SORAC 98: Conference Program & Schedule


SORAC 98 International Conference
Program & Schedule
“Images of Africa: Stereotypes & Realities”


October 22, 23 & 24, 1998


Keynote Speaker
Professor Martin Bernal
, Internationally-Acclaimed Author of Black Athena

Keynote Speech: “European Images of Africa: Tale of Two Names, Ethiop and N—-“

Professor Martin Bernal will speak on Friday 23, at 6:00pm

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    Program Last Updated:

Important information for SORAC 98 attendees staying at hotels. Here

THURSDAY 22 PROGRAM
Including opening ceremony’s plenary session. Topic: “Assessing Africa’s Third Millennium: Political, Cultural and Socio-Economic Prospects”
THURSDAY 22: SESSION 1: “Africa at the Crossroad: Issues of Development”
THURSDAY 22: SESSION 2: “Religions, Traditionalism and the West”

THURSDAY 22: SESSION 3: “Africa, Orientalism and the West”

THURSDAY 22: SESSION 4: “Africa in the Americas: A Question of Identities”

THURSDAY 22: SESSION 5: “Inventions of Africa: Reflections from the Dark Mirror”
FRIDAY 23 PROGRAM
FRIDAY 23: SESSION 1: “Africa and the Ancient World”

FRIDAY 23: SESSION 2 “Southern Africa: A State of Emergence”

FRIDAY 23: SESSION 3: “African Literatures: Text and Pre-Text”
FRIDAY 23: SESSION 4: “Western Imperial Ideology: Conquest and Appropriation”

FRIDAY 23: SESSION 5: “Africa in the Americas: A Question of Identities” (Continued)
FRIDAY 23: SESSION 6: “Inventions of Africa: Reflections from the Dark Mirror” (Continued)
FRIDAY 23: SESSION 7: “Special Pedagogical Session: Teaching African Cultures: Themes, Principles, Approaches”
Note: Keynote address by Martin Bernal, Student Center, Ballroom A, Friday 23, at 6:15pm
SATURDAY 24 PROGRAM
SATURDAY 24: SESSION 1: “Southern Africa: A State of Emergence” (continued)
SATURDAY 24: SESSION 2: “African Literatures: Text and Pre-Text” (Continued)
SATURDAY 24: SESSION 3: “Western Imperial Ideology: Conquest and Appropriation” (Continued)
SATURDAY 24: SESSION 4: “Media—ting Africa in Cinema and Music”
SATURDAY 24: SESSION 5: “African Women: Stereotypes and Realities”

NOTE: Rooms, events and schedule subject to change. Keep checking the SORAC Web site for updates on the program. Special Thanks to our Abstracts Selection Committee.


THURSDAY 22 PROGRAM

SORAC 98 Opening Ceremony
Room: Ballroom A

9:00-9:30 Coffee and Donuts
9: 30-11:30 Welcoming Notes by Dr. Susan Cole, President of Montclair State University, and by
conference organizers, followed by a Plenary Session

TITLE OF PLENARY SESSION: “Assessing Africa’s Third Millennium: Political, Cultural and Socio-Economic Prospects” “Assessing Africa’s Third Millennium: Political, Cultural and Socio-Economic Prospects”

Moderator: Dr. Leslie Wilson, History Department, Montclair State University

SPEAKERS

  • Special Guest: Congressman Donald M. Payne, “When Black America Encounters Africa: Impressions from my Meeting with Africa”

  • James Harris, Associate Dean of Students, Montclair State University, “How can Black America Help Africa Develop?”

  • Dr. Philip Lebel, Montclair State University, “What Type of Development for Africa?”

  • Dr. Mary Ann Rogers-Wright, Montclair State University, “African Women and the Third Millennium”

  • Professor Gbolahan Akinsanya, Montclair State University, “The Future of Religion in Africa”

  • Dr. Georges Agbango, Bloomsburg University, “From Wars to Peace: Conditions for Democracy and Political Stability in Africa”

  • Questions and Discussion

11:30-1:00 LUNCH BREAK

THURSDAY 22: SESSION 1: “Africa at the Crossroad: Issues of Development”
CHAIR: Duke Ophori, Montclair State University ROOM: Student Center 413

Kritilolu

Yomi

Ogun State University, Nigeria

“The Tail is Wagging the Dog: Africa and its Military”

1:00-1:30pm

Bewayo

Edward

Montclair State University

“African Cultures and Entrepreneurship”

1:30-2:00pm

Bailey

Kermit L.

