Call For Papers – Writing Workshops: Defiant Scholarship In Africa 2024

Call For Papers – Writing Workshops: Defiant Scholarship In Africa 2024

 

We invite early career scholars working on topics connected to and practices grounded in ‘defiant scholarship in Africa’ to apply for writing workshops in Yaoundé, Cameroon and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

During these three-day hybrid workshops we will work to identify and challenge the academic racism(s) and academic imperialism(s) that remain embedded within dominant publication models. We will centre work that pursues decolonial, solidarity, and anti-colonial praxes to break with self-referencing, recursive, and imperial modes of social science research (Ake 1979). Importantly, our collective refuses prevailing models of North/South writing workshops that too often commence from unspoken assumptions that there is a dearth of publishing know-how or skill in African settings that requires ‘correcting’.

 




 

We reject as untenable the neoliberal and corporate models of scholarly publication in Western universities that have led to the corporate capture of knowledge. This includes, for example, the implicit or explicit ‘publish or perish’ approaches and their manifestations in African universities as ‘publish and perish’ (Nyamnjoh 2004: 331-335). Such approaches to hiring and retaining academic labour have resulted in excessive competition, exhaustion (Mason & Megoran 2021), desperation, plagiarism, and the theft of ideas—all of which are often unevenly racialised and gendered (Muhs et al. 2012; see also Hengel’s 2022 analysis of discrimination of female-authored articles during peer review; and Assis et al. 2023: 75 on exclusions faced by women authors in HE). Neoliberal publication models have led to the gaming of citations by authors, the manipulation of bibliometric data by journal editors, and interrelated trends like ‘citational erasures’ of contributions from black, brown, and indigenous women scholars (Smith et al. 2021). Neoliberal publication models have given rise to the culture of YouTube tutorials and blog posts guaranteeing recipes for fast scholarship. These kinds of neoliberal and commercial approaches to scholarly writing efface other (uneven) demands on our labour while promising formulas for ‘maximum efficiency’—(‘turn out one academic article per week!’)—in a factory-like system that creates profit for the corporate owners of academic journals and advances individual careers but seldom benefits or even reaches wider collectives and communities.

At these workshops, we begin with a common enthusiasm for experimentation, audaciousness, improvisation, creativity, ‘slow scholarship’ (Mountz et al. 2015), and more. Our workshops aim to provide—for Central African and Horn of Africa scholars already engaging in forms of defiant scholarship—platforms to come together. We seek to nurture and strengthen critical writing collectives in the regions, to learn together as a transnational group, to practice critical politics of coalition building (see Lugones 2003). We want to amplify the work that is unearthing counter-histories and offering imaginaries of empowerment and political transformation rooted in wellbeing, ecological balance, and social relations otherwise. To do so, we will demystify inequalities embedded within corporate publishing models while learning from the powerful body of scholarship exposing the complicities and complacencies of social science logics, methodologies, refrains, and discourses (Smith 1999; Simpson 2011; see also Bouka 2018 on ‘collaborative research as structural violence’). We are particularly interested in exploring the challenges, hurdles, or limitations that Central African and Horn of Africa scholars encounter in their pursuit of decolonial, anticolonial, Pan-African, and/or critical research, writing, and publication.

 



 

The availability of AI software like Chat GPT, Google Bard, Grammarly, Copy.ai, and more are changing publication and writing practices; what are the uses and implications of these tools for scholars writing and teaching on the continent and those working in solidarity? We will invite journal editors to reflect on biases in the publishing industry, including when and how peer review can affect forms of gatekeeping and epistemic policing, and how authors might navigate these challenges (how, in the words of Nolas and Varvantakis (2019) ‘another review process is possible’). By sharing experiences, we will consider how African scholars can protect their emergent and developing ideas from theft, appropriation, and misattribution (Buchanan 2019) and reject colonial patterns of the ‘native informant’ (Khan 2005; Aidid 2015; Mwambari 2019). We will consider the latent consequences of the rise of some Open Access (OA) models based on excessive fees, and how policies aimed at challenging readership paywalls to make knowledge more widely available have resulted in a pay-to-publish model that heightens the exclusion of scholarship by those working at less affluent universities (Piron 2018; Nobes 2021; see also minutes 47 – 60 and 1:05 – 1:09 of the LSE Firoz Lalji Centre for Africa dialogue on ‘Decolonising the Global Publishing Industry’).

 

About University of Oxford

As the oldest university in the English-speaking world, Oxford is a unique and historic institution. There is no clear date of foundation, but teaching existed at Oxford in some form in 1096 and developed rapidly from 1167, when Henry II banned English students from attending the University of Paris.

 

Writing Workshops: Defiant Scholarship In Africa

Application Deadline 04 Mar 2024
Country to study Cameroon, Ethiopia
Type Fellowship
Sponsor University of Oxford
Gender Men and Women

 

Aim and Benefits of Writing Workshops: Defiant Scholarship In Africa

  • Travel, lodging, and meals for accepted participants will be covered by funds from a British Academy Writing Workshop Grant.
  • Stipends for childcare and/or internet data are available. If you would like to apply for this funding, please specify the need in your cover letter and include a brief budget.

 

 




 

Requirements for Writing Workshops: Defiant Scholarship In Africa Qualification

  • Early-career researchers pursuing their PhD or within three years of completion of the PhD. Scholars should be affiliated with a university or research institute in the Central Africa or Horn of Africa regions.
  • Language: Papers must be submitted in English or French. There will be live English/French translation at Workshop 1 in Yaoundé.
  • Workshop 1 will be held in Yaoundé from 18 – 20 June 2024. Workshop 2 will be held in Addis Ababa from 7-9 October 2024. Accepted participants should be available to attend one workshop in-person and will attend select sessions of the other workshop online.

 

Interview date, Process and Venue for Writing Workshops: Defiant Scholarship In Africa

Yaoundé, Cameroon
Workshop Dates: 18 – 20 June 2024

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Workshop Dates: 7-9 October 2024

 

Application Deadline

March 4, 2024

 

How to Apply

Interested and qualified? Go to University of Oxford on docs.google.com to apply

Please submit: (1) a 300-word abstract of an advanced research paper that speaks to themes of ‘defiant scholarship in Africa’ and (2) a cover letter of no more than 2-pages that details your interest in defiant scholarship as well as 2-3 issues that you consider to be the most urgent for scholars working in your region.

For accepted participants, your advanced research paper must be submitted by 1 June 2024 (for Yaoundé) and 20 September 2024 (for Addis) to enable response, feedback, and peer reflection during the workshops.

Submit your application online at https://forms.gle/QRBr7tQ6T3KkPR7i8 by 10 March 2024.

We look forward to your submissions.

For more details, visit University of Oxford website.

 

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