Theme: Igbo Womanhood, Womanbeing and Personhood,
17-18 April 2015 (paper submission deadline: 16 January 2015)
Please email abstracts of up to 200 words including the paper title, your name (first name followed by surname), current position, institutional affiliation, email address, mailing address and phone number to Dr Louisa Uchum Egbunike: le7@soas.ac.uk no later than 16th January 2015
Twitter @HerbertEkweEkwe
Igbo womanhood has been central in the conceptualisation of
several African feminist theories. African Womanism is influenced by ‘the Igbo
concept of Odozi ani, the “rehabilitator”: the person who wants to make amends
to ensure that the country supports its people from an environmental, ethical,
and judicial viewpoint’. Nego-feminism or a ‘negotiated feminism’ is inspired
by the Igbo/African woman’s experience as it is argued that ‘the theology of
nearness grounded in the indigenous installs feminism in Africa as a
performance and an altruistic act. African women do feminism; feminism is what
they do for themselves and for others.’ In this sense Igbo womanhood which has
developed within the milieu of Igbo tradition and culture, has been important
in the exploration of African women’s experiences, located within local and
global discourses.
One Igbo scholar
pronounced that ‘several concepts among the Igbo are identified with woman, for
instance, freedom, stability, morality and justice’, yet suggests that there is
an inherent paradox of womanbeing. This paradox, it is argued, centres on the
differing treatment of wives and mothers by their male counterparts in which
mothers are extolled whilst wives are not. Scholars have documented the
economic empowerment of Igbo women in pre-colonial and colonial Nigeria, in
part facilitated by flexible gender systems within Igbo culture.
This conference seeks
to create a platform through which to engage with various conceptions of Igbo
womanhood, vis-à-vis the changing position of Igbo women and the changing practices
in Igbo culture. It seeks to explore Igbo traditions in relation to the role
and status of women and examine the numerous social and political contributions
made by Igbo women.
This conference
invites papers that examine a variety of aspects of Igbo womanhood which
include, but are not limited to:
• Igbo Women’s Writing
• Ritual and Female Participation
• Ọgụ ụmụnwanyị or The
Igbo Women’s War of 1929
• Igbo Womanbeing and Personhood
• Mammy Water, Female Deities and Masquerades
• ‘Male Daughters’ and ‘Female Husbands’
• Women and Igbo Cosmology
• Male and Female Principles
• Igbo Women and the Ancestors
• Gendered Spaces
• Igbo Women’s Titles
• Widow Practices
• Igbo Women in the Arts and Sciences
• Representations and Participation of Igbo Women in
Nollywood
• Historicising the Changing Position of Igbo Women
• Igbo Women and the Family; Ụmụada
(Lineage Daughters) and Nwunyedi (Lineage Wives)
• The Politics of Inheritance
• Igbo Women’s Aesthetics
• Motherhood vis-à-vis Womanhood
• Igbo Women in the Diaspora
• Political Participation of Women in the Pre-colonial,
Colonial and Post-independence Eras
• Igbo Women in Digital Spaces
• Feminism, Womanism and the Igbo World
Please email abstracts of up to 200 words including the paper title, your name (first name followed by surname), current position, institutional affiliation, email address, mailing address and phone number to Dr Louisa Uchum Egbunike: le7@soas.ac.uk no later than 16th January 2015
Twitter @HerbertEkweEkwe
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