17 März 2026
Zeit: 16:00  - 17:30
Veranstaltungen, Öffentliche Veranstaltung

Plotting Sovereignty, Staging Liberation

Join Prof. Kenny Cupers for his public lecture titled "Plotting Sovereignty, Staging Liberation" on Tuesday, March 17 at 16:00 CET.

Three people in front of a building

"Ngaahika Ndeenda" ("I Will Marry When I want"), performed at Kamĩrĩĩthũ, Kenya, 1977 (Photo by Sultan Somjee)

Prof. Kenny Cupers will deliver a public lecture titled Plotting Sovereignty, Staging Liberation as part of the MIASA Public Lecture Series on Tuesday, March 17 at 16:00 CET.

What can the limits of postcolonial land restitution tell us about our planetary crisis today? Scholarship in architectural, urban, and environmental history has become increasingly planetary in scope, yet it has rarely engaged issues of land and sovereignty that postcolonial and African historians have long studied.

This talk develops earthmaking as a framework — attending to the slow and sticky infrastructural reorganization of land, labor, and ecology in the postcolony. Drawing on collaborative fieldwork with original performers of Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o and Ngũgĩ wa Mirii’s I Will Marry When I Want (1977) and archival research on the forced resettlement village of Kamĩrĩĩthũ in Kenya’s former White Highlands, it traces how the plot, the plantation, the theatre, and the play became paradoxical instruments of postcolonial sovereignty.

The intervention is twofold: if the plantation rather than the city is the world-making spatial form in much of the global South, our analytical focus must reorient accordingly. And if the most precise theory of plantation afterlives was produced on an open-air stage before the bulldozers arrived, we must reckon with whose knowledge counts as analysis of our planetary crisis — and from what ground.

To join via Zoom, please use the following link: https://uni-freiburg.zoom-x.de/j/67594280991?pwd=cSeT8fLNlYFfpb8rAiWIz0rpIbLRal.1

Meeting-ID: 675 9428 0991
Code: UrbysAz7S

The MIASA Public Lecture Series features fellows in residence at MIASA. MIASA is dedicated to research in the Humanities and Social Sciences, with ‘Sustainable Governance’ as its central topic. The Institute offers time and space for supporting innovative academic projects of top international quality. It is located on the campus of the University of Ghana at Legon (Accra) and supported by the German Federal Ministry for Research, Technology and Space with co-funding from the University of Ghana.


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