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Cluster of Excellence EXC 2052 - "Africa Multiple: reconfiguring African Studies"

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Globalization and Nationalisms: "Citizens and ‘Strangers’, Panafricanism, Nationalism, Labour and Diamonds in West Africa (1920-1970)" by Annalisa Urbano and Joël Glasman

2021-07-05 18:00 to 20:00
Online via Zoom

Globalization and Nationalisms
Historical Perspectives on a Complex Relationship


Joint Lecture Series of the Universities of Bayreuth (UBT) and Regensburg (UR)
Summer Term 2021
Mondays, 6 to 8 p.m. via Zoom


The shut-down of borders and the disruption of global supply chains in reaction to the COVID-19 crisis, Britain's "Brexit," U.S. President Donald Trump's "America First" nationalism among other current developments show that the growing economic entanglements of the world, often abbreviated as globalization, have not put an end to nations, and nation states. Contrary to what liberal theories suggest, market-oriented economies actually can enter into high-level conflicts, and economic integration has not dried out one of the most powerful historical forces of the so-called modern age: Nationalism.


While recent developments highlight the seemingly paradoxical relationship between nations and nationalisms on the one hand, and the economic integration of the world on the other, their complex and conflictual interplay is nothing new. Rather, it is one of the key frictions of our modern world, whose modernity more often than not is defined by the unfolding of capitalism and the invention of nations and nationalism.


In the context of a joint research project dealing with these pertinent issues, Professors Erdmute Alber (Social Anthropology, UBT), Ulf Brunnbauer (Director of the Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies, Regensburg), Volker Depkat (American Studies, UR), Hartmut Egger (Economics, UBT), Gerlinde Groitl (Political Science, UR), and Susanne Lachenicht (Early Modern History, UBT), in co-operation with the Leibniz Science Campus "Europe and America in the Modern World" and the Center for International and Transnational Area Studies (CITAS) at UR, and the Institute of African Studies and the Cluster of Excellence "Africa Multiple" at UBT, organize this joint zoom lecture series that probes into the paradoxical relationship of nationalisms and globalization in a longue durée perspective.


The lectures will take place on Mondays 6-8pm CET and will feature a number of renowned international specialists.
If you are interested in joining us for our discussions, please contact volker.depkat@ur.de or susanne.lachenicht@uni-bayreuth.de.


  • To access the schedule of all lectures, please click here.

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