SORAC 2002: Conference Program & Details
SORAC 2002 International Conference “Internalist vs. Externalist Interpretations of Africa History and Culture” Conference Program |
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List of papers accepted for presentation at SORAC 2002. The list will be updated as more presentations are included. This program is subject to change, so be ready to adjust to such changes should they occur.
Session Chairs: If you would like to chair a session, let us know which one.
Keynote speakers:
- Professor Ali Mazrui, Binghamton Universit, “Africa Between Westernization and Islamization: Penetration and Response”
- Professor George Ayittey, American University, “Biting Their Own Tails: African Leaders and the Internalist Intricacies of the Rape of a Continent.”
Friday, November 8, Ballroom AA/AB, Student Center, 6:00pm
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7
Registration Desks
Registered participants can get their conference folder and materials at the registration tables to be set up according to the following schedule.
- Thursday, November 7 (Morning Only): Dickson Hall, 8:00am-12:30pm
- Thursday, November 7 (Afternoon): Student Center, 1:00-5:00pm
- Friday, November 8 (All Day): Student Center, 8:00am-5pm
Morning Sessions: Plenary
Room: Cohen Lounge, Dickson Hall
8:30: Coffee and Bagels
9:00-12:00 – Plenary Session: Externalism vs. Internalism: De-Mining the Battleground
Room: Cohen Lounge, Dickson Hall
Welcoming remarks by:
- SORAC
- Institute for the Humanities
- Dr. Richard Gigliotti, Dean of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences
Panelists:
Professor Andre M. Kapanga, Illinois State University,Professor Kapanga is a former Ambassador of the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the United Nations,Title: Internalist vs. Externalist Implications of the Humanitarian Disasters in Africa’s Great Lakes Region
James Harris, Associate Dean of Students, Montclair State University,Title: Ubiquitous Visions: Black America in the Face of Itself
Professor Philip Lebel, Department of Economic, Montclair State University,Title: A Globalization Strategy for Africa
12:00-1:30 – Lunch Break
Afternoon (Parallel) Sessions
Session 1: Politics/Economy/Governance
Time: 1:30-4:30
Room: Ballroom C, Student Center
Session Chair: Tanto Richard Talla, University of Buea, Cameroon
Ayandiji Daniel Aina
Babcock University, Ikeja, Nigeria
Title: Development of Underdevelopment: Historical Antecedents and Fragments of Evidence in Obasanjo Administration of Nigeria
Veronica I. Adeleke and Martin A. Ogunganjo
Babcock University, Ilishan-Remo, Nigeria
Title: Problems, Prospects and Challenges of Social Development in Africa: Viewpoints of the Internalists
Musa D. Ilu
Central Missouri State University
Title: The Politics of Ideology and the Politics of Governance in Africa
Theodora O. Ayot
North Park University
Title: Conflict Resolution: The Changing Perspectives and Challenges in Africa
Adebayo A. Lawal
University of Lagos, Akoka-Yaba, Lagos, Nigeria.
Title: The Elite Class and the Underdevelopment of Africa: A Case Study of Nigeria.
Tanto Richard Talla and Ogork Janet Arrey
University of Buea, Cameroon.
Title: “Colonialism and Traditional Farming Methods In the Bamenda Grassfields of Cameroon: The Need for a Maintenance Culture Policy”
Session 2: Colonialism/Imperialism/NeoColonialism/Orientalism
Time: 1:30-3:30
Room: 411, Student Center
Session Chair: Thomas Puryear, Montclair State University
Willie J. Harrell, Jr Wayne State University
Title: “This is Primitive Art; These Artists Have No Names”: African Orientalism and European Obsession With the Other
Adedeji Adewunmi Olawale
Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Nigeria
Title: Colonialism and Imperialism: The Internalist and Externalist Analysis of African Underdevelopment
James E. Genova
Indiana State University
Title: “Unequal Partners: Ethnography, Colonialism, and Negritude in French West Africa, 1931-1945.”
