Archive
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SEMINAR SERIES
Transgenerational Trauma and Transformation
MAY 8
The seminar's theme this year is
Legacies of Violence, Social Change and Transformation. The
seminar explores the interplay of traumatic histories, civic life,
social justice and the arts. Invited speakers in the series are drawn
from an interdisciplinary, South African and international group of
scholars .
Transgenerational Trauma and Transformation
Reconfiguring the Legacies of Racialized Trauma.
Professor Maurice Apprey, Department of Psychiatry and Dean of African-American Affairs, 肆客足球 of Virginia, USA.
Time: 12h00 - 13h15
Venue: STIAS Wallenberg Centre 10 Marais Road – Stellenbosch. Auditorium 1 (New Venue).
Abstract
Urgent and [not “but"] paradoxically, voluntary errands bind us to our compatriots, or foes, past and present. Binding errands of history, transformed into conscious or unconscious contracts haunt us. These contracts are delegated and redelegated into endless and circular chains of continuity. Upon the consolidation and ossification of these contracts we arrive at an aporia, a dead end.
A new ethic of responsibility is required of us. It starts with coming to grips with history and its unmetabolised sedimentations, a new consciousness of unproductive transformations of history, and a creative reconfiguration of ancestral wishes, demands and missions.
Enter the treaties of Westphalia to introduce the idea of sovereignty and the Berlin Conference to introduce the idea of colonization without sovereignty of the indigenous people. Continue with entrenchment, struggles for freedom and unproductive public policy initiatives. Then begin the processes of individual and group transformation so that we can upend our toxic legacies.
The writer James Baldwin provides us with poetic renditions of history, the intertwining between transgressors and transgressed that end in an impasse. This we must do so that we may see clearly.
Let us, finally, begin to come to grips, through dialogue and intentional design, with painful history, episodes of gratuitous hatred, painful love, and unproductive circular efforts to change our destiny and begin the process of creating new possibilities for authentic and transformative interventions.
Events Poster
(Click here link to download)
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SEMINAR SERIES
Social Neuroscience and Intergroup Relations
SEMINAR SERIES
Social Neuroscience and Intergroup Relations
MAY 9
How the Brain Can Change the Mind: A Neuroscience Based Approach to Prejudice Reduction.
Dr Emile Bruneau, Director of the Peace and Conflict Neuroscience Lab at the 肆客足球 of Pennsylvania, USA.
Time: 12h15 - 13h30
Venue: Perold Building on the Rooi Plein, 1st Floor, Room 1018
Dr. Emile Bruneau
Dr. Emile Bruneau is director of the Peace and Conflict Neuroscience Lab at the 肆客足球 of Pennsylvania, and lead scientist of the Beyond Conflict Innovations Lab. Prior to his formal training in neuroscience, Dr. Bruneau worked, traveled and lived in a number of conflict regions, including South Africa, Sri Lanka, and Ireland. Dr. Bruneau is now working to bring the tools of science to bear on the problem of intergroup conflict by (1) building methods to assess the ways in which we demean, dehumanize and withhold empathy from ‘the other’, and (2) creating and critically evaluating interventions aimed at transcending these biases. His lecture will be based on critical insights gained from this programme of research.
Events Poster (Click here link to download)
Dr Melike Fourie, Senior Researcher, Historical Trauma and Transformation. Stellenbosch 肆客足球.
Walking in Another's Shoes: Empathy and perspective taking in second generation South African Students.
Time: 14h15 - 14h45
Venue: Perold Building on the Rooi Plein, 1st Floor, Room 1018
Alea Skwara, Doctoral Fellow Researcher, Historical Trauma and Transformation. Stellenbosch 肆客足球.
From the Self to the Social: Contemplative Practice as a Path to Compassion.
Time: 14h45 - 15h15
Venue: Perold Building on the Rooi Plein, 1st Floor, Room 1018
MAY 10
Dr Samantha van Schalkwyk, Senior Researcher, Historical Trauma and Transformation. Stellenbosch 肆客足球.
