(Archived Friday Bulletin)
AFRICAN
STUDIES PROGRAM
FRIDAY
BULLETIN
FEBRUARY 29, 2008
Contents
1.
Upcoming Events
2.
Announcements of Interest
3.
Jobs, Fellowships and other Opportunities
4.
Conferences
5.
Noontalks schedule
6.
Seminar schedule
NOTE: If you have announcements or
information appropriate for the Bulletin, please send it to us by 5:00 p.m.
on Thursdays.
1.
Upcoming Events
The African Studies Program and the Graduate Students in African Studies have announced a series of events in celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Ghana’s Independence (See list at end of Bulletin)
The first event is:
Tuesday, March 4, 7:30 p.m.
Wilkie Quad Auditorium
“Saakumu,” with Bernard Woma in Concert Performance
Tuesday Noon Talks
March 4
12:00-1:00 p.m., Woodburn 218
Prof. Samuel Obeng, Lingistics, Director of African Studies
“Ghanaian Political Criticism through Hip-Life: Textuality, Contextuality, and Intertextuality”
Wednesday Seminar
“Fieldnotes in African Research”
5:30-7:30 p.m., WH 218
The next seminar speaker will be March 19.
African Music and Dance Ensemble
Every Friday!!
6:00-8:00 p.m.
Neal Marshall Black Culture Center – Room A219
The African Studies Outreach Program and the Neal Marshall Black Culture Center are organizers of this event, taking place each Friday evening during the semester. The music/dance instructor is Kwesi Brown (kwebrown@indiana.edu).
Swahili Conversation Hour
Monday, February 25
1:15 p.m. - IMU Starbucks
Bamana Conversation Hour
Thursday, 6:00 p.m.
The Pour House (www.thepourhousecafe.com)
Contact Abbie Hantgan (ahantgan@indiana.edu) to sign up for the group.
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2. Announcements of Interest
Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis
February 29, 12:00-1:30 p.m.
Workshop Seminar Room, 513 N. Park
I.
“Assessing the Implication of Decentralization on Livelihood, Biodiversity, and Ecological Sustainability in Uganda: A Preliminary Analysis of the Pilot Sanrem/Ifri Site”
Joseph Bahati, Lecturer, Uganda Forestry Resources and Institutions Center (UFRIC), Makerere University, Kampala, and Fulbright Visiting Scholar, Center for the Study of Institutions, Population, and Environmental Change (CIPEC) and Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis.
II.
March 3, 12:00-1:30 p.m.
Workshop Seminar Room, 513 N. Park
“In the Shadow of ‘Lame Leviathans’: Collective Action and Local Governance in Africa”
Professor James Wunch, Department of Political Science and International Relations, Director of African Studies, Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska.
11th Annual African American Arts Institute/African American Dance Company Workshop
February 29 – March 1
Neal-Marshall Black Culture Center
The AAAI and the AADC co-sponsor the annual workshop, presented by Professor Iris Rosa, to expose students and community members to experiences in a broad range of dance styles and movement expression from the perspective of the African American and African Diaspora. Guest artists will teach master classes, discuss the Black Dance Experience, and educate participants through keynote speeches and panel discussions to create educational and enlightening dialogue. All events are open to students, as well as the surrounding communities.
Master dance classes will be offered in modern (Horton), jazz, Afro-Cuban, African, and Salsa as well as a choreographic workshop, a panel entitled “The Black Dance Experience: The Use of Culture of the Diaspora to Shape Performance” on Friday, February 29 at 7:00 p.m. in Woodburn 101, and a dance showcase on Saturday, March 1, 7:00 p.m. at Wilkie Auditorium. Guest artists include Ronne Stone, Elena Anderson, Reynaldo Gonzales, and Terence Green.
To participate, download a registration form from the AAAI website: www.indiana.edu/~aaai/ADCwksp.html
Full registration fees (Friday and Saturday) $90
Saturday Registration only (includes 3 classes) $55
Single class fee: $20
For information, contact: Iris Rosa at rosa@indiana.edu phone 812-855-6873
Special African Studies Lecture
Monday, March 24
Woodburn Hall 218
5:30-7:30 p.m.
Paul Zeleza, University of Illinois, Chicago
“Education in Africa”
“The Art of Persuasion”
18th Annual IU Art History Association Graduate Student Symposium
March 29, 2008
To be held in the Henry Radford Hope School of Fine Arts, Room 102, events begin at 9:30 a.m. and continue through the 4:00 p.m. Keynote Address by Dr. David Lubin, Charlotte C. Weber Professor of Art, Wake Forest University. Full program to be included in upcoming Bulletins in March.
Women’s History on Film
February-March 2008
Celebrating Women’s History Month
Monroe County Public Library
All movies are free and will be introduced b a faculty member of the IU History Department. Organized by the IU History Department’s Gender and Sexuality Field; Co-Sponsored by the Office of Women’s Affairs, Department of Gender Studies, Office of the Vice President for International Affairs, Russian and East European Institute, American Studies, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Jewish Studies, Cultural Studies, and Latino Studies.
