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Call: Conference – Collecting Africa: Before, During and After Colonial Overrule (Oxford, April 27 2020)

University of Oxford

In recent years European and US museums and libraries have been facing mounting calls for the return of objects taken or acquired from Africa and other parts of the world during the Colonial era. The objects, the ways in which they are gathered and presented, and the institutions which house them have become contested, especially when they are tied to histories of violence and dispossession. The contestation is driven by a greater awareness of the relations between institutions and politics, but also by changes in society and the balance of power. These issues have become interwoven with calls for change in the geopolitics of knowledge which have been met with support and opposition, sometimes violent, as in the case of Rhodes University. The increased focus on these issues in the media indicates that these collections have come to embody competing interests and the struggles of individuals within modern societies, and that the debates about them are as much about the present as the past. Museums in the UK have been responding in different ways to these challenges while scholars and governments debate on the institutional actions or activities that should be undertaken to address these contested collections, especially after the Sarr-Savoy report.

This conference seeks to place these debates in a historical perspective and provide an analysis of materials from Africa in UK collections that focuses on the significances they possessed in the contexts from which they were taken and on the significances they assumed and assume in the contexts in which they were and are deposited and displayed. Throughout history, traders, museum representatives, travellers and missionaries from Europe and Africa collected objects, gathered botanical and mineral samples, and took photographs for a variety of educational and socio-political reasons, sometimes assisted in these processes by African interlocutors engaged in a series of political projects of their own. Taken as a whole, these collections can be viewed as historical records of choices, values or ideologies, while the processes which led to their creation and categorization bear witness to relations of power and knowledge. How did these interactions reshape respective concepts and categories about each “other”? Did these collecting patterns change over time? To what extent are the current narratives reliant on vocabularies and paradigms that need to be reassessed?

For further information, please visithttp://www.collectingafrica.co.uk/.

Financial support

for this conference has been generously provided by the Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities (TORCH), the Oxford Centre for Byzantine Research (OCBR), and by the Beta maṣāḥǝft: Manuscripts of Ethiopia and Eritrea project (University of Hamburg). TORCH offers a series of opportunities to scholars from African countries who wish to spend time at the University of Oxford including  the Global South Visiting Professorships 2020-2021 and the AfOx TORCH fellowships.

Advisory Committee

  • Chris Wingfield, Senior Lecturer in the Arts of Africa, University of East Anglia
  • Dorothea Reule, Research Fellow, Hamburg University
  • Johanna Zetterstrom-Sharp, Curator of Anthropology, Horniman Museum and Gardens
  • Mai Musie, Public Engagement Manager, Bodleian Libraries
  • Peter Mitchell, Associate Professor of African Prehistory, School of Archaeology, University Oxford
  • Shadreck Chirikure, British Academy Global Professor, University of Oxford
  • Ida Toth, Lecturer in Byzantine Epigraphy, University of Oxford

Organizer

Jacopo Gnisci, Getty/ACSL Fellow, University of Oxford

Contact

collectingafrica@cluttergmail.com