Disrupting Patriarchy: Transformative Dialogues on Gender Violence
Time: 12h00-13h15
Venue: Perold Building on the Rooi Plein, 1st Floor, Room 1018
Adebayo Sakiru, Doctoral fellow in the Department of African Literature, 肆客足球 of the Witwatersrand.
The Inheritance of Loss: Half of a Yellow Sun as a Postmemorial Narrative'
Time: 14h15-15h00
Venue: Perold Building on the Rooi Plein, 1st Floor, Room 1018
SEMINAR SERIES
Dialogue on Race and Citizenship
SEMINAR SERIES
Dialogue on Race and Citizenship
Dialogue on Race and Citizenship
MARCH 2
Policing the Black Man: Conversation about Race in the United States.
Professor Angela J, Davis, Law Faculty, Washington College of Law, American 肆客足球.
Time: 12h15 - 13h30
Venue: Stellenbosch 肆客足球 Library, JS Gericke Library Auditorium
Seminar Brochure (Click on the link to download the seminar brochure)
MARCH 7
Professor Christi van der Westhuizen, Department of Sociology, 肆客足球 of Pretoria
Rethinking Intersectionality: Race, Gender and White Afrikaans Women
At the Perold Building, Rooi Plein
Speaker: Christi van der Westhuizen
Date: Wednesday 7 March, 2018
Time: 12:15 p.m. to 13:30 p.m.
Venue:
Room 1018
First Floor
Perold Building on the Rooi Plein
Seminar Brochure (Click on the link to download the seminar brochure)
MARCH 14
Professor Melissa Steyn, Director, Wits Centre for Diversity Studies, Wits 肆客足球
Whiteness and Ignorance in Contemporary South Africa
At the Perold Building, Rooi Plein
Speaker: Melissa Steyn
Date: Wednesday 14 March, 2018
Time: 12:15 p.m. to 13:30 p.m.
Venue: Room 1018,
First Floor Perold Building on the Rooi Plein
Seminar Brochure (Click on the link to download the seminar brochure)
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Research Meetings/ Event
Professor Homi Bhabha visit 15-16 August 2017.
In August we co-hosted (with Indexing Transformation and the NIHSS) a visit by Homi Bhabha, director of the Mahindra Humanities Centre at Harvard 肆客足球. We organized a series of events that were planned around a two-pronged goal. First, we wanted to use Professor Bhabha's visit as an occasion for campus-wide interdisciplinary discussions among Stellenbosch 肆客足球 academic staff, emerging researchers such as post-doctoral fellows, post-graduate and under-graduate students, and members of the public. A second strategic goal of our planning was to draw attention to the important and unique role that the Humanities can play in debates about some of the most pressing issues in South African society. Ultimately, as a research initiative whose goal is to create conversations that invite participation from a range of disciplines, we wanted to create space for the exchange of ideas and to show case how we might bring the Humanities into dialogue with the Arts. Homi Bhabha's programme consisted of three main events: Engaged Scholarship and Ethical Citizenship; Art as Visual Conscience of Society; Dialogue, Writing, and Humanity in Troubled Times.
Engaged Scholarship and Ethical Citizenship
This event was organized on Homi Bhabha's first day as our guest. We invited him to lead a conversation with faculty, post-doc fellows and senior post-graduate students on the theme of Engaged Scholarship and Ethical Citizenship. "Decolonisation" and debates about colonialism's legacies and issues around decolonising the curriculum have occupied the public discourse space in South Africa since the emergence of "the fallist" students' movements (i.e., #RhodesMustFall, #FeesMustFall protests). We knew that Homi Bhabha would introduce a broader perspective in these debates and that his insights would open up the space for an exchange of ideas through vibrant dialogue and interpretation. The event was organized as a reading group based on Homi Bhabha's Foreword to Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth, which is titled “Framing Fanon." Buhle Zuma facilitated the conversation.