North Carolina State University

“Interactive Multimedia Design as Social Practice: the Social Role of Asante Women, an Interface Demonstration Project”

2:00-2:30pm

Williams

Jennifer D.

Clark Atlanta University

“Rwanda’s Civil War and Genocide: Tribal Barbarism or Postcolonial Nightmare?”

2:30-3:00pm

Nesbitt

F. Nick

Miami University

“Guinée Indépendante!”: Remembering Utopia Forty Years Later.

3:00-3:30pm

Mhina

Amos

Montclair State University

“Tanzania: the Governing Elite, the Citizens and the Challenges of Modernity at the Turn of the Century”

3:30-4:00pm

Ogundowole

E.K

University of Lagos, Nigeria

“Unconscious Negation of the African Self in Senghor’s Philosophy of Negritude”

4:00-4:30pm


THURSDAY 22: SESSION 2: “Religions, Traditionalism and the West”
CHAIR: Adele McCollum, Montclair State University ROOM: Student Center, Ballroom B

Müller

Hans

University of Stellenbosch, South Africa

“What is the Study of African Religion About?”

1:00-1:30pm

Holmes

J. Teresa

York University, Canada

“Discovering Kinship: the Cultural Production of Otherness in Colonial Western Kenya”

1:30-2:00pm

Van Rinsum

Henk

Utrecht University, The Netherlands

“The Invention of African Traditional Religion & Ethnographic Authority”

2:00-2:30pm

Corley

Scott

“Neither East nor West: the Importance of Ethiopian Christianity”

2:30-3:00pm

Guthrie

Patricia

California State University at Hayward

“Glossolalia/Speaking in Tongues: its Unique Function in a Ghanaian Pentecostal Church”

3:00-3:30pm

Nwaezeigwe

Nwanko

University of Nigeria at Nsukka

“Traditionalism and the Concept of Democracy in Pre-Colonial and Post-Colonial Africa: Origins, Stereotypes, and Realities.”

3:30-4:00pm

Akinsanya

Gbolahan

Montclair State University

“Christianity in African Culture: From the Dark Continent to the Continent of Light”

4:00-4:30pm


THURSDAY 22: SESSION 3: “Africa, Orientalism and the West”
CHAIR: Mongi Bahloul, University of Sfax, Tunisia ROOM: Student Center, 419

Manopoulos

Monique

University of Memphis

“Subversion of Stereotypical Identity Parameters in Attilah Fakir by Ahmed Zitouni”

1:00-1:30pm

Bernstein

George

Montclair State University

“Ambivalence and Ambiguity in Algerian Francophone Fiction: Characters’ Attitudes Towards Using French.”

1:30-2:00pm

Orlando

Valerie

Purdue University

“Transposing the Political & the Aesthetical: Eugene Fromentin’s Contributions to Oriental Stereotypes”

2:00-2:30pm

Ben Rejeb

Lofti

The University of Tunis, Tunisia

“When North Africa was Called Barbary: Of Toponymy and Historiography”

2:30-3:00pm

Zachernuk

Philip

Dalhousie University, Canada

“Colonial Orientalism: West African Images of Islam, 1860-1930”

3:00-3:30pm

Bahloul

Mongi

University of Sfax, Tunisia

“The North-African Motif in Early American Fiction”

3:30-4:00pm


THURSDAY 22: SESSION 4: “Africa in the Americas: A Question of Identities”
CHAIR: Kristof Haavik, University of Botswana ROOM: Student Center, Ballroom A

Young Boyer

Doris

The Legacy School

“An African Identification as a Prerequisite to Wellness in Africans of the Diaspora”

1:00-1:30pm

Adkins Irby

Jocelyn

“The Rhetoric of Subtext: a Rhetorical (Re)Vision of African American English”

1:30-2:00pm

Alaya

———–and

Van Rensalier

Flavia

———–

Dolores

Ramapo College

“How We Met Ourselves at the Station: African Identities and the Public History of the Underground Railroad in Paterson”

2:00-2:30pm/

2:30-3:00pm

Ayuninjam

Funwi

Kentucky State University

“Ethnocentrism and Stereotyping: African and African-American Mutual Perceptions”

3:00-3:30pm

Ramirez

Victoria

Binghamton University

“The Herero in the Harz: Pynchon’s Representation of Race Relations in Gravity’s Rainbow

3:30-4:00pm

Note: Continues on Friday 23 as Session 5, Student Center, Ballroom A.


