Conerly Casey Headshot

Conerly Casey

Associate Professor

Department of Sociology and Anthropology
College of Liberal Arts

Office Location

Conerly Casey

Associate Professor

Department of Sociology and Anthropology
College of Liberal Arts

Education

BA, University of Vermont; M.Ed, University of Southern California; Ph.D., University of California at Los Angeles

Select Scholarship

Invited Keynote/Presentation
Casey, Conerly. "As spirits ride their mounts: Sensing, materiality and Intimacy in Bori Rituals." The Aesthetics of Esoteric Practices: Materialities, Performances, Senses. Fondazione Giorgio Cini. Venice, Italy. 14 Nov. 2024. Conference Presentation.
Casey, Conerly. "Maguzawa of Kano, Nigeria." Zoroastrians across the Indian Ocean. Zoroastrian Foundation. London, UK. 4 Jun. 2024. Guest Lecture.
Casey, Conerly. "Ecologies of Collaboration, Healing Ecologies and Medical Diversity." Ethnographic Approaches to Wellbeing Workshop. Sapienza University and the Centre for Advanced Studies, Friedrich Alexander University, Germany. Rome, Italy. 14 Jun. 2024. Keynote Speech.
External Scholarly Fellowships/National Review Committee
10/1/2022 -8/31/2023
     FAU, Center for Advanced Studies
     Amount: $66,000.00
8/1/2017 - 7/31/2018
     Cornell University, Society for the Humanities
     Amount: $50,000.00
Journal Paper
Conerly, Conerly. "Eco-Intimacy and Spirit Exorcism in the Nigerian Sahel." The Senses and Society 16. 2 (2021): 132-150. Web.
Casey, Conerly. "Memories of Violence in Spiritual Renewal." Sikh Formations: Religion, Culture, Theory 15. (2019): 1-13. Web.
Casey, Conerly. "States of emergency": Armed youths and mediations of Islam in northern Nigeria." Deja Lu Journal. 4 (2016): 1-18. Web.
Book Chapter
Casey, Conerly. "Sensory Politics and War: Affective Anchoring and Vitality in Nigeria and Kuwait." Political Sentiments and Social Movements: The Person in Politics and Culture. Ed. Claudia Strauss and Jack R. Friedman. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018. 147-174. Print.
Casey, Conerly. "Bollywood Banned and the Electrifying Palmasutra: Sensory Politics in Northern Nigeria." Asian Video Cultures: In the Penumbra of the Global. Ed. Joshua Neves and Bhaskar Sarkar. Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press, 2017. 176-197. Print.
Casey, Conerly. "Hypocrisy, spatial (in)justice and youthful 'policing' in northern Nigeria." Justicia e Injusticias Espaciales (Spanish version of Justice et Injustices Spatiales, 2010). Ed. Bret Bernard, Philippe Gervais-Lambony, Claire Hancock, Fredric Landy. Buenos Aires, Argentina: Universidad Nacional de Rosario Editora, 2016. 2001-218. Print.
Published Article
Casey, Conerly. “Remembering Genocide: Hypocrisy and the Violence of Local/Global Justice in Northern Nigeria.” Transitional Justice: Global Mechanisms and Local Realities after Genocide and Mass Violence, 2010. 171-199. Print. *
Casey, Conerly.“Hypocrisy, Spatial (In)justice and Youthful Policing in Northern Nigeria.” Justice et Injustices Spatiales, 2010. 201-218. Print. É  *

Currently Teaching

ANTH-310
3 Credits
This course considers the diversity, contours and synergies of African films and filmmaking, traversing the continent to view films from Senegal, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Nigeria, South Africa, Zambia, Kenya, Egypt and Mali. Though much scholarship has focused on influential African filmmakers and nationally located cinemas, the straight-to-video systems of the 1980s and 1990s had a profound impact on African films and filmmaking. Nollywood and other video film industries began to dominate film production and transnational mobility, influencing new film technologies and industries, accessibility and addressability across the globe. Topics in this course include the influence of African film directors on filmmaking, and critical developments in major industries; Nollywood and beyond, and the cultural aesthetics, politics and economics that affect their global mobility and popular appeal; postcolonial identities and power; music and oral traditions of storytelling; didactic, post-colonial cinema with moral, political missions vs. ‘arthouse’ approaches; Afrofuturist and speculative cinema; channels such as African Magic that are shown in more than 50 African countries; and the effects of video streaming on global stardom and popularity. Students will learn about diverse African films and approaches to filmmaking, and the vibrant people and creative cultures that make up these film industries.
ANTH-341
3 Credits
This course evaluates global forms of “addiction” in medical, cultural, national, and transnational situations of encounter. Though primarily a EuroAmerican concept of illness, addiction is now discursively and experientially widespread, assuming the status of a “global form.” Addiction narratives and experiences shape people and social life everywhere, as scientific and cultural or national knowledge intersect to form subjectivities, identities of addicts, and communities of addicted bodies. Concepts of will, morality, the addicted self and other, and living and dying also impact the cultural, national and international infrastructures we build—whether and how, for instance, we put resources into medical or criminal justice systems and networks. A closer look at the intimate lives of addicts thus enables us to consider identity boundaries and crossings; addiction languages; family relations and parenting; self-made communities and social bonds; work at the economic fringes of society; personal and institutional violence; policing and navigating enforcement or incarceration; homelessness and legal, medical and social service bureaucracies; as well as transnational production, trafficking, forms of addiction, and policing. By the end of the course, students will comprehend concepts and theories of addiction, and global perspectives on people living with addiction.
ANTH-345
3 Credits
The destruction and survival of societies hinges on collective ideas of identity. In times of social stress, identities—whether racial, ethnic, religious or national—become critical “sites” of conflict over the sovereignty of nation-states, and the legitimacy of social, cultural practices. When ideas fail to incorporate people, essentialist categories of identity, historical grievances, and accounts of extreme violence become interrelated, potent sources of destruction. Slavery and exclusive ownership of resources leave people starving or living in perilously polluted environments. Global cultural economies threaten local systems and self-representation. In this course, we will take critical, anthropological approaches to studies of ethnocide, genocide and transitional justice. Students will assess the destruction and survival of societies, from the 19th century slaughter of Native Americans and Amazonian Indians to more recent genocides in Cambodia, Bosnia, Rwanda, the Sudan, Iraq, Myanmar, Bangladesh and China. Students will consider similarities and differences in the social experiences of mass violence, and the ethics of protecting particular identity-based groups, and not others, in international, national and local laws. Students will become familiar with multiple inter-related justice systems, for instance, the International Criminal Court, national and United Nations-backed tribunals, and local justice systems such as the Rwandan Gacaca courts. Recent developments in legal ethics and international law will enable students to see how public sentiments, legal advocacy and other social, political processes facilitate enhanced protections for the world’s most vulnerable people.