Description
To reconfigure African Studies in Germany means to understand its past and its visions. This book tries to map some of the respective traces.
The debates surrounding the decentralization of academia in Germany can be illustrated using the example of African Studies. The contributors examine the history of the field while presenting concepts for its reconfiguration. Organized in the form of a glossary with a focus on African Studies and Bayreuth, it addresses themes such as intersectionality and decoloniality, memory and future-making, relationality and reflexivity, and diaspora and African nation states. This volume dedicated to Rüdiger Seesemann reflects his influential role in introducing »reconfiguration« to German academia and shaping institutional strategies for future scholarship.
Aleo Susan Arndt ist Professor*in für britische und afrikanische Literaturen an der Universität Bayreuth und Sprecherin des Promotionskollegs für Intersektionalitätsstudien. Arndts Arbeitsschwerpunkte sind intersektioneller Rassismus und britische sowie englischsprachige afrikanische Literatur.