THURSDAY: SESSION 5: “Inventions of Africa: Reflections from the Dark Mirror”
CHAIR: Alice Deck, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign ROOM: Student Center 411

PANEL: “Historical and Literary Inventions of Africa” (Director: Alice Deck)

Deck

Alice A.

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

“’What is Africa to Me?’ Narrative Constructions of Africa in African American Travel Writing.”

1:00-1:30pm

Dagbovie

Sika

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

“Whose People?: False Realities in Nadine Gordimer’s ‘July’s People’”

1:30-2:00pm

Korang

Kwaku

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

“Reinventing Africa: Empire, Nationalist History, and ‘Ghana’”

2:00-2:30pm

Murdoch

Adlai

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Respondent

2:30-3:00pm

END OF PANEL

Van Deventer

Susan

Union College

“States of Dis-ease: Representations of Africans in Arabic and French Versions of A Tale from the Arabian Nights

3:00-3:30pm

Gecau

Kimani

University of Zimbabwe

“Stereotypes, Popular Representations and Social Struggles”

3:30-4:00pm

Note: Continues on Friday 23 as Session 6, Student Center 411.


FRIDAY 23 PROGRAM

FRIDAY 23: SESSION 1: “Africa and the Ancient World”
CHAIR: David Kelly, Montclair State University ROOM: Student Center 413

Winsor Sage

Paula

Hobart and William Smith Colleges

“The Power of the Word: Rhetorical Subjugation in Early Accounts of West Africa”

9:00-9:30am

Ochwada

Hannington

University of Florida

“Oral Tradition and Historical Reconstruction in Africa: Ancient Egypt and Early Christianity”

9:30-10:00

Alvares

Jean

Montclair State University

“The Greco-Roman Idealization of Ethiopia”

10:00-10:30

Mengara

Daniel

Montclair State University

“Battle of Histories: Bernal’s Afrocentrism, Lefkowitz’s Aryanism and the Controversy over the African Roots of Western Civilization”

10:30-11:00

Dow

Miriam

The George Washington University

“Menelaos, the Cyclopes, and Eurybates: aPost-Colonial Reading of Homer”

11:00-11:30

Moore

David Chioni

Macalester College

“From Sodom to Saddam: Black Athena’s Critics and the Rhetoric of Retrospective Linear Descent.”

11:30-12:00

LUNCH BREAK

Allen

Troy D.

Southern University

“Ancient Egyptian Kinship, Family and Social Organization”

1:00-1:30pm

Kabemba

E. Kayembe

Université de Lubumbashi, Democ. Rep. of Congo

“The Image of Africa in the “Chronicon Societatis Jesu”: A Look at Some Recurring Ancient Stereotypes”

1:30-2:00pm


FRIDAY 23: SESSION 2 “Southern Africa: A State of Emergence”
CHAIR: David Taylor, University of South Africa ROOM: Student Center 413

Taylor

David

University of South Africa

“The Evaluation of Indigenous Norms by Western Norms in the Social and Legal Context of modern South Africa.”

2:00-2:30pm

Hewitt
———–and
Matlhako

Cynthia M.
————-
Mamadi

University of Georgia
———————–
Emory University

“The Portrayal of African History in South Africa’s New Curriculum”

2:30-3:00pm
———
3:00-3:30pm

Nyeko

Balam

National University of Lesotho

“Lesotho and Swaziland: Contrasting Images of Two Southern African Kingdoms in Colonial Historiography”

3:30-4:00pm

Note: Continues on Saturday 24 as Session 1, Student Center, Ballroom A.


FRIDAY 23: SESSION 3: “African Literatures: Text and Pre-Text”.
CHAIR: K. P. Asamani, William Paterson University ROOM: Student Center 411

Bayers

Peter

Fairfield University

“J. Nozipo Maraire’s Zenzele: a Letter to My Daughter and Postcolonial Identity”

9:00-9:30am

Tripathi

Prayag D.

University of Texas at Austin

“Diversity as Unity: African Literary Components”

9:30-10:00

Spencer

Sharon

Montclair State University

“English as an African Language: Strategies for adapting English to Ancestral Languages”

10:00-10:30

Morea

Rachelle

Norfolk State University

“The Western Eyes of Léopold Sédar Senghor: the Self Viewed as the Other.”

