My Mind Words Paper:
others

  • Emotion Book Club: Call for Membership (Nigeria)

    The Emotion Book club is a literary organization based in Ibadan, Nigeria, dedicated towards building leaders of tomorrow through quality books. We are the brain behind The Emotion Book Party, an edutainment event strongly bent bent on marrying intellectualism with entertainment.

    We as a prestigious Nigerian book club are calling on individuals passionate about building their intellects through consistent reading to join us today.

    ELIGIBILITY

    - You must be between the ages of 16 to 35.
    - Be passionate about encouraging others to read books
    - Be preferably available in all our monthly readings.

    WHAT YOU STAND TO GAIN

    - Have a glimpse in the world of writing and publishing.
    - Meet New People of like minds
    - Access Hundreds of old and new titles in our updated library at no cost.

    OUR MEETING VENUE

    We meet every third Saturday of the month at Faculty of Arts, University of Ibadan.

    HOW TO GET MEMBERSHIP FORMS

    You can get the membership forms at the rate of N500[Naira] from the following officers;

    Lola - 08088571890
    Alex - 07056099335
    Samuel - 07031104270
    Sophia - 08061505988
    Olajide - 08064927622

    You can also get the form as from March 5, 2012 in the following places;

    - National Library, Iyaganku, Ibadan.
    -Alliance Francaise, Iyaganku, Ibadan.

    Speak with the coordinator of the emotion book club: 2348093728869

    Further enquiries: emotionbookclub@gmail.com

    CONTACT INFORMATION:

    For inquiries: emotionbookclub@gmail.com

    Website: http://emotionbookclub.wordpress.com/

  • Sell Your Books at the Botswana Amateur Arts Festival

    Date: 24 September 2011

    Do you have books you're selling?

    Let the Writers Association of Botswana sell for you at the Botswana Amateur Arts Festival on Saturday 24th September at Maru-a-Pula in Gaborone. Bring your books between 9 and 10am and collect remainders between 4 and by 5pm. Ask for the WABO stall/table or call 71822516 on the day. Please no more than 30 books per writer.

    Note this opportunity is for members only. But, have no fear, if you're not a member you can also become one on that day as membership cards will be available. It is P100 for an annual membership. Membership includes free entrance to our monthly workshops, chance to have your work published in our literary journal, Mahube, as well as many other things. Don't miss out!

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: botswanawriters@gmail.com

    Website: http://writersassociationofbotswana.blogspot.com

  • Creative Cape Town Opens September 16th

    Dates: 16 - 18 September 2011

    Creative Week Cape Town showcases creativity in design, music, film, theatre, business, innovation, digital media, fine arts and crafts in Cape Town.

    WHY?

    Creative Week Cape Town started as a legacy event for Cape Town’s World Design Capital 2014 bid. Inaugurated in September 2010, it aims to strengthen the local creative community by providing a platform on which local creative and innovative industries can showcase their work. This initiative builds on Creative Cape Town’s work communicating, supporting and facilitating the development of the creative and knowledge economy in the central city of Cape Town.

    WHEN?

    Creative Week Cape Town will run from 9 to 18 September 2011. It always takes place just before the Loerie Awards – South Africa’s premier advertising, communication, design and experiential media awards – to be hosted this year in Cape Town from 16 to 18 September 2011.

    WHERE?

    Events can be staged anywhere in Cape Town. To celebrate the establishment of The Fringe: Cape Town’s Design and Innovation District, a number of events are planned for this space in 2011.

    WHO? YOU!

    Creative Week Cape Town is a user-generated event, which means that events are independently organised by participants – and that means you. Creative Week Cape Town events will be promoted on this site, in the mainstream media and in niche publications, including those of Creative Cape Town and its partners.

    Creative Week Cape Town invites individuals and organisations involved in all aspects of Cape Town’s creative life – education, arts, design, innovation, advertising, music and service organisations – to participate. Events may include, but are not limited to, lectures, presentations, demonstrations and networking. The format is open to interpretation, so if you have an idea, turn it into an event.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: via online form here

    Website: http://www.creativecapetown.net/

  • Job Opening: English and Literature Teacher for Lions Club of Nakuru Schools (Kenya)

    Lions Club of Nakuru Schools (Melvin Jones Academy, Lions Primary and Nursery), an affiliate of the Lions Clubs International-the world’s largest service organization, seeks to recruit competent teachers to fill the following positions w.e.f September 2011.

