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English departments rethink what to call themselves


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English departments nowadays are big tents, housing experts on everything from Chaucer and Shakespeare to LGBTQ and diaspora literature. Increasingly, departments are tweaking their names to reflect this diversity.
Cornell University’s Board of Trustees, for instance, recently approved the English department’s vote to rebrand itself as the department of literatures in English. Department professors Carole Boyce-Davies, Mukoma Wa Ngugi and Derrick Spires proposed the idea last summer, writing in an open letter that the “double pandemic of COVID-19 and global racism, along with the demands for decolonized institutions, have brought a new urgency to ongoing questions about how racism functions in symbolic and structural ways.” ....

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Canons don't only belong to dead white Englishmen. We have a Māori canon too | New Zealand


This article is more than 1 month old
Literary canons have real-world effects – they steal limelight from everyone else. We can challenge them by drawing attention to how they work
If we don’t challenge literary canons, people can be left with only a narrow understanding of cultures, New Zealand academic Alice Te Punga Somerville argues. Photograph: Grant Maiden
If we don’t challenge literary canons, people can be left with only a narrow understanding of cultures, New Zealand academic Alice Te Punga Somerville argues. Photograph: Grant Maiden
Sat 13 Feb 2021 14.00 EST
Last modified on Sat 13 Feb 2021 16.36 EST
I feel sheepish to admit how deeply affected I was when I encountered the research of Gauri Viswanathan, a professor in English at Columbia University in New York City. In Masks of Conquest: Literary study and British rule in India, she traces the history of English back to when it was first systematically taught as a secular discipline ....

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Print History: Rochelle Pinto - Mapping print in Goa


Traversing the overlapping print worlds of Portuguese, Konkani and English, Rochelle Pinto has been studying how colonialism and its aftermath has shaped life in Goa and the larger Goan diaspora in Mumbai and beyond. In this interview with Murali Ranganathan, she looks back at her engagement with print history and its connection with politics and land
At what point of time in your career did you realize that you had evolved into a book/print historian from a professor of English literature? How did the evolution happen?
A Master’s degree at JNU opened up a world of different methodologies thanks to an extraordinary range of teachers who introduced us to nineteenth century writing in India and to theoretical questions about the history of literary studies both in England and in India. This led to questions about how the field of literature was shaped during colonial rule and after, and about the assumptions that underlay our use of the category litera ....

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Shamsur Rahman Faruqi: The Ustad Who Could Catch the Bustle in A Flower's Scent


Shamsur Rahman Faruqi: The Ustad Who Could Catch the Bustle in A Flower’s Scent
The acclaimed Urdu critic, poet and prose master changed the face of Urdu but also what it meant to engage with the literary in all its shapes, glorious or unsightly. Life after him means living with a slew of unfinished conversations, writes Geeta Patel. 
Shamsur Rahman Faruqi (September 30, 1935 – December 25, 2020) Photo: Aashima
The language of flowers (in homage to Ghalib and Faruqi)
You happen upon them
Lotus midnight hands over your soul
Petalled rose harkens love’s slow fall
Tulip stillness as the heart’s quarry ....

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