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UID:news2143@dg.philhist.unibas.ch
DTSTAMP;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20241119T114216
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20241122T161500
SUMMARY:Ademide Adelusi-Adeluyi (Howard University): Lagos Life: Streets\, 
 Maps\, History (Carl Schlettwein Lecture 2024)
DESCRIPTION:Urban questions have taken on a new urgency in Africa\, as citi
 es like Lagos continue to grow faster and more intensely\, seemingly every
  day. Most often\, engagement with these cities is framed in terms of thei
 r problems: too crowded\, too disorganized\, too frenetic. But how should 
 we understand the ways the past shaped and produced this present? “Lagos
  Life” explores the histories of Lagos’s streets as markers of the mom
 ents of placemaking\, identity\, freedom\, and displacement in the ninetee
 nth century. It begins with the premise that Lagos’s streets offer impor
 tant clues and cues to the ways to ask\, analyze and frame the historica
 l and contemporary narratives of the city.\\r\\nMuch like the ways that co
 urt transcripts and letters can be read and analyzed to yield insights abo
 ut the past\, street names in Lagos bear witness to the ways that the city
 ’s pasts intertwine. In 1868\, an English-speaking Yorùbá court clerk 
 named all the newly paved streets in Lagos\, in the wake of new colonial i
 nfrastructure that was quickly taking root. Rather than superimposing Brit
 ish names or even a stripped-down numbering scheme\, the mostly indigenous
  Yorùbá names he chose reflect a remarkable archive of local priorities\
 , symbols\, events\, places\, and people.\\r\\nBy mapping the history of t
 hese streets\, and the encounters that Lagosians had in them\, this presen
 tation demonstrates how digital tools can be deployed in reading the urban
  fabric of Lagos Island as an archive of its own history. Old Lagos — th
 e city\, waterways and island — is never more visible in the archival re
 cord than when it is marked for destruction\, division\, or “civilizatio
 n\,” thus\, I use these maps\, documents and indigenous sources to recon
 struct the past\, in place.\\r\\nTrained as both historian and computer en
 gineer\, Ademide Adelusi-Adeluyi’s research into the history of Lagos\,
  Nigeria combines a set of interdisciplinary interests in urban studies\, 
 mapmaking and technology. Her forthcoming book\, Imagine Lagos\, explores
  Lagos’s mid-19th-century history\, rebuilding its past as a series of e
 ncounters: between men and women\, between the past and present\, enslaved
  and free\, Eko (the old town) and Lagos\, and between the land and lagoon
 s. She is an Associate Professor of History at Howard University\, and she
  received her PhD in History from NYU in 2016.
X-ALT-DESC:<p>Urban questions have taken on a new urgency in Africa\, as ci
 ties like Lagos continue to grow faster and more intensely\, seemingly eve
 ry day. Most often\, engagement with these cities is framed in terms of th
 eir problems: too crowded\, too disorganized\, too frenetic. But how shoul
 d we understand the ways the past shaped and produced this present? “Lag
 os Life” explores the histories of Lagos’s streets as markers of the m
 oments of placemaking\, identity\, freedom\, and displacement in the ninet
 eenth century. It begins with the premise that Lagos’s streets offer imp
 ortant clues&nbsp\;<em>and</em>&nbsp\;cues to the ways to ask\, analyze an
 d frame the historical and contemporary narratives of the city.</p>\n<p>Mu
 ch like the ways that court transcripts and letters can be read and analyz
 ed to yield insights about the past\, street names in Lagos bear witness t
 o the ways that the city’s pasts intertwine. In 1868\, an English-speaki
 ng Yorùbá court clerk named all the newly paved streets in Lagos\, in th
 e wake of new colonial infrastructure that was quickly taking root. Rather
  than superimposing British names or even a stripped-down numbering scheme
 \, the mostly indigenous Yorùbá names he chose reflect a remarkable arch
 ive of local priorities\, symbols\, events\, places\, and people.</p>\n<p>
 By mapping the history of these streets\, and the encounters that Lagosian
 s had in them\, this presentation demonstrates how digital tools can be de
 ployed in reading the urban fabric of Lagos Island as an archive of its ow
 n history. Old Lagos — the city\, waterways and island — is never more
  visible in the archival record than when it is marked for destruction\, d
 ivision\, or “civilization\,” thus\, I use these maps\, documents and 
 indigenous sources to reconstruct the past\, in place.</p>\n<p>Trained as 
 both historian and computer engineer\,&nbsp\;<strong>Ademide Adelusi-Adelu
 yi</strong>’s research into the history of Lagos\, Nigeria combines a se
 t of interdisciplinary interests in urban studies\, mapmaking and technolo
 gy. Her forthcoming book\,<em>&nbsp\;Imagine Lagos</em>\, explores Lagos
 ’s mid-19th-century history\, rebuilding its past as a series of encount
 ers: between men and women\, between the past and present\, enslaved and f
 ree\, Eko (the old town) and Lagos\, and between the land and lagoons. She
  is an Associate Professor of History at Howard University\, and she recei
 ved her PhD in History from NYU in 2016.</p>
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20241122T180000
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