    1. Biology and Chemistry up to GCE Advanced Level

    2. English and Literature up to GCE Advanced level

    Applicants for the above two positions should:

    * Possess a minimum of a Bachelor of Education degree in the relevant subjects.
    * Have served a minimum HOD in the British System of Education.

    Ladies are particularly encouraged to apply

    3. Computer Teacher /Instructor for Lions Nursery School

    4. A Special Education Needs Teacher

    Applicants for positions 3 and 4 should possess a Teaching Certificate and a Diploma in the relevant area

    Interested Candidates need to apply by 21st August 2011 to :

    The administrator,
    Lions Club of Nakuru Schools,
    P.O. Box 12109 20100
    Nakuru

    Or by email: mjlanakuru@ymail.com

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: mjlanakuru@ymail.com

    For submissions: mjlanakuru@ymail.com

  • Call for Submissions: Edited Collection on Contemporary African American Satire in all Media

    Deadline: 1 January 2012

    Proposals for essays should be between 750 and 1000 words and should articulate a clear critical question in relation to a set of primary and secondary texts. It is the editors’ view (in accordance with the view of most academic presses) that a successful edited collection needs a clear and compelling organizing narrative and, thus, successful proposals will articulate clearly which critical narratives are at work within their rhetorical structures and why. Completed proposals are due on January 1, 2012 and can be sent to either Derek C. Maus (mausdc@potsdam.edu) or James J. Donahue (donahujj@potsdam.edu) or mailed in hard-copy to Derek Maus, 244 Morey Hall, State University of New York at Potsdam, Potsdam, NY, 13676. We welcome any inquiries or questions about the volume prior to this submission date as well. Submitters will be notified about the status of their essays by February 1, 2012 and final essays of 4500-6000 words will be due on June 1, 2012 with a projected publication date some time in 2013. We have received strong initial interest in this volume from a major academic press and have every reason to believe it will be accepted for publication along to this timeline.

    Possible topics (others are welcomed)

    * Dawolu Jabari Anderson (visual artist; The Birth of a Nation: Yo! Bumrush the Show)
    * Damali Ayo (conceptual artist and writer; rent-a-negro.com; Obaminstan!: Land Without Racism)
    * Kevin Avery (“Siskel and Negro”; Thugs: the Musical)
    * Paul Beatty (novelist; The White Boy Shuffle; Slumberland; Tuff; etc.)
    * W. Kamau Bell (The W. Kamau Bell Curve: Ending Racism in About an Hour; Face Full of Flour; Laughter Against the Machine)
    * Black Dynamite (film)
    * Dave Chappelle (Chappelle’s Show; stand-up comedy)
    * Chocolate News (short-lived African American-themed satirical news-show on Comedy Central hosted by David Alan Grier)
    * Rusty Cundieff (Fear of a Black Hat; Tales from the Hood; etc.)
    * Ego Trip (magazine and website)
    * Trey Ellis (novelist, screenwriter; Platitudes; Home Repairs; Right Here, Right Now)
    * Patrice Evans (Negropedia: The Assimilated Negro's Crash Course on the Modern Black Experience; “The Assimilated Negro” blog)
    * Percival Everett (novelist; A History of the African-American People (Proposed) by Strom Thurmond, as told to Percival Everett & James Kincaid; Erasure; I Am Not Sidney Poitier; etc.)
    * Donald Glover (stand-up comedy; Community; "Childish Gambino" hip=hop performances)
    * David Hammons (visual and conceptual artist; "African American Flag")
    * D. L. Hughley (stand-up comedy; D.L. Hughley Breaks the News [CNN show])
    * Darius James (Negrophobia: An Urban Parable)
    * Charles Johnson (novelist; Oxherding Tale; Middle Passage; etc.)
    * Mat Johnson (novelist; Pym; Hunting in Harlem)
    * Keith Knight (cartoonist of The K Chronicles and (Th)ink)
    * Spike Lee (filmmaker; School Daze; Bamboozled)
    * Aaron McGruder (Boondocks comic strip and television show)
    * Paul Mooney (stand-up comedy; television)
    * Tracy Morgan (stand-up comedy; Saturday Night Live; 30 Rock)
    * Z.Z. Packer (short-story writer; novelist; Drinking Coffee Elsewhere)
    * Ishmael Reed (novelist; The Terrible Twos; The Terrible Threes; Japanese By Spring; Juice!)
    * Chris Rock (Saturday Night Live; The Chris Rock Show; stand-up comedy)
    * Wanda Sykes (stand-up comedy; various television shows)
    * Baratunde Thurston (writer and editor for The Onion; Better Than Crying: Poking Fun at Politics, the Press & Pop Culture; How to Be Black)
    * Touré (novelist, short-story writer; journalist; Soul City; The Portable Promised Land)
    * Robert Townsend (Hollywood Shuffle)
    * Keenen Ivory Wayans and other Wayans family members (In Living Color; I’m Gonna Get You Sucka; White Chicks; etc.)
    * Colson Whitehead (novelist; The Intuitionist; John Henry Days; Apex Hides the Hurt; etc.)
    * George C. Wolfe (The Colored Museum)

