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Monday, January 18, 2016
Aligarh Muslim University Admission 2016-17
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Saturday, January 16, 2016
National Conference on Language, Literature and Society – Influences and Counter Influences at Manuu, Hyderabad
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Dialog, a refereed bi-annual journal of the Department of English and Cultural Studies, Panjab University, Chandigarh
Scholarly articles of 12-20 pages, or 4,000 to 6,000 words, in 12-point Times New Roman, in accordance with thesystem of referencing available on our website (House Style), should be submitted electronically by 30 April 2016 to ruminasethi@gmail.com along with a 50-word biographical note. Articles must be original and hitherto unpublished.
Dialog invites submissions of poetry in English or in English translation. Please submit no more than six poems at a time. All submitted poems may be combined into one document and uploaded as a single attachment. Please submit only unpublished work. Anything that has been previously published or accepted for publication in any form, including work that has appeared online, in blogs, or on Facebook, will not be considered.
Book Reviews submitted for consideration will be ordinarily 1,200 words and Interviews 4,000-4,500 words.
· Gillian Beer, University of Cambridge, UK
· Catherine Belsey, Derby University, UK
· Homi K. Bhabha, Harvard University, USA
· Sudhir Chandra, Nantes Institute for Advanced Study, France
· Ritu Menon, Women Unlimited (Kali for Women), New Delhi, India
· Susie Tharu, EFL University, Hyderabad, India
· Harish Trivedi, University of Delhi, India
· Robert J. C. Young, New York University, USA
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Thursday, January 14, 2016
Guest Faculty needed at CCL, UoH.
Please forward and inform others.
Thanks.
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Thursday, January 7, 2016
Department of English, The University of Hyderabad Hosts Two Poets: Kazim Ali & Sridala Swami
Department of English
The University of Hyderabad
Hosts Two Poets
Kazim Ali
&
Sridala Swami
13 Jan. 2016
2.30 PM
ASIHSS Hall, Department of English
Kazim Ali is the author of four volumes of poetry, The Far Mosque, The Fortieth Day, Bright Felon: Autobiography and Cities and Sky Ward (that won the Ohiona Award in Poetry), two novels Quinn's Passage (BlazeVox Books), named one of the Best Books of 2005 by Chronogram, and The Disappearance of Seth (Etruscan Press) and two volumes of nonfiction, Orange Alert: Essays on Poetry, Art and the Architecture of Silence (University of Michigan Press) and Fasting for Ramadan: Notes from a Spiritual Practice (Tupelo Press). His work has appeared in American Poetry Review, Boston Review, Barrow Street, jubilat, Hayden's Ferry Review, The Iowa Review, Colorado Review, and New Orleans Review. He is currently Director of the Creative Writing Program at Oberlin College.
Sridala Swami is the author is the author of poetry collections, A Reluctant Survivor and Escape Artist. Her creative and critical work has been published in Wasafiri, The South Asian Review, Her Kind (the VIDA blog), and The HarperCollins Book of English Poetry. She attended the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa.
Please join us for tea after the event
All are Welcome
Tuesday, January 5, 2016
Conference at The Department of English, Malabar Christian College, Calicut, Kerala
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MM Memorial Prize 2015
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Fwd: HLF 2016 awaits you!
From: HLF <hydlitfest@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Jan 4, 2016 at 2:37 PM
Subject: HLF 2016 awaits you!
To:
Thank you for your interest in HLF 2016.
#HLF2016 is only a few days away. Please block your dates and attend the exciting events that HLF 2016 has to offer.
There promises to be much excitement - stimulating literary discussions, stage talks, workshops, exhibitions and cultural events.
Log onto our website for details of events: www.hydlitfest.org
Attached below is the schedule/ program of all the wonderful events lined up
from 7 - 10 January, 2016
at Hyderabad Public School.
~ All events are Free and Open to all! ~
As always, bringing you the best of Literature, Art, Culture - we present to you - HLF 2016!
Look forward to seeing you there!
Best regards,
HLF Team
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Monday, January 4, 2016
Guest Faculty Interview at CCL
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Sunday, January 3, 2016
The Singularities International Conference on Power
Please go through the attached brochure for details. To register and attend be part of the Conference, please call Shahina Mol (9744230791) or Aswathi (9447349388).
Please spread the word about the Conference among your friends and colleagues.
Thanks and regards
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Two Day National Conference on "Language Literature and Society – Influences and Counter Influences"
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International Seminar on “Multicultural India: Inclusiveness & New Humanities” on 25th & 26th February 2016
Dear Sir/Madam,
Greetings!
We would like to take this opportunity to inform you that our Department is planning to conduct an International Seminar on "Multicultural India: Inclusiveness & New Humanities" on 25th & 26th February 2016. We have invited distinguished speakers engaged in this domain as resource persons for the Seminar. We would be highly honored if you can either spare some time of your busy schedule to attend the Seminar or depute your colleagues/Scholars to participate in the Seminar. We assure you that your experience of participating in the seminar will be enriching. Further information about the seminar is attached for your perusal.
