Summer School, Pretoria & Johannesburg
Description
The summer school took place from September 25-30 2023 in Pretoria and Johannesburg, Souh Africa.
The aim of the Summer School was to bring together academics, poets, writers and activists to engage with the general theme of “Radical
Urbanisms” through the arts and literature, feminist and decolonial politics and imaginaries and the land question. The school was
attended by the cohort of minor cosmopolitanisms research fellows, professors and teaching staff, as well as professors and PhD Students
from our partner universities in South Africa.
Program
- View and download the program here (PDF 1,71MB)
Poster
- View and download the poster here (PDF 1,44MB)
Summer School Faculty
PROFESSOR SIONA O'CONNELL
is an African Studies scholar/practitioner in the School of Arts at the University of Pretoria. She is widely respected for her work on the effects of race-based land dispossesion. In addition to directing and producing 10 documentary films, her co-edited book 'Hanging on a Wire' won the 2018 National Institute for The Humanities and Social Sciences (nihss) Humanities and Social Sciences award for the best non-fiction edited volme. Her monograph on forced removals in Cape Town, 'An Impossible Turn: Cape Town's Forced Removals" continues to garner broad recommendation. O'Connell was a Trilateral Reconnection Project fellow (Brown University), is a Brown international advanced research institute's (BIARI) alumnus, was the NEH distinguished visiting professor of the Humanities at Colgate University in the USA in 2018-19 as well as visiting professor at Aarhus University in Denmark in 2021 and 2022. She is the South African lead investigator on an international interdisciplinary project bringing together climate change, heritage, food, and resilience. O'Connell is the chair person of the Academy of Science of South Africa (ASSAF) Humanities standing committee and a founding member of critical African Studies at the University of Pretoria (castup.ac.za).
PROFESSOR ZETHU MATEBENI
is South Africa Research Chair in Sexualities, Gender and Queer Studies at the University of Fort Hare. Zethu works collaboratively with activists, scholars and artists and creates interdisciplinary scholarly work on queer issues, critical race studies and decolonisation. She has been involved in decolonising movements in South Africa, including #RhodesMustFall and #AlternativeInclusivePride. She has been visiting professor at the Women's Gender and Sexualities Studies (WGSS) Departement at Yale University, and the Marie Jahoda professorial Fellow at Ruhr University Bochum. Zethu has published various key volumes on African sexualities and gender diversity including 'Reclaiming African: Queer Perspectives on Sexual and Gender Identites (2014)' as well as numerous essays, articles and poetry.
LINDA CHERNIS (SHE/HER)
is a South African archivist and heritage practitioner who has worked in museums and archives for the past 15 years. She has a passion for bringing history, heritage, and the arts to the public. Linda became the archivist at the GALA Queer Archive in Johannesburg, South Africa in January 2015. She recently completed her Masters in history at the University of the Witwatersrand.
MAKHOSAZANA XABA (SHE/HER)
is an award-winning anthologist and short story writer. She has published four collections of poetry, a collection of short stories and edited and co-edited six anthologies. In 2022 she co-edited 'Foundational African Writers: Peter Abrahams, Noni Jabavu, Sibusiso Nyembezi & Es'kia Mphahlele'. With Athambile Masola she introduced a book titled 'Noni Jabavu: A Stranger at Home (2023)'. Over the years she has written biographical essays on Noni Jabavu as she works towards Jabavu's literary biography. She is currently an associate professor of practice based at the Centre for the Study on Race, Gender and Class at the University of Johannesburg.
FERRIAL ADAM
is an environmental and climate justice activist. She is presently the executive manager of WaterCAN - a network of activist citizen scientists working in the water sector. She has completed her PhD on 'Citizen Science and Environmental Justice in the Water Sector'. She has worked for more than 15 years on environmental and climate change issues and challenges at both international and national levels. She believes that environmental justice and climate change straddle science, human rights, environment, economics and governance.
NIQ MHLONGO
is a Sowetan-born novelist, short story writer, travel journalist, essayist, editor, and educator who graduated from Wits University with a B.A. degree (African Literature and Politcal Studies) in 1997. He has written four novels - 'Dog Eat Dog (2004)', 'After Tears (2007)', Way Back Home (2013)' and 'Paradise in Gaza (2020)' - and a collection of short stories, 'Affluenza (2016)', 'Soweto, Under the Apricot Tree (2018)' and 'For You, I'd Steal a Goat (2022)'. He also edited an essay collection called 'Black Tax, Burden or Ubuntu (2019)'. Two short stories anthologies called 'Joburg Noir (2020)' and 'Hauntings(2021)'. His Novel 'Dog Eat Dog' won the Spanish literary award La Mar de Letras Internacional in 2006. He has also won several literary prizes in South Africa for his work, including the Herman Charles Bosman Literary Prize and the Humanities and Social Science, and the K. Sello Duiker Literary Award. His work has been translated into several languages, including French, Dutch, Flemish, German, Burmese, Spanish, and Italian.
VICTORIA COLLIS-BUTHELEZI
Victoria J. Collis-Buthelezi is Associate Professor in English at the University of Johannesburg and Director of UJ's Centre for the Study of Race, Gender and Class. She is a senior research fellow at the Johannesburg Institute of Advanced Studies (JIAS) and a research associate at the African American and African Diaspora Studies Department (AAADS) at Columbia University. Her research is on black intellectual and literary histories and has appeared in Small Axe, Callaloo, Boundary2 and the UK Journal of Arts and the Humanities. Her current book project explores global frames for understanding blackness in early twentieth century Cape Town. Collis-Buthelezi is on the editorial committee for Small Axe and an editor of the polity critical South Book Series as well as Peter Lang's 'Race and Resistance in the Long Twentieth Century'.
Workshops
Questions As a Method for Archival Research
Makhosazana Xaba
Wednesday 27 September 2023, 11am -1pm
Queering the City
Zethu Matebeni and Linda Chernis
Wednesday 27 September 2023, 3-5pm
Water Justice: Using Activist Citizen Science to Hold Government Accountable
Ferrial Adam
Friday 29 September2023, 10am-12pm
Keynote
Illusory Freedom: Forms, Modes, and Sites of Inequality in Post-Apartheid South Africa
Siona O'Connell
Thursday 28 September 2023, 3-5pm
Excursions
Walking Tour Ferreirarsdorp
Victoria Collis-Buhelezi
Thursday 28 September 2023, 10am-12pm
Soweto Visit
Niq Mhlongo
Friday 29 September 2023, 3-5pm
Pavement Booksellers Tour
Saturday 30 September 2023, 10am-12:30pm
Visit to The Forge
Saturday 30 September 2023, 3-6pm