South Asian Postcolonial Literature, The second is that these three countries do share a common political, literary and cultural history with India (as do Sri About this book The Melancholy of Kinship in Post-reform China and Postcolonial Literature, brings post-reform Chinese cultural texts into conversation with postcolonial novels from Africa and Asia to examine the shared experiences of kinship loss as a response to historical trauma, state violence, and socioeconomic dispossession. This is partly due to the negligence of the many practicing Postcolonial Studies practitioners, including editors of anthologies. She is also interested in literatures of migration, inter-Asia comparisons, popular culture, and in the transnational entanglements of German writers in fin-de-siècle Europe. South Asian literature, which sprang from the turbulent aftermath of colonial rule, presents a diverse range of stories that illustrate the intricacies of postcolonial identities, the fight for Postcolonial literature in South Asia stands as a vibrant testament to the enduring impact of colonial rule on the cultural, social, and literary landscape of the region. The Irrelevance of “Postcolonialism” to South Asian Literature Paul Brians, Professor of English (retired) Washington State University paulbrians@gmail. Postcolonial studies has evolved into Global Anglophone literature, shifting focus from theory to broader engagement. In the book Orientalism (1978), Edward Said conceptually addresses the oppressed subaltern native to explain how the Eurocentric perspective of Orientalism produced the ideological foundations and justifications for the colonial domination of the Other By examining the role of language in the postcolonial context, this paper investigates how linguistic alienation deepens the emotional and cultural rifts within the family, particularly between the twins. cfp | call for papers 2024 / 04 / 24 Postcolonial and Global South Affiliated Faculty Brent Hayes Edwards Peng Family Professor of English and Comparative Literature Writing the South Seas: Imagining the Nanyang in Chinese and Southeast Asian Postcolonial Literature Brian Bernards Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 2015. South Asian literature, which sprang from the turbulent aftermath of colonial rule, presents a diverse range of stories that illustrate the intricacies of postcolonial identities, the fight for Postcolonial literature has emerged as a powerful medium to challenge and deconstruct these colonial impositions. Through Arab-Asian comparisons, and projects bringing together Middle Eastern and East Asian Studies and South Asian Studies, we will address questions related to disciplinarily marginal approaches to comparative literature and comparison of literature from the global margins. It will be a useful research and teaching tool for those interested in postcolonial literature, music studies, cultural studies, contemporary literature and South-Asian literature. His current book project traces artistic experiments with political form in Cold War South Asia, theorizing “processual realism” as a framework for examining shifting modes of empire at a time of fraught national self-reckoning. even at conferences with the word “postcolonial” in them, South Asia CrossRef DOI is assigned to each research paper published in our journal. Nisha Kommattam works at the intersection of South Asian literatures and Gender & Sexuality studies, with a focus on Southern India (Malayalam Literature, Kerala Studies). As the critical voices of South Asian authors have become louder across the world in recent decades, with writers like V. South Asian postcolonial literature, silence and absence are not narrative deficits but forms of resistance and remembrance. Paying careful attention to the authors' distinct subcontinental backgrounds of Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka - as well as India - this study destabilises the central place given to fiction focused on India. Salman Rushdie's *Midnight's Children* explores postcolonial identity through historical events and personal narratives. Postcolonial literature emerging from India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Bangladesh, Postcolonial literature about the South Seas, or Nanyang, examines the history of Chinese migration, localization, and interethnic exchange in Southeast Asia, where Sinophone settler cultures evolved independently by adapting to their "New World" and mingling with native cultures. Feel free to agree or disagree with the proposed notions. . Bernards’s most recent and substantial contribution to the field of Sinophone and modern Chinese literary and cultural studies—and, indeed, to postcolonial studies, ethnic studies, and Southeast Asian studies, among others—comes in the form of a well-researched, dense yet eloquent book called Writing the South Seas: Imagining the Nanyang The essay collection "Anglia Review: South Asian Literatures, Postcolonial Literatures in English" edited by Gerhard Stilz and Ellen Dengel-Janic encompasses various themes including histories, identities, language, education, movements, and transcultural perspectives related to South Asian literature and its impact on the Western literary South Asia as a literary category is a new idea, the latest in a series of academic buzz-words. Abstract This introduction to the special issue of South Asian Review on South Asian Literature and the World frames the essays in the collection within theories of diaspora, transculturation, and regional neocolonialisms. Postcolonial literature about the South Seas, or Nanyang, examines the history of Chinese migration, localization, and interethnic exchange in Southeast Asia, Decolonization has been a primary paradigm for conceptualizing postcolonial poetry, as made possible by critical works such as Edward Said’s Orientalism (1978) and Culture and Imperialism (1993), Chinweizu, Onwuchekwu Jemie and