    Patrice Evans, who blogs under the moniker “The Assimilated Negro,” published an online essay on the ebonyjet.com website late in 2007 that lamented the seeming lack of satire in mainstream black culture:

    [W]hy does it seem like black people are missing the boat -- treating the SS Satire like a slave ship? Sometimes it feels we only get the joke if it's the lowest common denominator, otherwise we have to put on our suits and let Oprah or Tyler Perry hold our hands and make sure there's a heavy Maya Angelou level of respect.[…] Where are the black branded satirists? Maybe we don't get it. Maybe we don't care to get it. Are there no satirists because of the lack of demand? It can't be for lack of opportunity. Every week we get a new race-event begging for lampooning: Watson, Jena 6, OJ, Imus, Michael Richards, Vick .... all present unique opportunities to make a joke that might mean a little more to someone with melanin.

    Evans goes on to engage in some “speculative armchair psychology” and wonder openly if what he calls the “critical”, “literary”, and “detached” elements of satire are not barriers to African Americans’ participation in this mode of cultural commentary. Not surprisingly, Evans’s article garnered numerous online responses, both in its original form and in numerous repostings around the Internet. We seek to assemble a collection of scholarly essays about satire in contemporary African American culture in order to develop that response in both depth and breadth, examining both the premises that undergird Evans’s original claims and a range of African American satirists working in a variety of media over the past thirty years.
    Our volume seeks to build on the solid foundation laid by Darryl Dickson-Carr’s African American Satire (Univ. of Missouri Press, 2001) and the contributors to Dana Williams’s collection African American Humor, Irony and Satire (Cambridge Scholars, 2007). To that end we seek essays that critically examine African American satirical works since 1980, with an eye towards synthesizing a nuanced picture not only of the variety of forms in which African American satire appears but also of the larger media environment in which it participates. We invite close readings of individual satirists (a list of potential topics is appended below, but we welcome essays on other artists, especially women, from all media) as well as overarching meta-critical and theoretical discussions of themes, (sub)genres, or other aspects of the satirical mode as it relates to contemporary African American culture. We also would welcome essays that examine the use of satire by artists and within works not usually associated with the mode (e.g., Dickson-Carr’s discussion of Toni Morrison’s Jazz in his book) and wish to emphasize that our definition of satire is not limited solely to comedic or satiric-parodic works.

    Proposals for essays should be between 750 and 1000 words and should articulate a clear critical question in relation to a set of primary and secondary texts. It is the editors’ view (in accordance with the view of most academic presses) that a successful edited collection needs a clear and compelling organizing narrative and, thus, successful proposals will articulate clearly which critical narratives are at work within their rhetorical structures and why. Completed proposals are due on January 1, 2012 and can be sent to either Derek C. Maus (mausdc@potsdam.edu) or James J. Donahue (donahujj@potsdam.edu) or mailed in hard-copy to Derek Maus, 244 Morey Hall, State University of New York at Potsdam, Potsdam, NY, 13676. We welcome any inquiries or questions about the volume prior to this submission date as well. Submitters will be notified about the status of their essays by February 1, 2012 and final essays of 4500-6000 words will be due on June 1, 2012 with a projected publication date some time in 2013. We have received strong initial interest in this volume from a major academic press and have every reason to believe it will be accepted for publication along to this timeline.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: mausdc@potsdam.edu or donahujj@potsdam.edu

