Abstract: As the new century unfolds, many increasingly
acknowledge that there is no better laboratory than Africa to gauge the limits
of our epistemological imagination or to pose new questions about how we know
what we know and what that knowledge is grounded upon; how to draw on multiple
models of time so as to avoid one-way causal models; how to open a space for
broader comparative undertakings; and how to account for the multiplicity of
the pathways and trajectories of change. In fact, there is no better terrain
than Africa for a scholarship that is keen to describe novelty, originality and
complexity, mindful of the fact that the ways in which societies compose and
invent themselves in the present – what we could call the creativity of
practice – is always ahead of the knowledge we can ever produce about them. As
amply demonstrated by Jean and John Comaroff in a recent book, Theory From the
South, the challenges to critical social theory are nowhere as acute as in the
Southern Hemisphere, perhaps the epicenter of contemporary global
transformations in any case the site of unfolding developments that are
contradictory, uneven, contested, and for the most part undocumented.
Here, fundamental problems of poverty and livelihood, equity and justice are still for the most part unresolved. A huge amount of labor is still being put into eliminating want, making life possible or simply maintaining it. People marginalized by the development process live under conditions of great personal risk. They permanently confront a threatening environment in conditions of virtual or functional superfluousness. In order to survive, many are willing to gamble with their lives and with those of other people, with each activity producing its own social order and rules. This is a deeply heterogeneous world of flows, fractures and frictions. Power relations and the antagonisms that shape late capitalism are being redefined here in ways and forms not seen at earlier historical periods. Contemporary forms of life, work, property, production, exchange, languages and value testify to an openness of the social that can no longer be solely accounted by earlier descriptive and interpretive models. New boundaries are emerging while old ones are being redrawn, extended or simply abandoned. The paradoxes of mobility and closure, of connection and separation, of continuities and discontinuities between the inside and the outside, the local and the global, or of temporariness and permanence pose new challenges to critical thought and intellectual inquiry.
The Wits Interdisciplinary Seminar in the Humanities is a
widely interdisciplinary and lively research forum. Its objective is to strengthen and enrich the
interaction between local research and global scholarship, and to make this a
more productive dialogue. The seminar
works on the basis of the participants' careful and critical reading of a
pre-distributed paper. It is typically
an animated, demanding and constructive forum.
Participants are particularly encouraged to frame their work and questions
theoretically and to think sympathetically beyond their own disciplinary and
regional specialisations.
Attached File: Mbembe2013.pdf