Monday | 23. 6. 2025 - 24. 6. 2025
conference
Asixoxe (Let´s Talk!) Conference on African Philosophy
Organized by the Department of Political Philosophy and Globalization Research
Detailed information
Call for Papers (pdf)
Asixoxe – Let’s Talk! Conference on African Philosophy 2025
Understanding Decolonisation and the Return of African Cultural Heritage
The debate on decolonisation is far from over, as critics endlessly examine the many signs of colonisation over time. The current debate on the restitution of African cultural heritage removed from the continent during colonisation illustrates the issue. Critics and protagonists of the return of this heritage to its original owners clash over various issues including the nature and the extent of the removed heritage; the legality and legitimacy of the repatriation of artefacts displaced from their original environment; the philosophical and anthropological significance as well as the political impact of the restitution of African heritage; the aesthetic value of the artefacts to be returned, as well as their subsequent social and economic value for both Europe and Africa; the relevance for African countries to recover, in a globalised and constantly changing world, a legacy that has been exiled for so many years.
In 2025, the Asixoxe – Let’s Talk! Conference on African Philosophy aims at exploring this complex debate through multidisciplinary approaches. It strives to go beyond conventional discourses for which the return to the past and the (re)discovery of the pre-colonial African legacy represents the key to decolonising the continent. The conference aims at exploring the meaning of the idea of "return" and its meaning for the decolonisation of Africa. "Return" becomes a mythical category in African cultural imaginary that underlies various theoretical frameworks including concepts such as Ubuntu, Ujamaa, Sankofa, African authenticity, Negritude, the return to the "roots", and so on. The conference aspires to assess the scope and relevance of this "metaphysics of return", as well as their potential alternatives responding to the challenges facing Africa now.
We invite papers that explore issues regarding the concept of decolonisation and theories of return in an African framework. The conference interrogates a range of philosophical, political, literary, artistic, and communicational topics, such as:
•The colonial gaze on precolonial and modern African artefacts.
•Theories concerning the concepts of restitution and return.
•The philosophy and profile of institutions dealing with African cultural legacy, such as museums, art galleries, African film industry, publishing houses, and so on.
•The nature and the extent of African cultural heritage.
•The idea of justice and reparation with respect to the African cultural heritage in the context of decolonisation.
•The reception and the enhancement of restituted artefacts by African people, governments, educational and cultural institutions.•African and Afro-diasporic philosophies of arts.
•Property and copyright associated with African artefacts removed during colonisation.
Asixoxe – Let’s Talk! Conference on African Philosophy is jointly organized by the Professorship of African and Afrophone Philosophies of the University of Bayreuth and the Department of Political Philosophy and Globalization Research of the Institute of Philosophy of the Czech Academy of Sciences. The conference will be held in a hybrid form, at the Institute of Philosophy of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague, Czech Republic, and online, on 23-24 June 2025.
Titles and abstracts of 200–250 words, as well as any queries, should be sent by 31 May 2025 to Dr Albert Kasanda,
Programme
Monday, 23rd June 2025
Venue: Akademické konferenční centrum (AKC)
Husova 4a, 110 00 Praha 1
14:00-14:30 Online connection and welcome
14:30-14:45 Opening address
14:45- 15:45 Keynote lecture
Ubuntu as an African path to social sustainability.
Rianna Oelofsen, University of Fort Hare, South Africa.
15:45-16:00 Coffee break
16:00- 17:00 Panel 1: Literature, culture, and metaphysics of return
The myth of the marvellous to free the mind: Afro-surrealism in Swahili literature as a strategy for decolonisation.
Cristina Nicolini, University of Turin, Turin. (Online)
Metaphysics of return as consolidation of contradictions: A Transcolonial awakening.
Uche Miriam Nwafor and Anthony C. Ajah, University of Nigeria Nsukka, Nigeria. (Online).
17:00-19:00 Dinner Break
19:00- Film screening
Title: Philosophical Journey: DRC.
Language: French/Czech subtitles.
Venue: Kino Atlas, 4, Ke Štvanici 371, Praha 8.
Tuesday, 24th June 2025
Venue: Akademické konferenční centrum (AKC)
Husova 4a, 110 00 Praha 1
09:00-09:15 Online connection and welcome
09:15-10:15 Keynote lecture
Metaphysics of return in digitality: An African discourse.
Claudia Favarato, Humboldt Fellow/University of Bayreuth, Germany.
10:15-10:30 Coffee break
10:30-12:30 Panel 2: Cultural traditions and modernity
African philosophy in Japan and the importance of comparative philosophy.
Tetsuya Kono, Rikkyo University, Japan.
Revisiting the nature and the extent of African cultural heritage.
Peter Oni, University of Lagos, Nigeria.
Tracing notions of the nonhuman in precolonial African thought.
Alena Rettová, University of Bayreuth, Germany.
12:30-14:00 Lunch
14:00-15:30 Panel 3: Aesthetics, ethics, and cultural legacy.
Reclaiming aesthetics: African and Afro-diasporic philosophies of arts and cultural expression.
Kole Odutole, University of Florida, USA.
One-child ethics in the paradigm of postcolonialism: Identifying problems.
Jan Greguš, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic.
(Re)thinking the return of African cultural stolen legacy.
Albert Kasanda, Institute of Philosophy, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague.
15:30-16:00 Coffee break
16:00 - Film screening
Title: Philosophical Journeys: DRC.
Language: French/English subtitles.
Venue: Akademické konferenční centrum (AKC),
Husova 4a, 110 00 Praha 1.
Philosophical Journeys: DRC
Directed and produced by Anna Sowa and Remi Sowa, Chouette Films
Philosophical Journeys: DRC opens new channels of African philosophy, pushing us to rethink the boundaries and forms of philosophy as such. Next to the academic study of philosophical texts, the film brings the realm of lived experience into focus as a central source of philosophical insight. Embedded in the day-to-day life of individuals, filled with struggles, pressures and injustices of current environmental and ethical crises, is the philosophical notion of astonishment: the questioning of what is going on behind appearances. The film calls for the inclusion of African languages and a variety of textual genres, including poetry, novels, oral literature, theatre, and digital genres, into philosophical studies. Our guide through this philosophical landscape will be Albert Kasanda, a Congolese scholar based at the Institute of Philosophy of the Czech Academy of Sciences. He will invite us to go beyond conventional discourses on African philosophy and begin to see the diversity and depth of philosophical thought across the continent, with a particular focus on the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Philosophical Journeys: DRC is a short documentary film emerging from the research project Philosophy and Genre: Creating a Textual Basis for African Philosophy, led by Alena Rettová, University of Bayreuth. The film has been made thanks to the funding from the European Research Council, grant agreement ID: 818343.