    For submissions: mausdc@potsdam.edu or donahujj@potsdam.edu

  • Call for Papers: Arabic/ Islamic Cultural Studies in Nigeria Conference

    Deadline: 30 September 2011

    THE UNIVERSITY OF IBADAN, 7-9 FEBRUARY, 2012

    In 1961, an Arabic unit was established in the University of Ibadan to assuage the desire of scholars who were desirous of accessing information on the history of North African societies most of which were written or documented in Arabic. Led by the famous American historian, John Hunwick, the Department later became a full-fledged Department in 1962. It began to cater for the needs of Nigerians and indeed West African scholars through its programmes in Arabic and Islamic studies broadly defined even as it has facilitated the establishment of similar Departments in Universities all around the country. This conference is, therefore, being organized to mark its golden jubilee anniversary. The conferences shall attempt to look back at the various patterns and contours in Arabic and Islamic culture and scholarship in Nigeria since 1962 and attempt to chart a new course for the future. The need appears to have arisen for us to do a critical appraisal of the current state, future destiny, fortunes and benefits in the study of Arabic/Islamic culture in an era in which globalization and the emergence of new state and non-state actors are shaping and re-shaping cultural and cross-cultural identities and politics. Of what use is Arabic-Islamic culture and scholarship to Nigerian and indeed African future? What new directions could be suggested for the teaching of Arabic-Islamic culture in the West-African region? How have the various departments of Arabic and Islamic Studies faired in Nigeria today, what are the challenges impeding their vision and mission and what prospects lie ahead of them? How might we begin to gauge the impacts of the graduates of Arabic-Islamic culture on national and international alliances and development particularly in the West African sub region since 1962? How might Arabic and Islamic culture be critical for the development of interdisciplinary studies in the academia all around the world? What are the fissures, contradictions and paradoxes that could be observed in-between Arabic-Islamic culture as taught inside the Ivory Towers and the culture outside the universities? The conference organizers would welcome papers which engage with these and similar issues. Such papers may benefit from the following sub-themes which are evidently not exhaustive:

    • Arabic and Islamic Studies in Nigerian Universities since 1962.
    • Arabic/Islamic Culture and Scholarship in West Africa in the contemporary period.
    • Graduates of Arabic and Islamic Studies in Nigeria's Public and International Spheres since 1962.
    • Arabic and Islamic Studies and the Information and Communication Technology (ICT).
    • Arabic and Islamic Studies in the Arts and the Humanities.
    • Arabic and Islamic studies in African Universities and non-formal Quranic Schools.
    • En-Gendering Arabic and Islamic Studies in Nigeria.
    • Muslim NGOs and Arabic-Islamic Scholarship in Nigeria.
    • Arabic-Islamic culture and the Muslim Youth in Nigeria.
    • New Strategies and directions in Arabic-Islamic culture and scholarship around the World.
    • Pedagogy, epistemology and Arabic-Islamic scholarship.
    • New horizons in graduate studies in Arabic-Islamic culture

    The conference shall feature three keynote speakers all of whom are internationally acclaimed and renowned Professors of Arabic/Islamic culture.

    1. Hasan Ahmed Ibrahim, Professor of African, Islamic and Middle Eastern History and Civilization, Dean, International Institute of Islamic Thought and Civilization (ISTAC), International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

    Title of Proposed Lead Paper: "The Role of Arabic/Islamic Sources in Enriching African Historiography and Historical Legacy".

    2. Amidu Olalekan Sanni, Professor of Arabic, Department of Religious Studies, Lagos State University (LASU), Lagos, Nigeria.

    Title of Lead Paper: Textual and Source Criticism in Modern Scholarship on Quranic Studies.

