InicioNew Perspectives on Anti-Colonialism in the Metropolis

InicioNew Perspectives on Anti-Colonialism in the Metropolis

*  *  *

Publicado el martes 13 de abril de 2021

Resumen

The transnational networks of colonialism and increased mobility led to a rise in anti-colonial activism in European metropoles from the interwar period onwards. A central role can be ascribed to activists resisting against imperialism from within, as they played a crucial role in the organization of anticolonial resistance in metropole and colony. This PhD and early career workshop aims to examine anti-colonial activism in the European metropoles from interwar to immediate post-war period.

Anuncio

Argument

The transnational networks of colonialism and increased mobility led to a sharp rise in anti-colonial activism in European cities, especially in the twentieth century. A central role can historically be ascribed to activists resisting against imperialism from within, as they played a crucial role in the organization of anticolonial resistance in metropole and colony. They developed strategies and alliances against colonial oppression and racism. For these radical intellectuals and independence activists in exile, European cities offered a productive environment as they were able to pursue their political work in relative freedom compared to their countries of origin, despite censorship, repression and widespread surveillance by local authorities.

This workshop for PhD students and early career researchers aims to examine poignant examples of anti-colonial activism in the Europe, with a focus on the 20th century, altough applications from the 19th century are welcome as well. Applicants working on metropoles such as London, Paris, Lisbon, Amsterdam, Brussels, Berlin or in fact other cities are also very welcome to apply.

Among others, the workshop will address the following questions:How have ideas that criticize colonialism developed in European metropoles, regarding national or federal independence, imperial reforms, antiracism and pan-national movements? To what extent can we spatialize the global thinking of anti-colonial movements in the framework of the urban? What were the connections between anti-colonial actors from the global South and the political left of European metropolises? How can we conceive of the First and Second World War as a catalyst for anti-colonial independence movements?

Event format

This workshop will be held digitally via Zoom on 17.-18. June 2021, due to the Coronavirus pandemic and is part of the research project “The London Moment”, funded by the Volkswagen-Stiftung.

Submission guidelines

Proposals for papers should include the title, an abstract of maximum 300 words, and a short CV of the applicant. Please send proposals to anticolonialisminthemetropole@gmail.com

by 25. April 2021.

Notification of acceptance will be announced shortly after the deadline has passed. Participants are expected to submit a written paper or project description ahead of the workshop in April.

PhD-students from the Global South are particularly encouraged to send in their contributions. For further information and questions please do not hesitate to get in touch at anticolonialisminthemetropole@gmail.com.

Organizer and responsible for proposals selection

  • Simeon Marty, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin

Fecha(s)

  • domingo 25 de abril de 2021

Palabras claves

  • Postcolonial History, Anticolonialism, Black European History, Urban History, Global Urban History

Contactos

  • Simeon Marty
    courriel : simeon [dot] marty [at] hu-berlin [dot] de

Fuente de la información

  • Simeon Marty
    courriel : simeon [dot] marty [at] hu-berlin [dot] de

Licencia

CC0-1.0 Este anuncio está sujeto a la licencia Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal.

Para citar este anuncio

« New Perspectives on Anti-Colonialism in the Metropolis », Convocatoria de ponencias, Calenda, Publicado el martes 13 de abril de 2021, https://doi.org/10.58079/16eg

Archivar este anuncio

  • Google Agenda
  • iCal
Buscar en OpenEdition Search

Se le redirigirá a OpenEdition Search