(Re)Imagining SWANA Futurities

18-19 November, 2021

About SWANA Futurities Virtual Conference

Our collective vision is rooted in our collective liberation as racialized women, our vision is grounded in principles of feminist decolonial/anticolonial praxes and struggles. In line with this understanding, we envision this conference to uplift the voices of the people of the global majority, particularly those with a feminist agenda and are working towards a liberatory future in the SWANA region.

Most activism is brought about by us ordinary people
— Patricia Hill-Collins

Conference Agenda

“The people demand the fall of the regime”. The chant heard across the streets of Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Yemen, Bahrain, and Syria during the 2011 uprisings echoes and haunts the SWANA region (South West Asia North Africa popularly termed MENA) that dared to stand up against oppressive authoritarian regimes. A decade later, the Arab Spring uprisings have paradoxically overwhelmed and underwhelmed many of these societies wherein memories of justice and freedom have become entangled with nationalist and global challenges. 

We recognize that the Arab Spring did not start or end in 2011 and it is essential to acknowledge the ongoing everyday resistances that have marked 2011 as an important year, but have continued to shift paradigms and structures in the SWANA region. Our aim is to highlight the paradoxes and tensions that have (re)surfaced since 2011 and envision alternative SWANA futurities that represent the diverse communities that led these revolutions. 

The aim of this conference is to provide the space for epistemological and methodological interventions in the study of the SWANA region that is informed by a feminist, anti-capitalist, and decolonial/anti-colonial framework. This conference aims to centre SWANA peoples’ lived experiences, especially marginalized communities including women and other minorities indigenous to the region. This can include but is not limited to Yazidis, Armenians, Berber/Amazigh, Druze, Alawites, Assyrians, Nubians, Bedouin communities. 

Panel One: Histories and Geographies

November 18th, 9:30am-11:00am EST

How do we (re)imagine pluralist histories of the region and (re)define notions of collective memory(ies)? How do we reclaim spaces from within the nation-state and across imperial borders?

Panel Two: SWANA feminisms

November 18th, 11:30am-1:00pm EST

How have local feminist pieces of knowledge contributed to alternative modes of thinking? How do we understand everyday strategies of survival and regenerative and creative resistances?

Panel Three: Resistance and Refusal

November 18th, 1:30pm - 3:00pm EST

How can we reconceptualize and analyze resistance, refusal and revolution? What kind of resistance(s) are we centring? What mechanisms can be used to assess the impact of co-optation of resistance by international actors and dominant neoliberal forces?

Panel Four: Time/Temporality and Modernities

November 19th, 9:30am-11:00am EST

How does our past continue to inform our present and how do we redefine our futures? How can we critically theorize and understand the notion of universal colonial time in relation to knowledge production and persistence of violence within the SWANA region?

Panel Five: SWANA Futurities

November 19th, 11:30am-1:00pm EST

What do SWANA futurities look like? What is being challenged and what kinds of worlds are being unraveled? How do we re-envision belonging and collective liberation?

Keynote Speech - Sara Salem

November 19th, 1:30pm - 2:30pm EST

This talk explores anticolonial memory and anticolonial archiving as entry points into broader questions of temporality, the politics of the present and imaginings of the future. I focus on the varying ways in which anticolonial pasts express themselves today, and what this might tell us about how the crisis of the anticolonial past has structured the crisis of the postcolonial present. To do this, I think through forms of anticolonial memory - some fleeting and fragmented, others institutionalised and material - and ask how these different forms of memory constitute different types of anticolonial archives. At the same time, I explore the idea of anticolonial archives themselves, and how the impossibilities of archiving mean that anticolonial traces often remain connected to the ‘big histories’ or ‘big figures’ of decolonisation. Engaging with feminist debates around the archive, I am interested in troubling the idea of anticolonial archives as well, asking how other imaginings of the future that existed point to the limits of the ‘anticolonial archive’ itself.

This conference was generously funded by the Department of Politics at York University and co-sponsored by the Association for Middle East Women Studies (AMEWS)

CONTACT US

swanayorku@gmail.com