    3. Ishaq. O. Oloyede, Professor of Islamic studies and Vice Chancellor, University of Ilorin, Ilorin, Nigeria

    Title of paper not yet decided

    Languages of the Conference: Arabic and English

    Abstracts of not more than 250 words should be sent to the conference Secretary/convener, Dr Ibrahim Uthman via the following e-mail address not later than 30 September 2011. fiftyarabicyears@yahoo.com. The Ag. Head of Department and Chairman of the Conference, Afis. A. Oladosu PhD, can be reached via the following e-mail addresses: arabic_studies@mail.ui.edu.ng afism3@yahoo.com. For phone contacts: The Chairman and Secretary can be reached through the following lines: +234-8055-11-5001/ +234-80-3620-1617

    Registration fee: 100 Dollars

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: arabic_studies@mail.ui.edu.ng or afism3@yahoo.com

    For submissions: arabic_studies@mail.ui.edu.ng or afism3@yahoo.com

  • Symposium: History of Printing in the Languages and Countries of the Middle East (Egypt/ MENA)

    Date: 27 - 29 September 2011

    Following three successful international symposia on The History of Printing and Publishing in the Languages and Countries of the Middle East, held at the Gutenberg Museum in Mainz (2002), at the Bibliothèque nationale de France in Paris (2005) and at Universität Leipzig in Germany (2008), we are now convening the fourth meeting on the same themes. This will take place in Bibliotheca Alexandrina, 27-29 September 2011. This Symposium, however, will not be confined to printing in Arabic and Muslim languages, but will, as before, cover a range of Middle Eastern languages and scripts.

    History of Printing and Publishing
    in the Languages and Countries of the Middle East
    Fourth International Symposium
    Calligraphy Center-Bibliotheca Alexandrina
    27-29 September 2011

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: secretariat@bibalex.org

    Website: http://www.bibalex.org/

  • Invitation to the Tsebe Reading and Book Club: a Mandela Day Inspiration (South Africa)

    Date: 24 July 2011

    The wRite associates, in support in support of the Nelson Mandela day, invite you to attend the launch of the Tsebe Reading and Book Club!

    Time: 13H00-15H00

    Venue: 118 Ga-Tsebe

    Theme: Take action, inspire change, make every day a Mandela day

    Programme of activities:

    • Launch presentation
    • Speech by councilor Kiffie Motsepe
    • Reading and poetry performances
    • Music

    This initiative is in support of the Nelson Mandela Day which seeks to empower communities everywhere. For more information, please contact Lerato Tseu at telephone 0117914102/3585/ email lovenia@writeassociates.co.za or Monty Matjani at 0788653429.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: lovenia@writeassociates.co.za

    For submissions: lovenia@writeassociates.co.za

    Website: http://writeassociates.co.za/

  • Jozi Book Fair 2011 (South Africa) Opens August 6th

    Dates: 6 - 8 August 2011

    Jozi Book fair invites all writers, poets, playwrights and friends to contact us if they would like to participate in the upcoming Jozi Book Fair.

    Jozi Book Fair is at it again with another fair that promises to be vibrant, topical, engaging and fun. With over 70 authors, 50 libraries and numerous study groups participating in this years’ event, Jozi Book Fair is indeed the fair for readers, writers and small publishers. Would you like to read your work, launch your book, publication or newsletter or simply take part in network conversations with other writers and publishers?

    Because unknown writers hardly ever get a chance to share their work with a broader public, Jozi Book Fair invites you to participate in the 2nd Jozi Book Fair, hosted at the Museum Africa, Newtown, on 6, 7 and 8 August 2010. Jozi Book Fair offers all small and progressive writers, publishers, poets and illustrators with a free space to launch books, a forum to showcase their publications and work, to network, as well as the opportunity to develop alternative approaches and strategies.

    If you would like to participate in this years’ book fair send us an e-mail at jozibookfair@khanyacollege.org.za

    All submissions must be accompanied by your full contact details, a copy of your ID and a letter of declaration stating that the submitted work is your own original work. Please note that works submitted cannot be returned to the authors.

    Please send your submission to jozibookfair@khanyacollege.org.za.

    Or you can drop them off at:

    House of Movements
    5th Floor, 123 Pritchard Street
    Corner of Mooi and Pritchard
    Johannesburg
    Phone: 011 336 9190
    Contact: Thobile Disemelo

    Jozi Book Fair is organised by Khanya College. Education for Liberation.

