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Wissensdialog

Science Communication: Anthropology & Restitution

Scene from the Video, featuring Chinwe Ogbonna

Communicating science - this video attempts to artistically process research results from the project "Provenance Research with a Restitution Perspective".

This experiment in science communication is based on a 1.5-hour conversation between Prof. Wazi Apoh (University of Ghana) and Prof. Andreas Mehler (University of Freiburg). The text reflects the statements of the two experts in the form of film images and contains audiovisual excerpts from the discussions of the advisory board as well as material filmed with Prof. Albert Gouaffo (University of Dschang) at the Institute of Biological Anthropology at the University of Freiburg.

The voices of the two professors were re-enacted by two actors (Thomas Douglas for Andreas Mehler and Mbene Mbunga Mwambene for Wazi Apoh) and show some of the unexpected results of the research process in the exchange with the international advisory board.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ODoowhhexKQ

ALMA Lecture Series 2023

Grafik "Postcolonial Hierarchies & their Contestation from the South"

This year's ALMA Lecture Series is organized by Arnold Bergstraesser Institute (ABI) in cooperation with the BMBF-network ‘Postcolonial Hierarchies in Peace & Conflict’, the Global Studies Programme (GSP), and Colloquium Politicum at University of Freiburg.

Colonial legacies continue to shape political change in and research on the Global South. In this lecture series, we engage with the manifold hierarchies at work in postcolonial settings. We ask how decolonial perspectives from Africa, Latin America, the Middle East and Asia can contribute to understanding and confronting postcolonial hierarchies in political arenas ranging from logistics and trade, food, artivism, feminism, to everyday academic practices of knowledge production and collaborative research. 

Post- and decolonial approaches challenge North-South power asymmetries concerning theory-building, research partnerships, and policy interventions, while pointing to different inequalities (and political contestations of these) within and across the Global South too. Despite growing recognition of the colonial legacies shaping these globally unequal patterns of intra- and transregional interaction, the need for in-depth discussions is still there.

This year’s ALMA lecture series takes up this challenge by gathering speakers with original perspectives on challenging questions: 

  • How do race, gender and memory shape current understandings of power, contestation, and politics?
  • What does it mean to think and ‘apply’ social theory through the lens of decoloniality?
  • Which epistemic hierarchies affect the ways researchers, students, and lecturers think about and engage with scholars and scholarship from Africa, Asia, the Middle East and Latin America?

 

More information on the lectures:

09.05.2023 Logistical hierarchies and new forms of resistance in and through the Arabian Peninsula, Rafeef Ziadah (King’s College London)

Watch video:  https://youtu.be/xRRhEYsVBFc

04.07.2023 Decolonizing the Third Space between Oriente and Occidente. Colonial wound and scar, artivism and feminism from the South,

Karina Bidaseca (University of Buenos Aires/CLACSO) 

20.11.2023 Rethinking the coloniality and violence of famines in the Global South,
Swati Parashar (University of Gothenburg)

07.12.2023 Genealogies of African Studies in Germany: An intersectional critique and ways forward,
Serawit B. Debele (Universität Bayreuth)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

All lectures are hybrid / KG1 I Universität Freiburg