Benjamin F. Soares at UCSB (May 1)

30 04 2009

TALK: “Rasta” Sufis and Muslim Youth Culture in Mali
Benjamin F. Soares (African Studies Centre, Leiden, The Netherlands)
Friday, May 1 / 11:00 AM
4020 HSSB

In this talk, Benjamin Soares is concerned with understanding changing modalities of religious expression and modes of belonging among Muslim youth in contemporary Mali. While much recent scholarship about Muslim youth privileges Islamism, trajectories of political radicalization, as well as ethical modes of self-fashioning associated with so-called piety movements, the case of young self-styled Sufis — sometimes dubbed “Rasta” Sufis — in urban Mali helps to illustrate other ways certain youth have been refashioning how to be young and Muslim. By focusing on these young Muslims’ activities, including their religious practices, sophisticated engagement with the media, and religious marketing, Soares explores the cultural politics of Muslim youth who are involved in building new communities and dreaming of a world different from the one in which they find themselves.

Sponsored by the IHC’s African Studies RFG, the Center for Middle East Studies, the Dept. of History, and the Dept. of Religious Studies



Bianca Murillo Speaks about Ghana at UCSB

13 04 2009

BIANCA MURILLO, “The Politics of Consumption in the Gold Coast/Ghana, 1930-75″
Tuesday, April 14, 2009, 12:30 pm
Feminist Studies Seminar Room (4631 South Hall)

Bianca Murillo is completing her dissertation and will give a talk based on her extensive research — it’s her practice job talk, so come and support her.

[Dissertation Abstract]
“The Politics of Consumption in the Gold Coast/Ghana, 1930-75″
This dissertation explores the politics of consumption in the Gold  Coast/ Ghana from 1930-75, a period that encompasses British  colonialism, rapid urbanization, political independence, military  rule, and severe economic decline. By ?politics,? I refer not only to  the conflicts over power and authority that surround access to goods  and control over systems of distribution, but also the regulation of  consumer practices and the organization of consumer space. Drawing  upon both archival and oral research, this project examines how  shifting relationships between foreign capital, colonial/postcolonial  governments and groups of African retailers and consumers shaped these  processes. It argues that efforts to construct and control Ghanaian  markets by the colonial state and foreign capitalists were limited by  deep-rooted critiques of the colonial economy and trading policies, as  well as cultural understandings of wealth and accumulation. After WWII  these issues came to head as Africans used their identities as consumers to assert economic and political rights. After independence  in 1957, the country?s first Prime Minister Kwame Nkrumah linked  ideologies of consumerism to notions of freedom, equality,  modernization, and development. He hoped that a flourishing consumer  society, among other things, would help legitimize Ghana as a new  independent nation. In the late 1960s, a declining economy,  outstanding foreign debts, and increased militarization of the state  challenged these ideas. Government-imposed import and price controls  echoed colonial attempts to control the market. Coercive state  measures fueled and increased black market trading and the public  created their own marketing system or what other scholars have described as a ?beat-the-system? economy.

This talk is organized by the RFG African Studies and co-sponsored by Feminist Studies and History.



Brian Larkin at UCSB, April 9 (Media Fields 2)

3 04 2009

Brian Larkin (Columbia) will be at UCSB Thursday April 9 as part of Media Fields 2. The program can be found below. 

MEDIA FIELDS 2: INFRASTRUCTURES
UCSB, April 9-10, 2009
McCune Conference Room (HSSB 6020) and Mosher Alumni House

Media Fields 2: Infrastructures is an interdisciplinary conference on
media and infrastructure hosted by graduate students in Film and Media
Studies, Communication, and Comparative Literature at UCSB. Media
Fields 2 aims to open a dialogue between different disciplinary
approaches to the study of media infrastructure, provide a forum to
discuss the neglected material aspects of current media systems, and
ask questions about how the term “infrastructure” could help link the
study of media across the humanities and social sciences.

Keynote Speaker:
Brian Larkin, Associate Professor of Anthropology at Barnard College,
Columbia University; author of Signal and Noise: Media,
Infrastructure, and Urban Culture in Nigeria (Duke University Press,
2008); co-editor of Media Worlds: Anthropology on New Terrain
(University of California Press, 2002).

All events are free and open to the public. See full schedule below.
For more information, please visit http://mediafields.wordpress.com/

Sponsored by the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center, Center for
Information Technology and Society, Carsey-Wolf Center for Film,
Television, and New Media, Consortium for Literature, Theory, and
Culture, and Department of Film and Media Studies

Conference Schedule:

THURSDAY, APRIL 9, 2009
McCune Conference Room, HSSB 6020

4:00 PM - Opening Roundtable
Joshua Neves, Katy Pearce, David Platzer, Daniel Reynolds, Jeff
Scheible (University of California, Santa Barbara)

5:30 PM - Keynote Address
Brian Larkin (Barnard College, Columbia University)
“The Political Aesthetics of Infrastructure”

FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2009
Mosher Alumni House

9:00 AM - Panel 1: Circulations

Eric Hoyt (University of Southern California)
   ”Studio Libraries”
Steven Witkowski (University of California, Santa Barbara)
   ”Porn in the Valley: Mom-and-Pops Video Store Distribution of
Adult-Materials in Reseda, Winnetka and Canoga Park”
Meredith Wright (University of Texas at Austin)
   ”Ciné Woulé, Ciné en Progrès: The Cultural Infrastructure of
French Caribbean Cinema”
Zeynep Gürsel (University of Michigan)
   ”What Is the Dominant? Rewiring the World Picture”
Charles Wolfe (University of California, Santa Barbara), moderator

11:00 AM - Panel 2: Aesthetics

Tom Henthorne and Lee Transue (Pace University)
   ”String Theory, French Horns, and the Infrastructure of ‘Cyberspace’”
Chris Vasantkumar (Hamilton College)
   ”In-forming Aesthetic Infrastructures: Remediating Money and Theory”
Clint Froehlich (University of Chicago)
   ”Digital Liquidity: Blu-Ray Menu Screens and Porous Media”
Moderator TBA

12:30 PM  Lunch Break

1:30 PM - Panel 3: Publics

Ryan Bowles (University of California, Santa Barbara)
   ”Ambient XXX: The Porn Screen as Infrastructure of Looking,
Sexuality and Power in Public Space”
Mehita Iqani (London School of Economics and Political Science)
   ”Point of Sale: The Magazine Newsstand as Socio-semiotic Infrastructure”
Ateya Khorakiwala (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
   ”Intersections of Infrastructure and Security: The Case of the
Border Roads Organisation”
Clayton Rosati (Bowling Green State University)
   ”The Ecstasy of Alienation: Infrastructures of Feeling and the
Spatial Struggles of Cultural Production”
Bishnupriya Ghosh (University of California, Santa Barbara), moderator

3:30 PM - Panel 4: Mobilities

Scott Ruston (University of California, Los Angeles)
   ”Mobile Media: Combining Infrastructures of Database and
Connectivity? and Narrative?”
Ajay Gehlawat (Sonoma State University)
   ”Bollywood Infrastructure in an Era of Digital Transnationalism”
Athena Tan (University of California, Santa Barbara)
   ”Mediating Mobilities at the Call Center”
Cristina Venegas (University of California, Santa Barbara), moderator

5:30 PM - Closing Roundtable
Brian Larkin (Barnard College, Columbia University); Jennifer Earl,
Lisa Parks (University of California, Santa Barbara)



James Ferguson at UCLA, April 6

3 04 2009
“Declarations of Dependence: Labor, Personhood, and Welfare in South Africa and Beyond”
 
The African Studies Center presents a talk by James Ferguson, Professor and Chair, Department of Anthropology, Stanford University
 
Date: Monday, April 6, 2009
 
Time: 11:30 AM – NOTE EARLIER TIME FOR LECTURE
 
Where:
6275 Bunche Hall
6th floor History conference room

Cost:  Free and open to the public; pay-by-space and all-day ($9) parking is available in lot 3.
 
Special Instructions
PLEASE NOTE TIME AND ROOM CHANGE!!
 
Abstract:
South Africa has in recent decades gone through a wrenching transformation from a labor-scarce society to a labor-surplus one. Labor scarcity through most of the 19th and 20th centuries led to forms of social solidarity and social personhood that had significant continuities with the pre-colonial past (continuities that are obscured by conventional narratives that emphasize the rise of capitalism as a complete and comprehensive break with the past). In recent decades, though, economic restructuring has radically reduced demand for low-skilled, manual labor, and mass unemployment has become a durable structural feature of South African society. This new situation is more radically different from the past than is generally recognized, and calls for new ways of thinking about social membership, work, “dependency”, and social assistance. It is suggested that the South African experience reveals, in an extreme and clarifying form, a set of processes that are occurring in many other parts of the world. Better understanding such processes may help us to find our way past some of the current impasses in progressive politics.
 
About Professor Ferguson and his research:
Professor Ferguson’s research has been conducted in Lesotho and Zambia, and has engaged a broad range of theoretical and ethnographic issues. A central theme running through it has been a concern with the political, broadly conceived, and with the relation between specific social and cultural processes and the abstract narratives of “development” and “modernization” through which such processes have so often been known and understood. Ferguson’s most recent book, Global Shadows: Africa in the Neoliberal World Order was published by Duke University Press in 2006. The essays that make up the book address a range of specific topics, ranging from structural adjustment, the crisis of the state, and the emergence of new forms of government-via-NGO, to the question of the changing social meaning of “modernity” for colonial and postcolonial urban Africans. They converge, however, around the question of “Africa” as a place in a wider categorical ordering of the world, and they use this question as a way to think about such large-scale issues as globalization, modernity, worldwide inequality, and social justice.
 
Professor Ferguson is now beginning a new research project in South Africa, exploring the emergence of new problematics of poverty and social policy under conditions of neoliberalism. He is currently Chair and Professor in the Department of Anthropology at Stanford University; he completed his PhD at Harvard in 1985.
 
About MASS:
This lecture is part of the Monday Africa Seminar Series (MASS) .  Monday Africa is a bi-weekly series that will feature innovative research by UCLA faculty, as well as outside visitors, and build an Africanist community at UCLA. Speakers will present recent books, unpublished papers, or ongoing research.
 
For more information, please contact:
James S. Coleman African Studies Center