10:30-11:00

Oyesoro

Segun Oyeleke

University of Ilorin, Nigeria

“The Theatre in Nigeria’s Cultural Diplomacy: the Problem of Dialogue”

11:00-11:30

LUNCH BREAK

Earley

Samantha

Millikin University

“Dismantling Stereotypes & Constructing Self: Olaudah Equiano’s Interesting Life.

1:00-1:30pm

Okereke

Augustine

University of Bielefeld, Germany

“Once upon a time … Representations, Misrepresentations and Rehabilitations in African Oral and Modern Literature.”

1:30-2:00pm

Lebdai

Benaouda

University of Angers, France

“Ayi Kwei Armah: A Ghanaian Vision of Western Perception of Africa”

2:00-2:30pm

Sen

Sharmila

Yale University

“Playing Africa: The Fictions of Ferdinand Oyono”

2:30-3:00pm

Rabbitt

Kara

William Paterson University

“Nos ancêtres les Gaulois/leurs ancêtres africains: Légitime Défense and the (Re)Appropriation of Difference in French Texts”

3:00-3:30pm

Munatamba

Parnwell

University of Zambia

“Under African Eyes: a Study in Shattered Innocence”

3:30-4:00pm

Note: Continues on Saturday 24 as Session 2, Student Center 419.


FRIDAY 23: SESSION 4: “Western Imperial Ideology: Conquest and Appropriation”
CHAIR: Tim Watson, Montclair State University ROOM: Student Center, Ballroom B

BRITISH IMPERIAL IDEOLOGY

TIME

Groberman

Michael

University of British Columbia, Canada

“Controlling Caliban: the Efforts of Prospero, Said, and their Books”

9:00-9:30am

Logan

Mawuena

Ohio University

“The British Empire, the Cult of Gentle/manliness, and the Image of Africa”

9:30-10:00

Jennings

Christian

University of Texas at Austin

“Making up Maasailand: Victorian Imagery and Experience in East Africa”

10:00-10:30

Jok

Jok Madut

Loyola Marymount University

“The Legacy of Race as the Foundation for the Slave Trade in Sudan”

10:30-11:00

Itandala

Buluda

University of Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

“European Images of Africa from Early Times to the 18th Century”

11:00-11:30

LUNCH BREAK

Larson

Victoria

Montclair State University

“British Imperialism in Africa: Cecil Rhodes and The New Roman Empire “

1:00-1:30pm

Hacker

Paulette

University of Miami

“The Domestication of Savage Africa: W. Winwood Reade’s Excursion of ‘Enlightenment’”

1:30-2:00pm

FRENCH IMPERIAL IDEOLOGY

PANEL: “Colonialist Discourse in Francophone Africa” (Director: Walter Putnam)

Putnam

Walter

University of New Mexico

“Raging against the Night: Céline’s African Episode”

2:00-2:30pm

Higginson

Francis

Simon’s Rock College

“Africa in the Mystery Novel”

2:30-3:00pm

Mudimbe-Boyi

Elizabeth

Stanford University

“Subverting Nature and Culture: Pierre Loti and Colonial Discourse.”

3:00-3:30pm

Kemedjio

Cilas

University of Rochester

“The French Anticolonialist of the Postcolonial Age: the Case of Gide.”

3:30-4:00pm

Note: Continues on Saturday 24 as Session 3, Student Center, Ballroom C.


FRIDAY 23: SESSION 5: “Africa in the Americas: A Question of Identities” (Continued)
CHAIR: Georges Agbango, Bloomsburg University ROOM: Student Center, Ballroom A

Collins-Sibley

Michelle

Mount Union College

“What is Africa to Us? Myths and Metaphors of the Continent in the Poetry and Prose of Alice Walker”

9:00-9:30am

Kramer

Liza

University of California, Berkeley

“Land of the Free and Home of the Brave?” Ida B. Wells Re-Views the Case of Robert Charles”

9:30-10:00

Holt

Elvin

Southwest Texas State University

“Imagining Africa in the Harlem Renaissance: a Study of Selected Poems by Countee Cullen, Claude McKay, and Langston Hughes”

10:00-10:30

Lewis

Leslie W.