Ihechukwu Madibuike’s Toward the Decolonization of African Literature (1980), Kamau Brathwaite‘s History of the Postcolonial literature has emerged as a powerful medium to challenge and deconstruct these colonial impositions. Global Anglophone World Literature Postcolonial and the Global South Asia/South Asia Contemporary Literature and Culture Comparative Literature and Translation, Theatre Postcolonial and Global South Affiliated Faculty Brent Hayes Edwards Peng Family Professor of English and Comparative Literature Southeast Asia, one of the most colonized regions in the world, is conspicuously absent in the expanding archive of Postcolonial Studies. Some of the most influential authors include Salman Rushdie and Arundhati Roy, who have explored themes of identity, culture, and resistance in their work. Assistant Professor- English Literature Postcolonial Anglophone and South Asian Studies has expired. First, the category of South Asia, while convenient, may do dis-service to those nations, Pakistan and Bangladesh, whose very raison d’être is their separateness from India and each other. Naipaul, Salman Rushdie, Rohinton Mistry and Anita Desai becoming household names, the study of these figures and their influential works have become increasingly prevalent. Through their narratives, they reclaim indigenous histories, contest Eurocentric representations, and redefine their cultural identities Jun 17, 2025 ยท South Asian literature in English has produced many notable authors and works that have contributed significantly to the postcolonial discourse. Her forthcoming book, The Melancholy of Kinship in Post-reform China and Postcolonial Literature, brings post-reform Chinese cultural texts into conversation with postcolonial novels from Africa and Asia to examine the shared experiences of kinship loss as a response to historical trauma, state violence, and socioeconomic dispossession. While much of postcolonial criticism tends to centre on broad historical and political analysis, 'Navigating Boundaries' emphasizes the multiple voices coming from Africa, Caribbean and South Asia, offering a more intimate look at identity formation in postcolonial settings. These are deliberate gaps— charged spac While much of postcolonial criticism tends to centre on broad historical and political analysis, 'Navigating Boundaries' emphasizes the multiple voices coming from Africa, Caribbean and South Asia, offering a more intimate look at identity formation in postcolonial settings. In Anglophone discourse, we have had the literatures of our part of the world collectively described under several different labels, such as "Commonwealth Literature," "Third World Literature," and most recently, "Postcolonial Literature. His research interests include environmental humanities, postcolonial studies, Indigenous studies, South Asian literatures, world literature, and translation studies. The term 'New Literatures in English' has been deemed appropriate to describe the recent literary developments in South Asian countries emerging from the esperiencc of colonialism. South Asian literature, which sprang from the turbulent aftermath of colonial rule, presents a diverse range of stories that illustrate the intricacies of postcolonial identities, the fight for Ghosh teaches graduate and undergrad courses on South Asian literatures and film and postcolonial theory at UCF, and hosts podcasts on South Asia and culture on the side (WireIndia, Mehfil, SpaceInk). Through their narratives, they reclaim indigenous histories, contest Eurocentric representations, and redefine their cultural identities Transnational, interdisciplinary and comparative approaches to Asian North American, ethnic American, and American literature and culture Filipino and Philippine Studies Gender, Sexuality, Queer Theory, Feminism Asia/South Asia Postcolonial Studies Ethnicity, Race, and Indigenous Studies 20th and 21st Century Introduction South Asia's postcolonial literature is a monument to the long history of colonialism and the various ways it still influences the political, social, and cultural spheres in the area. The term 'new' in this context would iilso seek to distinguish between the 'old' British literature producedby representatives of the imperial power and the recent 'new' literature producedby indigenous inhabitants A recipient of the Zubaan-Sasakawa Peace Foundation Grants for Young Researchers in the North East in 2021, her areas of interest include women’s writing, poetry and poetics, popular culture, and South Asian literature and culture studies. Drawing from Sartre (1943/2003), existentialism defines as the individual’s procedure to make meaning and to opt for originality in an absurd world, a Fields of Study: Folk Tale & Oral Literature, Historiography and Historical Writing, Philosophical Texts & Intellectual History, Poetry/ Poetics, Pre-Modern Genres and Literary Forms, Diaspora, Global Anglophone, South Asia, World Literature, Gender Studies, Women’s Studies, Queer Theory, Trans Theory, Linguistic Theories and Culture Thus, unlike other disciplines, literature and literary study recognise the ethics of plurality as foundational to our ‘study’ of ‘South Asian literature’ and its subspecies. Postcolonial theory studies the power and the continued dominance of Western ways of intellectual enquiry, the methods of generating knowledge. Taking the absence of discussion on transnationalism in South Asia as a conspicuous lacuna as well as a point of intervention, this book pushes the boundaries of scholarship further by organizing a dialogue between the nation-state and many nationalisms and the emergent method of transnationalism. These novels explore the effects of colonialism on culture, identity, language, and history. Postcolonial literature in South Asia reflects colonialism's enduring impact on identity, culture, and society. " In this exploration of postcolonial effects in South Asian literature, the rich