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A conversation with Cajetan Iheka, Associate Professor in the English Department at Yale University, where his research and teaching focus on African and Caribbean literatures, ecocriticism, ecomedia, and world literature. He is the editor of the Modern Language Association Options for Teaching volume, Teaching Postcolonial Environmental Literature and Media, and co-editor of African Migration Narratives: Politics, Race, and Space. He also serves as the deputy editor of African Studies Review, the multidisciplinary journal of the African Studies Association. In this conversation, we discuss the key concepts and arguments in the book about centering Africa in discourses on media ecologies, materiality, and infrastructure in the media studies and the environmental humanities. His book, African Ecomedia: Network Forms, Planetary Politics, the occasion for our conversation today, was published by Duke University Press in late-August 2021.
By Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy5
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A conversation with Cajetan Iheka, Associate Professor in the English Department at Yale University, where his research and teaching focus on African and Caribbean literatures, ecocriticism, ecomedia, and world literature. He is the editor of the Modern Language Association Options for Teaching volume, Teaching Postcolonial Environmental Literature and Media, and co-editor of African Migration Narratives: Politics, Race, and Space. He also serves as the deputy editor of African Studies Review, the multidisciplinary journal of the African Studies Association. In this conversation, we discuss the key concepts and arguments in the book about centering Africa in discourses on media ecologies, materiality, and infrastructure in the media studies and the environmental humanities. His book, African Ecomedia: Network Forms, Planetary Politics, the occasion for our conversation today, was published by Duke University Press in late-August 2021.