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UID:news4675@zasb.unibas.ch
DTSTAMP;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20250820T163117
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20251112T161500
SUMMARY:Sabine Mohamed: "Black Empire and its Labors: Working With and Agai
 nst the Rubble in Addis Ababa"
DESCRIPTION:Famously never colonized by Europeans\, Ethiopia has not only c
 onstituted a pivotal\, if complex\, imaginary in transatlantic histories o
 f Blackness but has in turn been informed by them. In describing this tens
 ion\, Sabine Mohamed moves between three ethnographic\, historical\, and i
 nfrastructural spaces: colonial legacies of urban planning\, political vis
 ions of Addis Ababa as the renaissance capital city that encompasses the s
 tate\, and\, more centrally\, young men and women on the economic and soci
 al sidelines of Ethiopia’s capital\, Addis Ababa.\\r\\nThis talk will ad
 dress how racial configurations in East Africa\, Italian colonial and cont
 emporary forms of imperialism are not only localized\, but tethered to the
  circulation of transatlantic and Indian ocean discourses on slavery\, and
  indeed global forms of Blackness.
X-ALT-DESC:<p>Famously never colonized by Europeans\, Ethiopia has not only
  constituted a pivotal\, if complex\, imaginary in transatlantic histories
  of Blackness but has in turn been informed by them. In describing this te
 nsion\, Sabine Mohamed moves between three ethnographic\, historical\, and
  infrastructural spaces: colonial legacies of urban planning\, political v
 isions of Addis Ababa as the renaissance capital city that encompasses the
  state\, and\, more centrally\, young men and women on the economic and so
 cial sidelines of Ethiopia’s capital\, Addis Ababa.</p>\n<p>This talk wi
 ll address how racial configurations in East Africa\, Italian colonial and
  contemporary forms of imperialism are not only localized\, but tethered t
 o the circulation of transatlantic and Indian ocean discourses on slavery\
 , and indeed global forms of Blackness.</p>
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20251112T180000
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