St. Mabol I. Olaolu
Olabisi Onabanjo Univeristy, Ago-Iwoye, Nigeria
Title: Self Reliancism rather than Reparationism
Session 3: Diasporic Perspectives
Time: 1:30-3:00
Room: 417, Student Center
Session Chair: Kelvin S. Sealey, Columbia University
Carmen Kynard
Medgar Evers College of New York University
Title: Old School, New Rules: Black Students, Language, and (Neo)colonialism in Higher Education
Kelvin S. Sealey
Columbia University
Title: Postmodern Moments in the Present Tense: Moving Beyond African Subjectivities
Fred L. Johnson, III Hope College
Title: “Dangerous Distortions in African and African American Worldviews”
Session 4: Culture/Society/Contemporary Perspectives
Time: 1:30-4:00
Room: 419, Student Center
Session Chair: Leslie Wilson, Montclair State University
John Teye
Delaware State University
Title: Ghana, English, Cultural Alienation: A Multicultural Perspective
Karin Paasche
Salem International University
Title: Language: An Indicator of both Past and Present
John Cinnamon
Miami University Hamilton
Title: Sorcery Narratives, Power, and Explanations of State ” Crisis” of in Postcolonial Africa
Hannington Ochwada
Indiana University
Title: ‘Chokora-Mapipa’: The Evolution of the Street Culture in Urban Kenya
Jerry Cline-Bailey
Xavier University
Title: The Role of Indigenous African Languages in National Development
Erin Hanrahan Colby College
Title: Media and the Use of English in Tanzania
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8
Morning (Parallel) Sessions
Session 5: Politics/Economy/Governance (Continued)
Time: 9:00-12:00
Room: Ballroom C, Student Center
Session Chair: Mark Korlie, Montclair State University
Victor Fakoya
Olabisi Onabanjo University, Ago-Iwoye, Nigeria
Title: Corruption and Vicious Circle of Poverty in Africa: Internalist versus Externatlist Interpretations
Christopher G. Thomas
University of South Africa
Title: Democratic Revival and the Advancing of Social and Economic Rights in Africa: Lessons from the South African Experience
Fred L. Johnson, III
Hope College
Title: “Eagle On The Continent: U.S. Foreign Policy In East Africa, 1945-Present”
Gbenga Lawal
University of Ibadan, Nigeria
Title: The Normative Impediments to African Development: The Internalist and Externalist Interpretations
Nicholas E. Makana
West Virginia University
Title: Regional Economic Integration in Africa: Prospect and Retrospect
Session 6: Culture/Society/Contemporary Perspectives (Continued)
Time: 9:00-12:00
Room: 419, Student Center
Session Chair: Mary Holley, Montclair State University
Tanto Richard Talla and Ogork Janet Arrey
University of Buea, Cameroon.
Title: “Traditional Authorities and witchcraft Trials in Postcolonial Cameroon: The case of the Wimbum in Nkambe Division”
Joe Amoako
Delaware State University
Title: Taboo Left Hand Among the Akans of Ghana
Miroslava Prazak
Bennington College
Title: “Building a House: A Grassroots Perspective on The Fertility Transition in Rural Kenya.”
Peter A. Dumbuya
Fort valley State University
Title: “Punishing Genocide and Other War Crimes in Rwanda and Sierra Leone: A Comparative Analysis.”
James E. Lassiter
INS Office of International Affairs
Title: African Culture and its Influence on the Continent’s Internal Initiatives and External Relations
Session 7: Nationalism/Panafricanism/Postcolonialism/Postmodernism
Time: 9:00-12:00
Room: 411, Student Center
Session Chair: Rabia Redouane, Montclair State University
Mrs. E. O. Oduwole
Olabisi Onaganjo University, Iwoye, Nigeria
Title: The Intellectual Anomaly in the African Colonial and Post-colonial Predicament
Paul Emile Stephan Simon ColumbiaUniversity
Title: Léon Mba: The Evolution of a Neo-Colonial Puppet
Uche E. Ezeadichie
University of Nigeria, Nsukka
Title: External Influence on Nation Building in Nigeria: A Critique
Rabia Redouane
Montclair State University
Title: Internalist Interpretation of the Algerian Dilemma: A Country in Need of Reconstruction
Shadrack W. Nasong’o
Northeastern University
Title: Regime Consolidation and the Betrayal of Nationalism in Kenya: The Dynamics of External Linkages
Maurice Nyamanga Amutabi
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Title: Fiction, Imagination and Colonial History: Revisiting the Debate on the Writing of Colonial History and the Rise of “Posts” in African History
Session 8: Historical Approaches
Time: 9:00-12:00
Room: 417, Student Center
Session Chair: Esperanza Brizuela-Garcia, Montclair State University
Felicien Assoumou and Justin Gandoulo
Université de Rennes 2
Title: Did Africa Have a Bad Start?
