Indian Ocean World Centre

Call for Collaborators

The Indian Ocean World Centre, McGill University, under the directorship of Prof. Gwyn Campbell, invites collaborators to work on an interdisciplinary research project application entitled, Climate Change and its Impact on Vulnerable Coastal Lowland and Island Communities of the Indian Ocean World, 1600 to the Present-Day.” This project is intended to last for seven years and to be funded by a Partnership Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

The project aims to:

  1. Use innovative technology-based tools on a vast trove of historical records and cutting-edge scientific method to create a data-driven ‘deep history’ of adverse environmental and climatic events in the Indian Ocean World (IOW), a macro-region running from East Africa and the Middle East to South, Southeast and East Asia.
  2. Gain an understanding of how such events have impacted lowland littoral populations of the IOW since circa 1600.
  3. Identify strategies and policies that could help these communities of the Global South, notably the most vulnerable―women, children, the impoverished, socially marginalised, ethnic and other minorities, and migrants—prepare for and manage future environmental risk.

A summary of the project can be found here.

As part of this project, we envisage collaborations between practitioners, stakeholders, and scholars from the humanities and natural and social sciences. We especially encourage interest from under-represented groups, and from those based in institutions in the IOW. Those who are interested in learning more about the project, should contact. Prof. Gwyn Campbell (gwyn.campbell@mcgill.ca) and the Indian Ocean World Centre (iowc@mcgill.ca). We look forward to hearing from you.

CFP: JIOWS – ECR Online Workshop on IOW Studies

Download a PDF copy of the CFP here.

“Visual Portrayals of Environmental Crises” Conference Schedule Available Now

The schedule for our upcoming conference, “Visual Portrayals of Environmental Crises in the Indian Ocean World, Past to Present,” taking place 15-16 May, 2024 is now available.

Check out our conference page here.

Call for Papers: Visual Portrayals of Environmental Crises in the Indian Ocean World, Past to Present

The effects of the current climate crisis are regularly beamed around the world with the use of shocking images and video recordings. This applies no more so than in the Indian Ocean World (IOW), a macro-region stretching from eastern Africa and the Middle East to South, Southeast and East Asia. Such recent crises include floods and locusts that devastated northeastern Africa (2019-20), flooding of the Indus River Valley, Pakistan (2022), and drought and fires across mainland and island Southeast Asia (2023).

Some of the visual portrayals of these crises fall into the category of what might be described as “poverty porn,” particularly in depictions of northeastern Africa. Others take wide-angled shots displaying destruction in the foreground set against a background of stunning “natural” beauty. Still others simply display infrastructural destruction and emaciated bodies as portraits of disaster. Although diverse, many of these images may reinforce long-standing (neo-)colonialist tropes of the Indian Ocean World as a series of mismanaged and over-populated ‘paradises,’ whose peoples are helpless against an unpredictable climate.

However, images of environmental hazards and events in the IOW, and their consequences, have a deep, mostly unexplored history, represented in a multitude of ways, from simple sketches to more complex forms such as paintings, engravings, daguerreotypes, photographs, animations, videos, and films. Some of these were produced “live,” others were produced at a distance in time and space, mostly second hand. In all, a range of techniques were used to shape and manipulate the desired image. All had an aim and an audience in mind.

This conference focuses on visual representations of environmental crises and disasters in the Indian Ocean World from early times to the present day. It seeks to ground them in history, including the development of global structures such as capitalism, (neo-)colonialism, and developmentalism. Thus, we encourage submissions that discuss the authorship, techniques, aims, and wider historical context of images of current and past environmental events. With this in mind, we encourage interdisciplinarity, and submissions from scholars based in the humanities, social sciences, and cognate disciplines.

We invite proposals that address either a single image or a series of images, illustrations, or multimedia from any location(s) in the Indian Ocean World, referring to any time-period. Interested scholars may think about several approaches and themes:

  • The meanings of “climate crisis” and “environmental crisis” in different contexts, and how such “crises” are depicted visually.
  • Explanations of the place and execution of such illustrations.
  • The aim behind visual portrayals of environmental events and their impacts, and the audiences they are intended for.
  • What such illustrations obscure, as well as what they show.
  • How such visual portrayals of IOW environmental events might contest how crises are depicted in global media, NGOs, and international organisations.

The conference will take place in an online format on 15-17 May 2024.

Proposals should come in the form of a 200–300-word abstract with a 100-word scholarly biography. They should be submitted to Prof. Gwyn Campbell (gwyn.campbell@mcgill.ca), Dr. Philip Gooding (philip.gooding@mcgill.ca), and Dr. Carleigh Nicholls at the Indian Ocean World Centre (iowc@mcgill.ca). The deadline for submission of proposals is 18 November 2023.

We intend to publish selected papers in a special issue of the Journal of Indian Ocean World Studies (https://jiows.mcgill.ca/).

IOWC Fall Speaker Series Schedule

The IOWC’s Fall Speaker Series Schedule is now available. Talks will take place monthly on Wednesdays at 3pm.

View the schedule here.

Additionally, new episodes of the Indian Ocean World Podcast will continue to be released on all major podcast services.