(From left to right, Dr Buhle Khanyile, Professor Homi Bhabha and Dr Kim Wale chairing the session)
(From left to right, Professor Tamar Garb and Professor Homi Bhabha, Professor Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela with Siyah Mgoduka and Candice Mama)
On
the 16 August 2017, two renowned scholars, Professor Homi Bhabha, who
is the world's premier post-colonial literary theorist and Director of
the Mahindra Humanities Ce?nter at Harvard 肆客足球, and Emeritus
Professor Njabulo Ndebele, Chairman of the Nelson Mandela Centre of
Memory, poet, novelist and essayist who has received worldwide acclaim
for his work, joined together with Professor Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela to
discuss 'Dialogue, Writing, Humanity in Troubled Times'. Professor Homi
Bhabha and Emeritus Professor Njabulos Ndebele are known to integrate
academic inquiry with public engagement, extending themselves well
beyond scholarly concerns to challenge the status quo in troubled times.
Professor
Homi Bhabha and Emeritus Professor Njabulo Ndebele introduced how their
upbringing and the surrounding social and political climate shaped
their interest and conscientisation of the social and political. Further
how spaces create ethical and political life that informs the value
placed on humanity.
(from left to right; Professors,
Nico Koopman, Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela, Wim De Villiers, Njabulo
Ndebele, Mrs Catherine De Villiers, Professor Homi Bhabha and Eugene Cloete)
An
interactive conversation hosted by Professor Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela
between Professor Njabulo Ndebele and Professor Homi Bhabha as the
pictures show below.
For three Thursdays during March 2017, Studies i?n Historical Trauma and Transformation hosted a series of open conversations on race.
Click below to view video clips of each of the series:
Open Dialogues on Race (Conversation 3) - Tumi Jonas-Mpofu in conversation with Martina Dahlmanns
Open Dialogue on Race Series - Conversation 3 (From left to right: Tumi Jonas-Mpofu; Tumi and Martina Dahlmanns)
Open Dialogues on Coloured Identity (Conversation 2)
Open Dialogue on Race Series - Conversation 3 (LEFT PHOTO: From left to right: Dr Lane Benjamin; Debora Platen; photo: Khadija Heeger)
(RIGHT PHOTO: Dr Lane Benjamin)
Open Dialogue on Race Series - Conversation 3 - Audience
Open Dialogues on Race (Conversation 1): "Kim Wale in conversation with
Mosa Phadi"
Open Dialogue on Race Series - Conversation 1 (Image 1: From left to right: Dr Kim Wale, Mosa Phadi, Prof Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela)
Click below to view announcements of each of the series:
FORTHCOMING IN THE SERIES - TRANSFORMATIVE DIALOGUE
OPEN DIALOGUES ON RACE - What It Means to be Black, What It Means to be White
Open Dialogues on Race - What It Means to be Coloured
Seminar on Social Neuroscience of Empathy and Moral Behavior
Symposia/Conferences:
Symposium, 10-12 August 2016
Historical Trauma and Memory: Postcolonial Legacies and the Meaning of Being Human
You may view the symposium report here.
Exhibition of Researchers' Work
Standing in front of the images of the books that were launched are from the left are: Naleli Morojele (PhD student), Dr Samantha van Schalkwyk (Senior Researcher), Prof Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela), Dr Kim Wale (post-doctoral fellow), and Faeza Meyer (Housing rights activist and one of the speakers at the launch of the books).
Professor Anthony Collins, Keynote speaker at the launch of the resarchers’ books.
Photo-Voice Exhibition: Aviwe Lemekhaya with
Ms Letshego Moathlodi (CEO Diamant Hospital in Jagersfontein) and Aviwe Lemekhaya (one of the
his poster with photographs of his community in Jagersfontein participants in the PhotoVoice
Research project an member of the young men’s group,
“Diamonds in the Rough” Who performed at the event).