Emmanuel G. K. George
Babcock University, Ikeja, Nigeria
Title: Hindsight: A Look at the Shadows behind the African Problem
N. Oluwafemi Mimiko
Adekunle Ajasin University, Akungba, Nigeria
Title: In the Haystack of History: The Historical Bases of Africa’s Extant Failures
John M. Mwaruvie
West Virginia University
Title: “Mali Ya Uma” Culture and the Genesis of Mismanagement of Public Resources in Africa
Esperanza Brizuela-Garcia
Montclair State University
Title: Internalist and Externalist in African Historiography: A History of Conflicted Identities
Peter Kanyandago
Uganda Martyrs University, Uganda
Title: Anthropological History and Interpreting African History and Culture
12:00-1:30 – Lunch Break
Afternoon (Parallel) Sessions
Session 9: Culture/Society/Gender
Time: 1:30-3:30
Room: 411, Student Center
Session Chair: Nina Berman, Ohio State University
Mouni Djekrif
University of Constantine, Algeria
Title: Nechra an ethnographic approach of women’s sexuality in Constantine
Thérèse Migraine-George
University of Cincinnati
Title: Beyond the Internalist vs. Externalist Debate: African Homosexuals’ Local/Global Identities in Woubi Chéri and Dakan
Nina Berman
Ohio State University
Title: Kenya in Contemporary German-Language Autobiographies: Internalist Interpretations of the Situation of Women
Agnes Loteta Dimandja
Cercles des femmes ingenieurs de la Republique Democratique du Congo
Title: The role and place of women in African societies
Session 10: Culture/Society/Science
Time: 1:30-3:00
Room: 419, Student Center
Session Chair: Jude C. Aguwa, Mercy College
Rosalind Chirimuuta
Queens Hospital
Title: The History and Science of Aids in Context of Internalist vs. Externalist Interpretations of African History
Jude C. Aguwa
Mercy College
Title: Change and Continuity in African Therapeutic Systems: The Impact of the West
Sada Niang
University of Victoria, Canada
Title: Imagining a Continent: The Films of Djibril Diop Mambety
Saikat Majumdar
Rutgers University
Title: Greenwich Village, Harlem and the Left Bank
Session 11: Culture/Society/Literature
Time: 1:30-4:30
Room: 417, Student Center
Session Chair: Thomas Lynn, Penn State Berks-Lehigh Valley College
Thomas Lynn
Penn State Berks-Lehigh Valley College
Title: Language and Ambivalence in Achebe’s No Longer at Ease
Jeanne-Sarah de Larquier
University of Cincinnati
Title: Ama Ata Aidoo’s Our Sister Killjoy: (He)Art-to-Heart Against Alienation
Raphael Comprone
St. Paul’s College
Title: The Dialectic of Internal and External Contradictions in Ngugi Wa Thiong’o’s Weep Not Child
Ben B. Halm
Fairfield University
Title: The Example of Obierika in Things Fall Apart: The High Cost of the Native Thinker’s Pandering or Non-Admission of the Truth
Shirin E. Edwin
Vanderbilt University
Title: « Le besoin post-colonial » in Aminata Sow Fall’s La Grève des Battù
Session 12: Philosophical Approaches
Time: 1:00-4:00
Room: Ballroom C, Student Center
Session Chair: Carolyn M. Somerville, Hunter College
Samuel Oluoch Imbo
Hamline University
Title: Roles for Contemporary African Philosophers
Daniel M. Mengara
Montclair State University
Title: On Internalism vs. Externalism: Rationale and Theoretical Framework of an Incestuous Paradigm
Michael C. Mbabuike
Hostos Community College of the City University of New York
Title: The Internalist vs the Externalist Debate on Africana: Simplistic Exercise in futility
Tsegaye Wodajo
Bronx Community College
Title: Black Africans as Coauthors of their Own Fall: An Analysis of the Healers
Carolyn M. Somerville
Hunter College
Title: Internalist vs. Externalist Interpretations of African History and Culture: Looking at Africa Through a Buddhist Lens
FRIDAY EVENING PROGRAM
Keynote Speeches
Friday, November 8, Ballroom AA/AB, Student Center, 6:00pm
Panelists
- Professor Ali Mazrui Binghamton University “Africa Between Westernization and Islamization: Penetration and Response”
- Professor George Ayittey American University“Biting Their Own Tails: African Leaders and the Internalist Intricacies of the Rape of a Continent.”
Please try to arrive on time (30 minutes before speech begin) as we will be starting on time.
Immediately followed by Banquet/Reception
Room: Ballroom AA/AB, Student Center
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9
9:00-1:00 – Plenary Session: What Initiative for Africa?
Room: Cohen Lounge, Dickson Hall.
We preferred not to have presentations on Saturday to allow for a “town-hall” style of session where we would be able to discuss the following issues:
1) Initiative for Africa
The focus of this informal discussion will have to do with how we as African intellectuals and activists on the one hand, and we as intellectuals of all backgrounds working on African issues on the other, can help to shape or imagine a new future for Africa.
The issues and challenges that the continent is facing today are several and demand a fresh, pragmatic and non-apologetic approach. Examining African issues in the context of this conference will allow us to address such issues as a group and seek to imagine initiatives that may lead to positive and comprehensive outcomes for the continent.
2) Internationalization of the SORAC Executive Board and conference venues.
SORAC is ready to expand and internationalize its structure. The Society is also ready to begin rotating its conference venues by holding its meetings at institutions other than Montclair State University. We shall discuss how this can be done, elect a new board and, possibly, decide where the next SORAC conference might be held. For this, any person willing to have the next conference held at his/her institution may make such an offer during the meeting.
Note: Program subject to change.
Co-Sponsors:
Global Education Center, Montclair State University
Institute for the Humanities, Montclair State University
College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Montclair State University