tapestry of narratives that illuminate the ongoing struggle for self-definition, cultural reclamation, and social justice in the wake of colonialism's enduring footprint will be studied. Modern South Asian literature has a deep focus on independence from Britain, mainly expressed in prose, this literature commonly discusses the partition of India and how different South Asian nations, religions, and cultures interact with each other. Introduction South Asia's postcolonial literature is a monument to the long history of colonialism and the various ways it still influences the political, social, and cultural spheres in the area. Emerging from the aftermath of colonialism, South Asian literature reflects the complexities of a postcolonial world, where nations once subjugated by imperial powers grapple with issues of identity, nationhood, language, and Post-Colonial Histories of South Asia: Some Reflections Any consideration of historical writing and public understanding of the past the subcontinent reveals that history was an important terrain of the that led to political transformations rather than simply being transformed their wake. The publication of Velcheru Narayana Rao, David Shulman, and Sanjay Subrahmanyam’s Textures of Time: Writing History in South India, 1600–1800 (New Delhi: Permanent Black) twenty-five years ago, in 2001, was an important landmark in the study of historiography in South Asia. INTRODUCTION The terrain that contemporary South Asian fiction contributes to the overlapping, yet questioning terrain of existentialism and postcolonialism is a rich one concerning itself with the nature of identity in a world rent asunder. The historical trajectory of South Asian literature mirrors that of Latin American literature's boom and post-boom phases. Keywords: subaltern, colonialism, hybridity, societal, othering, etc. Mohsin Hamid's *The Reluctant Fundamentalist It intends to explore the intersections between Blue Humanities and South Asian literature and culture in the postcolonial context, emphasizing how the Indian Ocean serves as a site of memory, mobility, and ecological imagination and a living witness to the clashes between power and resistance. Chinua Achebe's *Things Fall Apart* illustrates the clash between Igbo culture and European colonialism in Nigeria. Surely a first in postcolonial studies!" - Vasudha Dalmia, Professor of Hindi and Modern South Asian Studies, University of California, Berkeley"This volume of critical essays on colonialism and modernity revisits the episteme of 'modernity' in a new way by taking into account its non-Western roots. Postcolonial literature about the South Seas, or Nanyang, examines the history of Chinese migration, localization, and interethnic exchange in Southeast Asia, where Sinophone settler cultures evolved independently by adapting to their "New World" and mingling with native cultures. Introduction South Asia's postcolonial literature is a monument to the long history of colonialism and the various ways it still influences the political, social, and cultural spheres in the area. Subjects: Disability Studies, Feminist and Gender Studies, Postcolonial Literature, South Asian Literature This research contributes significantly to the field of comparative South Asian diasporic literature by offering insights into the emotional turmoil and identity struggles of diasporic characters. South Asian writers have actively engaged with themes of cultural resistance, identity reconstruction, and historical revisionism in their works. It charts the significant changes these writers have produced in postcolonial and contemporary women's fiction since the late 1990s. Postcolonial literature emerged from countries that were once colonized by imperial powers. Further, even There are four points that must be made early about South Asian English poetry. Abstract As scholars of South Asian literature, we find ourselves in the midst of two “ends”: the waning of postcolonial studies as the institutional force under which we organize, and the softening or splitting-off of the market for South Asian Anglophone literature, the object we study. Wrought from Water: “Nanyang” as Transoceanic Imaginary of the South Seas This book is one of expanse. Download Citation | Muslim Women’s Agency and South Asian Literature: A Postcolonial Feminist Analysis of Purdah and Polygamy: Life in an Indian Muslim Household by Iqbalunnisa Hussain | The We have a distinguished record in particular in postcolonial theory, global history at the time of empire, postcolonial book history, and in South Asian and southern African literatures in English. Tathagata Som (PhD, English, University of Calgary) is an Instructor in the Department of English at the University of Calgary. ”¹ Combining interviews, literary criticism, commentaries, and cultural studies, Between the Lines: South Asians and Postcoloniality suggests the diversity and complexity of what one might designate the “postcolonial” subject. com Note: I read this paper at the 2003 meeting of the South Asian Literary Association in San Diego. Arguments regarding the role of history within South Asian traditions had taken a number of different but related Aijaz Ahmad was a prominent figure in postcolonial literary criticism, known for his incisive analysis of the intersections between literature, politics, and culture. S. Arnav's scholarship has appeared in venues including Cultural Critique, Global South Studies, and Postcolonial Text. In terms of South Asia we have to leave such explorations in languages other than english to area studies conferences, maybe the American Comparative Literature Association, or conferences focusing on the literatures of South Asia in languages other than english. This volume brings together the voices of South Asians in the Anglo-American academy on the construction and representation of the “postcolonial. cdmg, nssg4, kexup, vqvm, kttg, ctu5ae, gwrx, zoje, cad8n, 6fsl5,