February 29, 3:00 p.m. “Kadosh” (Israel 1999) – MC Library meeting room 1C
March 3, 6 p.m. “Iron-Jawed Angels” (US 2004) – MC Library Auditorium
March 9, 2 p.m. “4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days” (Romania 2007) MC Library Auditorium
March 23, 2:30 p.m. “Portrait of Teresa” (Cuba, 1979) – MC Library Auditorium
March 25, 6:30 p.m. “A Midwife’s Tale” (US 1998) – MC Library meeting room 1B
March 29, 2:30 p.m. “Sisters in Law” (Cameroon 2005) – MC Library meeting room 1B
March 31, 6:00 p.m. “Losing Isaiah” (US 1995) – MC Library Auditorium
SCALI 2008
The Summer Cooperative African Language Institute for 2008 will again be held at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. The website is now active: http://scali.afrst.uiuc.edu Interested students should visit the website and submit an “expression of interest” for the language you want to study. This is very important because it helps SCALI organizers determine what languages will be offered, and at what levels.
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3. Jobs, Fellowships and Other
Opportunities
The Project on African Expressive Traditions (POAET)
Travel and Research Grants (up to $2000)
Eligibility: IU undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty who wish to do original research in summer or fall 2008 on aspects of culture in Africa or communities of African descent, including language, literature, music, religion, the arts, journalism, dress and popular culture. These grants are not intended for pre-dissertation exploratory research, enrollment in classes, or participation in conferences. They may be used for dissertation research as long as funded research results in a coherent finite project. All recipients will present their research at the annual POAET Conversations and will submit an article for publication by POAET.
Deadline for applications: March 28, 2008. Submit to Professor Eileen Julien, Ballantine Hall 903, IUB. Announcement of awards will be made in mid-April 2008.
For complete information and application materials, see the website:
NOTE CORRECTED WEBSITE ADDRESS: www.indiana.edu/~complit/poaet.html
or contact Natasha Vaubel: iupoaet@indiana.edu
Ambassadors for Children
Travel Abroad Program
Ambassadors for Children (AFC) is a non-profit organization dedicated to serving children around the world through short-term humanitarian service trips and sustainable projects. Volunteers on an AFC trip can expect to interact one-on-one with children and communities in need while contributing to a major sustainable project that will benefit the country long-term. Since its formation in 1998, AFC has assisted thousands of children and distributed close to $5 million in aid through the implementation of hundreds of service trips. More information is available in the African Studies office, Woodburn 221.
Upcoming AFC trips include:
South Africa: June 11-21 and December 29, 2008-January 9, 2009. To work on community development projects throughout townships surrounding Cape Town and interact one-on-one with the children. Visit the wine lands, Table Mountain, and experience homestays. June ground package: Single $2999; Double $1899; December pricing not yet available. Flights estimated between $1400 and $1600.
Uganda: May 14-24 and July 9-19, 2008. AFC is building its first international school in the rural areas of Kampala. Plan on digging, painting, cleaning, mixing concrete, etc.! Ground package: sincle $1399; flights estimated between $1400-$1700.
Contact Ambassadors for Children: 1201 N. Central Avenue, Indianapolis, IN 46202; 317-536-0250; contact@ambassadorsforchildren.org Visit the website: www.ambassadorsforchildren.org
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4. Conferences
See our conferences link for previously announced upcoming conferences: http://www.iub.edu/~afrist/conference.html.
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AFRICAN STUDIES NOONTALKS
February 19 John Prendergast – Co-Founder of the “Enough Campaign”, a joint initiative
Of the International Crisis Group and the Center for American Progress.
“Stopping Genocide in Darfur”
February 26 Summer Tritt (IU-SLIS) “Understanding the Digital Divide in Sub-Saharan
Africa: Connections between Information Access and National Development.”
March 4 Samuel Obeng, African Studies, Linguistics
"Ghanaian Political Criticism through Hip-Life: Textuality, Contextuality,
and Intertextuality”
March 11 SPRING BREAK
March 18 Richard Werbner, Manchester
March 24 MONDAY: 5:30-7:30 p.m. Paul Zeleza, University of Illinois, Chicago
“Education in Africa”
March 25 Gracia Clark
April 1 Alwiya Omar, IU Linguistics
April 8 Verlon Stone, Indiana University Liberia Collections
“Selecting Digital Equipment for Field Work: Video, Photo & Audio”
April 15 Kathryn McHarry, University of Chicago
“Institutonalization of the WHO’s Child Health Standards in La Case des Tout
Petits (Senegal)”
Special Talk:
April 21 MONDAY: 2:30 Adewale Maja-Pearce, writer/publisher (Nigeria)
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“FIELDNOTES IN AFRICAN RESEARCH”
African Studies Wednesday Seminar
Fieldnotes in African Research
(Marion Frank-Wilson and Ruth M. Stone)
Wednesdays 5:30-7:30, WH 218
Speakers:
February 20--Steven Raymer, Journalism, Indiana University
“The Documentary Photographer: Writing with Light”
February 27--Peter M. Chilson, English and Creative Writing, Washington State University
“Romancing the Archivist: A Cautionary Dispatch from West Africa”
March 19--Kate Schroeder, History/Library, and Austin Okigbo, Folklore and Ethnomusicology
“Recent Experiences with Fieldnotes”
March 26--Daniel Reed, Folklore and Ethnomusicology, Indiana University
“Fieldnotes: For Whom and What For?”
April 2--David Henige, Library, African Studies, and Anthropology, University of Wisconsin
April 9--Anaba Anankyela Alemna, Library and Library Science, University of Ghana, Ghana
April 23--Selwa El-Shawan Castello Branco, Ethnomusicology, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal
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