Africa Talks Fall 2025 Events

September 24

LocationGoodman South Library, 2222 South Park St., Madison, WI 53713 

Moderator: Erica Ayisi, Indigenous Affairs multimedia reporter for PBS Wisconsin

Talk Title: Environmental Histories and the Cold War in the Indian Ocean

Talk Description: The  will focus on the small islands on the east coast of Africa – particularly those where human settlements began after European colonizers brought enslaved labor from Africa and Asia during the course of the seventeenth century. How can the history of these small islands be written together with that of continental Africa and what can such an approach contribute to African History/Studies?

Speaker

 

Yadhav Deerpaul

 

 

Yadhav is a PhD student in the African History and History of Science, Medicine and Technology programs at UW–Madison. Their doctoral dissertation is on the colonial and postcolonial history of small islands on the east coast of Africa.

 

Community Panelist

 

Christine Cina

 

 

Christine Cina is a professor in the History department at Madison Area Technical College  who extends her love for working with students to the UW Odyssey project on educational and career advising.

October 29

LocationGoodman South Library, 2222 South Park St., Madison, WI 53713 

Moderator: Erica Ayisi, Indigenous Affairs multimedia reporter for PBS Wisconsin

Talk Title: Beyond Isolation – Centering West African Arabophone Literature in African & Global Contexts

Talk Description: The twenty-first century is witnessing a naḥḍah (renaissance) of Arabic scholarship, emerging in the wake of the intellectual crisis produced by colonialism and its policies on Islamic and Arabic education. What distinguishes this period is an epistemic shift that has given rise to new textual genres and a new audience “equipped with new sensibilities, expectations, and worldly interests.” Yet, despite these significant developments, West African Arabic literature continues to be either neglected or studied in relative isolation, largely due to the persistent exclusion of Arabic from the broader critical discourse on sub-Saharan Africa. Such exclusion, I argue, amounts to the erasure of an entire literary tradition and its aesthetic values. This presentation seeks to reposition West African Arabophone literature within both the African literary studies and the wider field of global modern Arabic literature.

Speaker

 

Jibril Gabid

 

 

Jibril Gabid is a doctoral candidate and Arabic instructor in the Department of African Cultural Studies. His research seeks to explore ways of (re)imagining Islamic West Africa, foregrounding West Africa Muslim scholarship by shifting the gaze of Islamic knowledge production from an Arabo-centric one to one that privileges and affirms the contributions of Black West African Muslim intellectuals. Jibril received a bachelor’s degree in Arabic and Psychology from the University of Ghana and a master’s degree in Arabic Language and Literature from the American University in Cairo.

Community Panelist

 

Dr. Amr Youssef, MD

 

 

Dr. Amr A. Youssef is a cardiologist in Madison, Wisconsin and is affiliated with multiple hospitals in the area, including UW Health University Hospital and UnityPoint Health Meriter. He received his medical degree from Ain Shams University Faculty of Medicine and has been in practice for more than 20 years. He has expertise in treating coronary artery disease, heart failure, hypertension & high blood pressure, among other conditions – see all areas of expertise.

December 3

LocationGoodman South Library, 2222 South Park St., Madison, WI 53713 

Moderator: Isabella Musherure, Mental Health Practitioner

Talk Title: Paper Paths of Resistance: Algeria, Vietnam, and the Making of Africa-Asia Solidarity

Talk Description: Nguyễn’s dissertation project examines radical psychiatric/psychotherapeutic praxis in Vietnam and Algeria post-WWII, within a broader theoretical framing of Afro-Asia intimacies, postcolonial studies, decoloniality, and critical social theory from the Global South. Against the landscape of liberation wars and decolonization across the two continents, her research brings forth a radical reconfiguration of the psychiatric asylum space by studying the encounter between the seemingly distinct identities of psychiatric patient and political dissident. Engaging with archival materials and literary analysis of works produced by the residents of psychiatric asylums, the project draws connections among seemingly unrelated temporal, spatial, and social conditions to problematize the contemporary construction of global mental health.

Speaker

 

 

Nguyễn T. Thuỳ-Trang 

 

Nguyễn T. Thuỳ-Trang is a PhD Candidate at the Department of Geography, UW-Madison. She is also a practicing psychotherapist, specializing in traumatic stress in children and adolescents. She grew up in Vietnam.

 

Community Panelist

 

 

Sadat Abiri, APNP, PMHNP-BC, MPH

 

Sadat is a community leader and distinguished Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner with over 25 years of experience in the field of mental health.