Emporia State University

“’The Land of Romance and Magic and Mystery’: Martin and Osa Johnson’s African Adventures”

10:30-11:00

Tyrrasch Ok

Diana

Marymount University

“Toni Morrison’s Beloved: Unveiling Unspoken Realities”

11:00-11:30

LUNCH BREAK

Splawn

P. Jane

Beaver College

“African Memory/African Imagery: Africa in the Imagination of Two Pre-Harlem Renaissance Writers: Carrie Law Morgan Figgs and Carrie Williams Clifford”

1:00-1:30pm

Jackson

Edward

Delaware State University

“The Images of Africa in African American Letters from Phillis Wheatley to Keith Richburg”

1:30-2:00pm

Jones

Jeannette Eileen

SUNY at Buffalo

“’In Brightest Africa’: Naturalistic Constructions of Africa in the American Museum of Natural History, 1910-1936”

2:00-2:30pm

Brooks

Joanna

University of California

“Prince Hall, Freemasonry, and the Idea of Africa”

2:30-3:00pm

Gruesser

John

Kean University

“From Race to Class: the African American Literary Response to the Italo-Ethiopian War”

3:00-3:30pm

Hickey

Dennis

Edinboro University of Pennsylvania

“Beyond Kwanzaa and Kemet: History, Identity, and the African-American Critique of the Homeland”

3:30-4:00pm


FRIDAY 23: SESSION 6: “Inventions of Africa: Reflections from the Dark Mirror” (Continued)
CHAIR: Mark Korlie, Montclair State University ROOM: Student Center 419

Twagilimana

Aimable

SUNY Buffalo State College

“Africa and the Postcolonial Condition”

9:00-9:30am

Canton

David

Temple University

“The Origins of the ‘Curse of Ham’ Myth, Scientific Racism and Its Impact on African History”

9:30-10:00

Unigwe

Chika

KU Leuven, Belgium

“Let No Two Calabashes Strike Each Other”

10:00-10:30

Levin

Jessica

Harvard University

“Dr. Albert Schweitzer in Black and White: the Life Portraits”

10:30-11:00

Arianda

Owiti J.

McGill University, Canada

“Ethnopsychiatry and the Colonial Encounter: The Pathologization of the African Psychopersonality”

11:00-11:30

LUNCH BREAK

Sarkodie-Mensah

Elizabeth

Harvard University

“The Politics of Language in Africa: an Examination of the Logics of Power and Control”

1:00-1:30pm

Hassan

Wail

University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

“Gender (and) Imperialism: Africa in Oriental and Racial Discourses”

1:30-2:00pm

Djata

Sundiata

Northern Illinois State University

“Reflections in the Wrong Mirror:A History of Black Sexuality as an ‘Other’ Construction”

2:00-2:30pm

Wagner

Michele

Indiana University of Pennsylvania

“Manipulated Histories, Tragic Realities: the Legacy of the Hamitic Hypothesis in Great Lakes Africa”

2:30-3:00pm

Quist-Adade

Charles

Wayne State University

“Russia’s Version of Africa’s Tarzan Image”

3:00-3:30pm

Falaiye

Muyiwa

University of Lagos, Nigeria

“Africa vs. West: in the Court of Reparations”

3:30-4:00pm

Gomez

Vanessa

Illinois State University

“An Eye Open on the Commercial Recycling of Used Materials in Ouahigouya (Burkina Faso): What Will Remain of the Notion of ‘Informal Sector’?”

4:00-4:30pm


FRIDAY 23: SESSION 7: “Special Pedagogical Session: Teaching African Cultures: Themes, Principles, Approaches”. For more details on Pedagogical Session, GO HERE.
CHAIR: Robert Koenig, The African Art Museum of the SMA Fathers
ROOM: Student Center, Ballroom C
This session is sponsored by The African Museum of the S.M.A. Fathers, NJ

Gaudelli

Bill

Hunterdon Central Regional HS, NJ

“African Art and Spirituality”

9:00-9:30am

Icolari

Ellen

“South Africa, a Major Power in Transition: Designing and Implementing Curricular Material for the Classroom”

9:30-10:00

Haavik

Kristof

University of Botswana

“Decolonializing French 101: Teaching French as an African Language”

10:00-10:30

PANEL: ” Universalist and Comparative Art: Historical Approaches to African Art” (Director: Robert Koenig)

Koenig

Robert

The African Art Museum of the S.M.A. Fathers, NJ

Opening Remarks

10:30-10:40

Johnson

Harmer

“Let the Buyer Beware: Collecting African Art”

10:40-11:30

Waite

Joan

“A World Within: Values in African Art”

11:30-12:20

LUNCH BREAK

Wright

William

“The Art of Ethiopia”

