québec/Frankfurt am Main/London, Éd. Nota bene/IKO-Verlag, coll. Studien zu den frankophonen Literaturen ausserhalb Europas, vol. 7)
Ndiouga, Adrien Benga, « Espace public et culture populaire en Afrique », Annales de la Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines/Ethos, n° 39/B, 2009, pp. 109-123
Ndiouga, Adrien Benga. [2008], « Mise en scène de la culture et espace public au Sénégal, 1960-2000 », 12e assemblée du CODESRIA, Administrer l’espace public africain, Décembre 2008, Yaoundé.
Sagno, Jean Pierre (2020). « Postures et mises en scène de la presse satirique dans l’espace public francophone d’Afrique subsaharienne », Communication, 2020/vol. 37/2. https://journals.openedition.org/communication/13203.
Subjects
- Thought (Main category)
- Mind and language > Thought > Philosophy
- Mind and language > Representation > Cultural history
- Mind and language > Thought > Intellectual history
- Mind and language > Language > Literature
- Society > Political studies > Governance and public policies
- Society > Sociology > Sociology of culture
- Society > Geography > Geography: politics, culture and representation
Places
- Faculté des Lettres et Sciences Humaines - Avenue Cheikh Anta Diop
Dakar, Republic of Senegal (10700)
Event attendance modalities
Hybrid event (on site and online)
Date(s)
- Friday, February 20, 2026
Attached files
Keywords
- espace public, pouvoir, créativité, Sénégal, Afrique
Contact(s)
- Serigne Seye
courriel : serigne2 [dot] seye [at] ucad [dot] edu [dot] sn - Steen Bille Jorgensen
courriel : romsbj [at] cc [dot] au [dot] dk
Information source
- Serigne Seye
courriel : serigne2 [dot] seye [at] ucad [dot] edu [dot] sn
License
This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.
To cite this announcement
« Les agents de la sphère publique au Sénégal », Call for papers, Calenda, Published on Tuesday, January 20, 2026, https://doi.org/10.58079/15ix0

