Saturday 29 September 2012

Conference: English Literature - EFLU


Call for papers
 Unveiling a Secret Agreement
Revisiting the Contours of English Studies



The Department of English Literature, The English and Foreign Languages University, Hyderabad, invites papers for a three-day international conference to be held from 19 to 21 November, 2012.

DanteHomer and Virgil in Raphael's
Parnassus fresco (1511),
in which the Western canon 

is visualised
Does the phrase “English Studies” connote something greater than its so-called destiny as originally intended in a colonial framework? Can we imagine an English literary and language “community” outside the history of canon formation intertwined with the history of colonialism? The function of English in a nation-state such as India constituting many ‘nations’ and bound by a sense of Indianness—again an offshoot of anti-colonial politics of resistance—is certain to be entrapped in a liminal space where identities are at best fluid and in a state of flux. On the one hand, it professes loyalty to the Shakespeares, the Miltons and the Dr. Johnsons with the idea of reaching out to a forever "uncontaminated" space unaffected by the politics of the present. On the other hand, it seeks to engage with a version of the canon based on interpretations generated within specific cultural milieus such as the Caribbean writer Derek Walcott’s Omeros, the epic rereading of Homer’s Odyssey, and Azar Nafisi’s Reading Lolita in Teheran: A Memoir in Books—the latter in a more popular vein. Frederick Jameson argues that “[a]ll third-world texts . . . in a very specific way . . . are to be read as . . . national allegories.” Are "we" in the non-western worlds creating “national allegories” in the process of rereading/misreading the canon?
In the enigmatic text “Theses on the Philosophy of History,” Walter Benjamin notes that “[t]here is a secret agreement between past generations and the present one. Our coming was expected on earth.” The global usage of English with a fetishized language component is more and more inclined towards a sterile emphasis on communication devoid of the literary and cultural dimension. The cultural understanding of English language and literature is equally nebulous, lost in contradictions that emerge from the “secret agreement between past generations and the present one.”

The aim of this conference is to discuss the problems and prospects in unveiling the “secret agreement” between the colonial past and the postcolonial present. In post-independence India, English education often tends to valorize with a dint of hidden irony the literature of Anglo-America, the roots of which may be traced to hegemonic agendas behind the introduction of English language and literature during the British rule. The interest in non-canonical texts in the wake of the advent of interdisciplinary studies has confined canonical studies to a position where departments of English award degrees without any required courses on Chaucer or Shakespeare. This conference proposes to problematize the anxieties of influence that go into the making of canons of English literature and to examine their plausible relevance to the present. Cultural materialists, political psychologists and literary theorists have engagingly looked at literature as part of an intertextual space reaching out to the ethos that produced it. With the arrival of Postmodernism/ Poststructuralism/ Postcolonialism the historicity and politics of a canonical text have become apparent making one wonder if “[o]ur coming was expected on earth.” In the process of revisiting the contours of English Studies this conference aspires to rekindle interest in what constitutes canons in view of a corporate global economy with a declared antipathy to conventional notions of the nation-state. At the same time, the sense of belonging that literary and cultural histories and historians have given the believer is threatened at a fundamental level.


Are canons based on imagined communities or are they relics of a feudal colonial past irrelevant to the present? Is the arrival of discourses such as postmodernism an “expected one”, well within the parameters of the conventional understanding of the canon? What is the shape of a future literary and cultural history given the power big publishers wield over the reading market? What kind of power relations along with languages of resistances can we expect in the emerging political economies of the future as embodied in literary texts? What role does literature and cultural studies, intensely isolated from mainstream disciplines, play in sustaining the idea of counter canon paradoxically bringing past writers into the present? This conference provides more questions than are likely to be answered in any conclusive manner. The debate on “revisiting the contours” is expected to generate a dialogue that responds to the transformative role of English Studies in creating arguments that bring a cautiously interpreted past into a redefined future.