1:20-2:10pm

Spencer

Ann

Newark Museum, NJ

“From Fiber to Fabric: Textiles in Sub-Saharan Africa”

2:10-3:00

Koenig

Robert

The African Art Museum of the S.M.A. Fathers, NJ

“Open Eyes and Minds: Universalist and Comparative Approaches to the Study of African Art”

3:00-3:50pm


Friday 23: Student Center, Ballroom A, 6:15pm, Banquet and Keynote Address
Professor
Martin Bernal:
European Images of Africa: Tales of Two Names, Ethiop and N…


SATURDAY 24 PROGRAM

SATURDAY 24: SESSION 1: “Southern Africa: A State of Emergence” (continued)
CHAIR: David Pattison, University of Hull, England ROOM: Student Center, Ballroom A

Icolari

Ellen

“Language Learning and Democracy in the New South Africa”

9:00-9:30am

Kuehnle

Karen

Truman State University

“The Lives of Ruth First and Emma Mashinini: Race, Class, and Gender within a South African Discourse”

9:30-10:00

Mathers

Kathryn and Charisse Levitz

University of California/ Berkeley

“Images of the New South Africa: Museums, Tourism and Audiences”

10:00-10:30

Seidel

Linda

Truman State University

“The Gender Equality Movement in South Africa”

10:30-11:00

Zinyemba

Ranga

University of Zimbabwe

“The Changing Face of Africa as Seen Through Literature: the Case of Zimbabwe”

11:00-11:30

LUNCH BREAK

Pattison

David

University of Hull, England

“The Rouge and Lipstick of the Struggle”

1:00-1:30pm

McCorkle

James

“Zakes Mda and J.M. Coetzee: Configuring the Spaces of Apartheid”

1:30-2:00pm

Magubane

Zine

University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

“Barbarous Working Classes and the Savage Poor: The Intersection of Race and Class Imagery in the Cape Colony, 1830-1870”

2:00-2:30pm

Diala

Isidore

Imo State University, Nigeria

“Biblical Mythology in André Brink’s Anti-Apartheid Fiction”

2:30-3:00


SATURDAY 24: SESSION 2: “African Literatures: Text and Pre-Text” (Continued)
CHAIR: Augustine Okereke, University of Bielefeld, Germany ROOM: Student Center 419

Khan

Zafar

Bayero University, Kano, Nigeria

“Children’s Literature in Africa with Special Reference to Cyprian Ekwensi.”

9:00-9:30am

Wodajo

Tsegaye

Bronx Community College (CUNY)

“Wrestling with Western Preconceptions of Africa: A Consideration of Resistance in an African Narrative.”

9:30-10:00

Banks

Kimberly

Rutgers University

“Ama Ata Aidoo’s Storytelling Acts: the Process of Communal Integration and Fragmentation”

10:00-10:30

Holley

Mary

Montclair State University

“A Sociological Examination of African Women’s Conceptions of Peace in Four Novels”

10:30-11:00

Buma

Pascal

University of Akron

“The Bildungsroman and African American Selfhood in Post-Colonial Literature: the Case of Emecheta’s The Joys of Motherhood

11:00-11:30

Simeon

Kersuze

Rutgers University

“On the Identity of the African: Constructed and Assigned”

11:30-12:00


SATURDAY 24: SESSION 3: “Western Imperial Ideology: Conquest and Appropriation” (Continued)
CHAIR: Grover Furr, Montclair State University ROOM: Student Center, Ballroom C

Haavik

Kristof

University of Botswana

“From Crusades to Colonies: Africa in French Literature”

9:00-9:30am

Laroussi

Farid

University of Richmond

“Heart of Whiteness in Roussel’s Impressions d’Afrique

9:30-10:00

Gosnell

Jonathan

Smith College

“Mediterranean Waterways, Extended Boundaries and Colonial Mappings: French Images of North Africa.”

10:00-10:30

Mullen-Hohl

Anne

Seton Hall University

“Images of Africa in Gide’s Voyage au Congo and Retour du Tchad

10:30-11:00

Pears

Pamela

University of Pittsburgh

“The Sleep of the Just and Everything it Awakens: the Totalitarianism of the Colonial System in Algeria”

11:00-11:30

LUNCH BREAK

ITALIAN IMPERIALISM

Quinn

John

Hope College

“Whose Ancient Past? Italian Colonialism in Eritrea and Ethiopia”

1:00-1:30pm

Scott Jones

Richard

University of Connecticut

“When They Disembarked in Sicily, They Found Themselves in Africa: the Limits of Italy and the Ambiguity of Africa”

1:30-2:00

HISTORIOGRAPHY & GEOGRAPHY

McIntosh

Janet S., and Omar A. Lali

University of Michigan / Fort Jesus Museum, Mombasa (Kenya)

“Versions of Vasco da Gama on the Kenya Coast: Contesting the Past in Understanding the Present.”