    Via: basa.co.za

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: jozibookfair@khanyacollege.org.za

    For submissions: jozibookfair@khanyacollege.org.za

    Website: http://www.jozibookfair.org.za/

  • Volunteer Judge Wanted for this Year's Ken Saro-Wiwa Poetry & Writing Contest for Nigerian Youth

    The Niger Delta Restoration of Hope (NGO) sponsors the annual Ken Saro-Wiwa Poetry & Writing Contest for Nigerian youth.

    If you are interested in being one of the judges for this year's competition, please send a message to us at NDRestorationofHope@yahoo.com. PLEASE RESPOND AS SOON AS POSSIBLE. All poetry reviews and voting will be conducted via e-mail communications.

    Please put "Volunteer Judge" in the subject line of your e-mail.

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: NDRestorationofHope@yahoo.com

    Website: see their FB fan page

  • Call for Papers: Dis/connects: African Studies in the Digital Age (UK)

    Deadline: 31 October 2011

    The digital revolution is profoundly affecting African studies. New digital resources are making available large areas of content, as well as greatly improving access to bibliographies. In Africa, governments and NGOs are publishing online, some publishers are moving to print on demand and e-books, and international academic journals are increasingly becoming available in university and national libraries.

    Yet the story, as is well-known, is far from straightforward or unproblematic. This conference will mark the 50th anniversary of the founding of SCOLMA by taking a critical look at the field of African studies and how it is changing. In particular, although there has been much discussion of new digital resources and what their creators plan to do, we have a limited understanding of their impact on their users and on knowledge production in general. For example, what are the implications for historical research of the availability of digitised sources, and of the choices made in their selection? How do social science researchers work in a field in which much, but not everything, is now available online? Are e-journals – or indeed mobile phones – beginning to change the research process in Africa? And, more generally, how have broader historical and political developments changed African studies and librarianship over the last half-century?

    We welcome papers on these themes across the humanities, arts, social sciences and sciences. Papers may deal with digital content, whether digitised or born-digital, of any kind, e.g. archives and manuscripts; audio-visual material; maps; newspapers; books, journals and theses; photographs, prints, drawings and paintings; ephemera; statistical databases; and social media.

    The conference will bring together academics and other researchers with librarians and archivists. We aim thus to have a productive exchange of expertise, experience and analysis on the question of knowledge production in African studies.

    Themes may include, but are not limited to: • How scholars, researchers, librarians and archivists use digitised resources. • How African studies is changing, and the place of the digital revolution in these changes. • Access to, selection of, and training in the use of digital resources in the library context. Are resources under-used? • To pay or not to pay? How easy is it for researchers to find subscription e-resources? And for libraries to fund them? What is the balance of free and charged resources in the research process? How well do the models for making e-resources available in Africa work? • How well does user consultation work? • Access to the technology that underpins e-resources. • Digital scholarship: are scholars in African studies using digital collections to generate new intellectual products? • The impact of mobile phone technology on African studies. • How patchy is the creation of digital resources, and what – and who – is being left behind? • Language in Africa and new technology.

    One-page abstracts of papers on these themes are warmly welcomed. If you would like to give a paper, please send your abstract to

    Lucy McCann SCOLMA Secretary Email: lucy.mccann@bodleian.ox.ac.uk. Tel.: 01865 270908

    THE DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS IS 31 OCTOBER 2011.

    Papers in French are welcome if a summary is provided in English.

    SCOLMA: The UK Libraries and Archives Group on Africa
    50th ANNIVERSARY CONFERENCE
    Dis/connects: African Studies in the Digital Age
    Oxford, 25–26 June 2012

    Contact Information:

    For inquiries: lucy.mccann@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

    For submissions: lucy.mccann@bodleian.ox.ac.uk

    Website: http://www2.lse.ac.uk/library/scolma/

  1. Job Opening: Head of Editorial Department for Panorama Publications (South Africa)
  2. Job Opening: Copywriter/ Editor for African Foresight (South Africa)
  3. Proofreader/ Editor Wanted at a Well-established Transcription Company (South Africa)
  4. Job Opening: Assistant Editor for Beeld South Africa
  5. Job Opening: Assistant Editor for Sondag (South Africa)