We eagerly await your participation in the Seminar.
Thanks and Regards,
Dr. T.Marx
(Organizing Secretary)
Department of English
Pondicherry University
Puducherry-605014Mobile: +91 94 94 24 26 45
Saturday, January 2, 2016
Sr. Project Assistant in Creative Arts at IIT Hyderabad.
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Presidency University Department of English Invites academic papers for Young Researchers’ Conference On Critiquing caste in /as Dalit Literature
Presidency University Department of English Invites academic papers for Young Researchers' Conference On Critiquing caste in /as Dalit Literature
( 8th & 9th March, 2016)
Call for Papers:
Caste and caste based movements have traditionally been perceived as the inquiries of the social and the political. Social science disciplines like history and sociology or political science , with their assumed and implied scientificity and claims on truth-value , have been engaging with the 'caste question' (Rao) for a long time. Despite Gopal Guru's pertinent assertion as to how social sciences in India have been practiced in 'casteist', exclusionary ways that entailed epistemological as well as material violence to 'lower caste' communities, one might still say that caste has, at least, been discussed (albeit not necessarily from a conscious, self-proclaimed anti-caste perspective) in these disciplines. However, the advent of the Marathi Dalit Panthers , in the early nineteen seventies, ferociously pushed the caste question within the realm of literature. This Marathi experience has eventually given birth to similar ideologically loaded literary productions in other vernaculars (like Tamil, Telugu, Bengali, Oriya, Punjabi, Gujarati, etc.). Apart from the currency that the term 'dalit' got infused with in this process, the existing academic avenues through which social scientists have been engaging with caste , were forced to grapple with something that , in most cases, challenged their disciplinary limits. But, this conference seeks to address a somewhat different but related question: how do we read a literary text (in this case a dalit literary text) that is so unambiguously and emphatically 'social' and 'political'? What are the implications of such 'literary turn' in caste studies in India (or South Asia and the South Asian/ Indian diaspora in other parts of the globe)? While the conference is premised upon this fundamental thematic cognition, it also invariably attempts to engage with questions of 'self' and the 'community'; questions and contestations on ethical and ontological issues related to representation, authenticity or lived experience (Guru and Sarukkai). This conference is also aspiring to address how universities are including Dalit literary texts in their syllabi. In other words, following Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, we want to grapple with the politics of canon formation and how dalit literature – as a long neglected domain or 'outside' - slowly comes within the 'teaching machine'. What are the implications of such inclusions for both- anti-caste politics and the way we study literature? How does this influence our contemporary perceptions of caste? This line of thinking, then, takes us to interrogate how we translate and publish these texts to be read by members in the urban, middle class civil society. For decades in post-independence India, anti-caste politics and Dr. B. R. Ambedkar's legacy have remained alive among various 'lower caste'/ dalit constituencies through independent publishing ( e.g. Ambedkar Prakashani or Choturtha Duniya in Bengali) placed outside the organized and direct control of the market (Somwanshi). Therefore, it is more than important to ask how translations and publications of these translated texts (by market-driven 'mainstream' publishing houses) influence a particular target readership or how it influences our contemporary and modern perceptions of caste in an urban, consumerist, neo-liberal society. In short, "Critiquing Caste in/as Dalit Literature" seeks to ask questions that are usually submerged under the liberal celebration of pain and suffering in Dalit narratives and instead of having redundant ( redundancy does not imply unimportance in any way) academic discussions on the 'marginalization of dalits' in particular literary texts , attempts to have a self-reflexive gaze at the discursive changes that have been / are happening in caste studies, dalit studies and literature.
This broad theme is based upon the following issues that participants might be interested in specifically exploring (in the broader context described above). However, the papers are not essentially bound to remain confined within these issues. These issues are:
a) Dalit literature, alternative history and historiography,
b) Dalit literature , identity and the question of ethics in aesthetic representation,
c) Translating Dalit literature: Politics, problems and challenges in translating Dalit literature,
d) Politics of naming and Dalit literature : Dalit/ Harijan/ Scheduled Castes/ Depressed Classes/ Particular Lower Caste Names(e.g. Namasudra/ Mahar etc.)
e) Politics of publishing Dalit literature: Compulsions in Neo-Liberal market or a question of agency, ownership and appropriation
f) Politics of canon-formation and Dalit writings.
g) Changing / converging critiques of caste: From social sciences and literatures produced by non-dalits to Dalit literature.
Interested participants (PhD / M.Phil / MA students) are requested to send in abstracts ( word limit: 300-400 words), for a twenty minute presentation , on or before 20th January, 2016 to yoreconpresi@gmail.com . Please mention your full name, the course you are pursuing and departmental or institutional affiliation. Selected paper presenters will be notified by 31st January, 2016.
Selected candidates will have to manage their own travel and accommodation arrangements and will have to pay registration fees of Rs: 200 – for research scholars/students and Rs: 500 -for full-time employed faculty cum research scholars
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