2:00-2:30

Wittenberg

Herman

University of Western Cape, South Africa

“African Alpinism & the Shaping of an Imperial Landscape”

2:30-3:00pm


SATURDAY 24: SESSION 4: “Media—ting Africa in Cinema and Music”
CHAIR: Janet Cutler, Montclair State University ROOM: Dickson Hall, Brantl Auditorium

CINEMATIC REPRESENTATIONS

Rahier

Jean

Florida International
University

“Representations of Africa in Two African-American Films: L.H. Clegg’s When Black Men Ruled the World, and Eddie Murphy’s Coming to America

9:00-9:30am

Dikobe

Maude

University of California at Berkeley

“Under African Eyes: Interrogating the reel world order in The Gods Must Be Crazy and Touki Bouki

9:30-10:00

Taylor

Steven

Marquette University

“The Interplay of Egos: Albert Schweitzer in the Cinema of Bassek be Kobhio”

10:00-10:30

Grayson

Sandra

Bentley College

“The African Subtext in Haile Gerima’s Sankofa

10:30-11:00

Brucher

Marco

State University of New York at Albany

“Colonial Discourse and the Representation of the Native in Pepe le Moko, a film by Julien Duvivier”

11:00-11-30

Dugga

Victor

University of Jos, Nigeria

“Africa from the American Lens: A Comparative View of the Films Sheena and Coming to America“.

11:30-12:00

LUNCH BREAK

Goodman

R. David

New School for Social Research

“Gnawa Music in New York City: the Commoditization and Africanness of a North African Musical Form”

1:00-1:30pm

Turner

Diane D.

University of South Florida

“Image of Africa in Film”

1:30-2:00

Ali

Yusef A.

William Paterson University

“New Perspectives on African Music”

2:00-2:30


SATURDAY 24: SESSION 5: “African Women: Stereotypes and Realities”
CHAIR: Sally McWilliams, Montclair State University ROOM: Student Center 413

Kiah

Rosalie B.

Norfolk State University

“The Significance of the ‘Bride Price’ as a Sociocultural Institution in some African Countries with Special Reference to Botswana”

9:00-9:30am

Bavibidila

Teresa

Wayne State University

“Sweet Rock and Hives: the Politics of AIDS and African Women of Color”

9:30-10:00

Sibanda

Sabelo

School of African Awareness

“African Women in Politics”

10:00-10:30

Tsuruta

Dorothy Randall

San Francisco State University

“Womanish on the Continent”

10:30-11:00

Gaudelli

Bill

Hunterdon Central Regional HS, NJ

“Kenyan Women: Educational Opportunities and the Dynamics of Change”

11:00-11:30

LUNCH BREAK

Simpkins

Tiffany

Blair Academy

“Ghanaian Market Women: Keepers of Tradition”

1:00-1:30pm

Dunn

Stephane

University of Notre Dame

“Speaking the Primitive: Images of Black Femininity in Modernist Literature”

1:30-2:00pm

Grise

Martha

Eastern Kentucky University

“Scarred for Life? The Image of Africa and Female Genital Excision on American Network News Programs”

2:00-2:30pm

Okome
———-and
Yinka

Onookome
——-
Badewa

University of Calabar, Nigeria

“The Mythified Gaze: Women and Myth in Post-Colonial Video Production”

2:30-3:00pm
———-

3:00-3:30pm

3:45-5:15pm: Wine and Cheese Cocktail Hour

7:00: African Dance Performance by UMOJA DANCE COMPANY. See Details Here. Sponsored by the School of the Arts, MSU.

NOTE: Rooms, events and schedule subject to change. Keep checking the SORAC Web site for updates on the program.

Questions?? E-mail them to Dr. Daniel Mengara

danceWelcome to Montclair State University!

Event Co-Sponsored by:

The Institute for the Humanities, MSU
CHSS-College of Humanities and Social Sciences, MSU
Funded by a grant from the Center for Global Education, MSU

Special thanks to our Abstracts Selection Committee


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