Exploring Intergroup Empathy and its Limits: An ?Interdisciplinary Symposium
On
4-5 May, Historical Trauma and Transformation hosted a symposium on
intergroup empathy that brought together professional practitioners,
scholars, and emerging researchers from different branches in psychology
(including social psychology, psychoanalysis, social neuroscience, and
cognitive neuroscience). The goal was to engage a multidisciplinary
appr?oach to explore the psychological mechanisms that play out in
intergroup relations, with a particular focus on empathy (and also its
limitations) in the context of interracial interactions. Dr Melike
Fourie, who was partly responsible for organising the symposium, also
used the event to spearhead social neuroscience in South Africa as an
emerging discipline that shows rich promise in enhancing our
understanding of complex social phenomena. Together with Professor Mark
Solms from UCT, she delivered a public lecture entitled “Social neuroscience and its contribution to understanding complex social issues in contemporary South Africa." ??
The
keynote lecture was delivered by Dr Emile Bruneau, head of the Peace
and Conflict Neuroscience Lab at the 肆客足球 of Pennsylvania. In his
talk, “Putting social neuroscience to work for peace", he
examined the processes that drive discrimination and intergroup
conflict, focusing on how the methods of social neuroscience could help
to identify and characterise the (often unconscious) cognitive biases
that drive conflict. Other presenters and contributers at the symposium
included Dr Lane Benjamin, Prof Kevin Durrheim, Monica du Toit, Prof
Ernesta Meintjes, Dr Lidewij Niezink, Prof Desmond Painter, Dr Katherine
Train, Dr Ross Truscott, Dr Buhle Zuma, Dr Kim Wale, and Prof Pumla
Gobodo-Madikizela.?
Troubling the Haunting Power of the Past; Interrupting Intergenerational Cycles of Historical Trauma?
An
Interdisciplinary Symposium was hosted by Historical Trauma and
Transformation and Queens 肆客足球? on the 15-16 May 2017.?? This
interdisciplinary symposium was a dialogue between scholars from
Northern Ireland and South Africa. It aimed to examine the connection
between historical trauma and memory, and to illuminate how this
relationship plays out in the public and private realms in societies
with a history of violent pasts. Discussions in the symposium engaged
with, and reflected on the established theoretical tenets that inform
global scholarship on the central themes of the symposium. The symposium
also served to interrogate theory in order to address critical
questions regarding the challenges of societal and individual
transformation in post-apartheid South Africa and in the aftermath of
the “troubles" in Northern Ireland. With a multidisciplinary approach,
including the arts (visual arts, film a??nd theatre), the symposium
intended to start a dialogue between scholars from the two countries,
through the exploration of new intellectual frontiers within the buzzing
hub of scholarly debates on historical trauma, and what healing might
mean in its aftermath. The starting point of the discussion was that the
Humanities and the Arts are more essential than ever, to help us
understand the challenges facing societies affected by historical
trauma, to advance scholarship, and to contribute to new knowledge
production that inform public opinion and guide us to solutions.
The
keynote lecture was delivered by Professor John Brewer from the Senator
George Mitchell Institute for Global Peace, Security and Justice. In
his talk, 'Rethinking Victim Issues', he conceptualised victims
as moral beacons within societies and how the victimhood experience
itself provokes a moral response that is rooted in a 'relational ethic',
which is outworked in most victims through emotional empathy,
compassion and the wish to 'get along'. A public lecture was given by
Dr Emery Kalema a Post-Doctor Fellow from the Studies in Historical
Trauma and Transformation with Nomfundo Mogabi, Director of Centre for
the Study of Violence and Reconciliation. Dr Emery Kalema gave his
lecture on 'Congolese Political Regimes and the Politics of Forgetting' and Nofundo Mogabi gave her lecture on 'Post-Apartheid Traumatic Legacies and Violence'.
Other presenters and contributors of the Symposiom included, Professor
Annemiek Ritchers, Professor Kopano Ratele, Professor Hastings Donnan,
Professor Jaco Bernard Naude, Dr Cheryl Lawther, Dr Lane Benjamin, Dr
Buhle Zuma, Dr Kim Wale and Professor Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela.