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Paving roads over well-trodden paths?

The (dis-)use of everyday infrastructure from pre- to post-colonial Africa, 1800s to present

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Published on Wednesday, February 06, 2019

Abstract

We're putting out a call for panelists for our panel at the ECAS Conference in Edinburgh, June 11-14, 2019. This panel draws attention to the establishment of dynamic infrastructure systems through everyday usage. It is interested in the logics, actors, and practices that shaped infrastructure during transition periods, and in the ways (post-)colonial states engaged with existing infrastructure.

Announcement

11-14 June 2019

Argument

Current work in African history throws into question the earlier binary notion of the "formal" versus the "informal" by analysing the interactions between different actors. For various settings, the evolution of everyday infrastructure such as water, electricity, or transport networks has been explored. This panel shifts the conceptual focus to the establishment of infrastructure through everyday usage in increasingly connected societies. It is especially interested in their construction and management during transition periods, i.e. from the pre-colonial to colonial to post-colonial eras, and in the ways (post-)colonial states engaged with existing infrastructure.

Infrastructure networks fashioned the lives of Africans since pre-colonial times. This panel draws attention to the logics and practices that shaped infrastructures. It explores how dynamic, everyday infrastructure systems were established and transformed. How, e.g., were road networks fashioned by people's circulation, and how were they negotiated as well as organised between different actors?

We are especially interested in the disruptions and continuities in these transition periods. To what extend did (post-)colonial rule disrupt or utilise established systems? On the other hand, did people evade spatial reorganisations and continue to shape infrastructure through everyday usage? Is there a continuity between pre-colonial and/or early colonial ways of organising infrastructure and the informal systems that developed in (post-)colonial states?

Papers could include:- actors and formations that shaped infrastructure- connections made through infrastructure in Africa- everyday applications and transformations- continuities and disruptions under colonial rule- African responses to and adaption of colonial infrastructure

Submission guidelines

Please submit abstract proposals

by 21 January 2019

using the following link:

https://nomadit.co.uk/ecas/ecas2019/conferencesuite.php/panels/7599

Convenors

  • Andreas Greiner (ETH Zurich)
  • Robert Heinze (University of Berne)

Subjects

Places

  • Edinburgh, Britain

Date(s)

  • Monday, January 21, 2019

Keywords

  • infrastructure, colonialisme

Contact(s)

  • Robert Heinze
    courriel : rheinze [at] dhi-paris [dot] fr

Information source

  • Robert Heinze
    courriel : rheinze [at] dhi-paris [dot] fr

License

CC0-1.0 This announcement is licensed under the terms of Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.

To cite this announcement

« Paving roads over well-trodden paths? », Call for papers, Calenda, Published on Wednesday, February 06, 2019, https://calenda.org/554471

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