Papers may broadly revolve around the following areas:

English Studies: Its Past, Present and Future
Towards Definitions of Culture and its Others
Translating the Un-translatable
Comparison as a Framework of Literary Thought
Canonizing the Subaltern
Literary Studies as Figurative Languages
Idioms of Multiculturalism
The Hyphen (-) As a Site of the Intertext
Transgressing Disciplinary Borders
Problematizing Research Methodologies
Art, Politics and Styles of Writing
Narrating the Histories of Words

LIST OF INVITED SPEAKERS

Prof. A. R. Kidwai (Aligarh Muslim University)
Prof. Fakrul Alam (University of Dhaka)
Prof. P.C. Kar (Forum on Contemporary Theory) 
Prof. Udaya Kumar (University of Delhi)
Prof. Rajvinder Singh (Poet & Semiotician, Berlin, Germany)
Keki Daruwalla (Poet and Novelist)
Githa Hariharan (Novelist)
Prof. Temsula Ao (Poet, Novelist and Academic)
Prof. Hoshang Merchant (University of Hyderabad)
Prof. Venkat Rao (EFL University, Hyderabad)
Prof Shiv K Kumar (Poet, Novelist & Academic)
Prof J. Bheemaiah (University of Hyderabad)Prof Shilpaa Anand (Maulana Azad National Urdu University, Hyderabad)
Prof  Rashmi Dube Bhatnagar (University of Pittsburgh)


Scholars are encouraged to submit papers that are densely analytical and not limited to fact-gathering and data assortment. Each presenter will be allowed 15 minutes presentation time and five minutes for a question and answer session. Abstracts of not more than 300 words must be sent by 10 October 2012 to englitconference2012@gmail.com for being considered. Acceptance will be intimated by 15 October 2012.  

Stay and food will be arranged by the organizers for the delegates during all three days of the conference.



Registration Fee 

Non Paper Presenters:   500    (INR)

Faculty :                          1000  (INR)

(Registration for the conference will open in November. Please keep visiting our blog for updates.) 

Saturday 15 September 2012

Talk on 17th September, Monday, 2012


Department of English Literature
The English and Foreign Languages University
Hyderabad 500007

Invites You to a Talk By
Anant Maringati
On
Is it time yet for postcolonial urban imagination?

Date: 17th  September 2012 (Monday), 3:30 P.M.
Venue: Room No. 1, Ground Floor, New Academic Building, EFLU

Abstract: Postcolonial thought has found its way slowly and steadily into urban studies over the last decade. Critical urban scholars have borrowed extensively from postcolonial criticism to rethink power relationships in and between cities, so much so that ‘provincializing’ urban studies has become a project in its own right. Yet, this traffic appears to be largely in one direction. In this talk, I will trace the trajectories of some key ideas borrowed and reworked by urban scholars and speculate on their future potentials and limits. I suggest that postcolonial thought has successfully disrupted the methodologies, models and planning regimes of the cold war era. Yet, perhaps unwittingly, in doing so, postcolonialism appears to have become inextricably entangled in the unfolding of neoliberal urban  imaginations. Rebuilding a critical urban studies agenda therefore needs a critical engagement with and reworking of postcoloniality for a world in which the  ‘cities’ and ‘regions’ rather than the ‘nation state’ are emerging as sites of new identity construction projects. The talk will draw on examples from postcolonial fiction – particularly on the notion of home and the world in Amitav Ghosh’s acclaimed novel ‘The Shadow Lines’   as well as from recent scholarship in critical urban studies. 
Dr.Anant Maringanti is a geographer based in Hyderabad. He coordinates the Review of Urban Affairs, published biannually by the Economic and Political Weekly and serves as the Executive Director of Hyderabad Urban Lab, a research programme supported by the Right to the City Foundation.  After receiving his PhD from the University of Minnesota in 2007, he was a post doctoral researcher at the National University of Singapore where he taught courses on global cities.