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CFP: Pakistaniaat: A Journal of Pakistan Studies
by Masood Ashraf Raja
CFPs
Jan 23, 2013
CFP: Pakistaniaat: A Journal of Pakistan Studies

Special Issue on The Aesthetics and Limits of Historical Memory: Contemporary Perspectives on Bangladesh


Guest Editor: Neilesh Bose, University of North Texas


Under the guest editorship of Dr. Neilesh Bose, Pakistaniaat welcomes submissions for its December 2013 edition with a focus on East Bengal, East Pakistan, and Bangladesh. Given the recent rise of critical reflections on history of the 1971 war in historical literature and film, this special issue aims to interrogate the state of debate regarding historical legacies, the arts and aesthetic representations, and silences and voices within the contemporary age. This special edition builds upon the 2010 issue about the 1971 Indo-Pakistan war by focusing on the contemporary debates about historiography, historical memory, literary criticism, and film. Given the emergence in 2011 of Rubaiyat Hossein’s film Meher Jaan, Sarmila Bose’s Dead Reckoning: Memories of the 1971 Bangladesh War, and Yasmin Saikia’s Women, War, and the Making of Bangladesh: Remembering 1971, the field now includes vigorous debates about memorialization, historic accuracy, nationalism, violence, women’s roles in the conflict, and the relations between East and West Pakistan in the years leading up to the 1971 war. This new vista of reflection about East Bengal, East Pakistan, and Bangladesh has also entered the larger field of the history and culture of contemporary Pakistan. The editorial staff welcomes creative writing (poetry and prose), book review essays, scholarly articles featuring new research, and translations about any of these topics.


For submission guidelines and submission, please visit the journal for online submissions.  Please contact the guest editor, Dr. Neilesh Bose, with questions and concerns.


Deadline for submissions is June 1, 2013.


Pakistaniaatis a refereed, multidisciplinary, and open access academic journal offering a forum for scholarly and creative engagement with various aspects of Pakistani history, culture, literature, and politics. Housed in the English Departmentof the University of North Texas, Pakistaniaat is a sponsored journal of the American Institute of Pakistan Studies. Available online as well as in print, Pakistaniaat publishes three issues per year.

About the Guest Editor:

Dr. Neilesh Bose is currently Assistant Professor of History at the University of North Texas. Research interests include late colonial and post-colonial India and Pakistan, decolonization, cultural and intellectual history, modern Bengal, Islam in South Asia, popular culture, and South Asian diasporas. Recent research concerning these topics has been published in South Asian Popular Culture, South Asia Research, and is forthcoming in Modern Asian Studies. He is guest editing a special edition of South Asian History and Culture regarding South Asian Islam and his forthcoming book about late colonial and early post-colonial Bengal is entitled Recasting the Region: Language, Culture, and Islam in Colonial Bengal.
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CFP: Studies in the Humanities
CFPs
May 23, 2012

Studies in the Humanities

Call for Editorial Board Members
Studies in the Humanities is a multidisciplinary journal of theoretical investigations in literature, film, drama, and cultural studies, published at Indiana University of Pennsylvania since 1975.

We encourage articles that reach across disciplines and cultures to deepen our understanding of a work, an artist, a genre, an artistic milieu, or the conditions of artistic production. Studies in the Humanities also publishes reviews of recent books in the areas of our publishing interests. Applications are invited for new editorial board members for the journal. If your profile and interests match the stated objectives of the journal and you have the time and energy to review at least one and no more than two essays in a year, you are welcome to submit to the editor your application accompanied with a copy of your curriculum vitae byJuly 30th, 2012.

Call for Papers
 A Call-for Papers for a double issue of Studies in The Humanities on the subject of globalism from below, scheduled to be out in December, 2012.

Articles and essays are invited by September 30th, 2012, on an examination of globalizing flows and circulations at the periphery/margins as well as the center, especially as they relate to resistance to neo-liberal globalization as neo-colonialism.

The objective is to illuminate neoliberal corporate globalism is only one destructive model of globalization; not only are there other alternative sustainable paradigms of economic globalization but these other globalization movements are aligned to global peace and social justice movements. These alternative globalization movements from below are vibrant indigenous cultural global resistance movements like the Arab Spring and Occupy movements and include the active reception and engagement with, and resistance to neocolonial neoliberal corporate globalization. In late capitalism the ninety nine percenters are not only consuming and distributed publics, they are producing publics who re-produce and re-make the media and culture.
    

Essays are welcome that address any aspect of the re-production and re-making of media, literary-cultural, and creative output : topics may include but are not limited to the creative translation, localizing and indigenizing potentialities in corporate globalism through the re-claimation of technologies of the past and the present assist in mounting and arming the resistance to counteract the depredations of neoliberal globalization; the dialectical movement between the local and the international or global (expressed in the clichéd phrase “glocalism”) and the hybrid or mestiza, mixing the past (the premodern) and the modern, into the postmodern; the status of postcolonial theory in Globalization Studies and the recontextulization of globalization studies within postcolonial theory; the destructive developmental legacy of colonialism with a fresh elucidation of the complicity of the nation state in the neocolonization of  its own resources and peoples in neoliberal economic globalism; the subversion of binaries like the city and the countryside, the center and the periphery, low/popular and high/elite culture, the post-industrial information societies and developing societies, the eternally new in postmodernism and the postmodern in the pre-modern or the new in the old, and vice versa. The reversal also puts the media-tion of the counter-publics or multitudes or ninety-nine percent in the forefront of the agenda for globalization studies in general and cultural studies in particular. 
    

Three copies of the manuscript, double-spaced, in 12-pt. Times New Roman font using Chicago style of documentation should be submitted to Reena Dube, Editor, Studies in the Humanities, Department of English; 110 Leonard Hall; Indiana University of Pennsylvania; Indiana, PA 15705.

Please do not include your name anywhere on your manuscript. Place it on an accompanying letter or separate pagr. Also please do not use embedded endnotes or footnotes. Footnotes should be at the end of the essay with no page division between them and the text or the Works Cited list that should follow it. Email inquires regarding possible essay topics may be sent to reena.dube@iup.edu.

 

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Visit our affiliated academic journal: Pakistaniaat: A Journal of Pakistan Studies.

Now Published: Constructing Pakistan: Foundational Texts and the Rise of Muslim National Identity 1857-1947 (Oxford UP)

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