澳门六合彩开奖现场

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Asha Varadharajan

Biography

My research and pedagogy have been driven by inveterate and eclectic curiosities, a delight in speculation, a low boredom threshold and a rather old-fashioned belief in erudition. These principles have resulted in undergraduate teaching across the department鈥檚 core curriculum鈥攆rom Shakespeare to Soyinka鈥攁nd in developing new offerings in African-American literatures and cultures, Australian literature and cinema, cross-cultural and multi-media adaptations of Shakespeare, and modern and contemporary women writers (online). I take a contrapuntal approach to decolonizing canon and curriculum. My graduate seminars are generally designed to address problems that shape modernity or to develop modes of being and reflection designed to alter the worlds we inhabit. My most recent graduate seminars have discussed the refugee crisis, creolization and syncretism, and the Black Lives Matter movement.

My current research focuses on forced migration and involuntary displacement. I have forthcoming book chapters on trauma and refugee narratives and on the 鈥渄enizen鈥 rather than the 鈥渃itizen.鈥 I have presented papers on dignity, distress and care at the UNESCO-RILA Spring School, Glasgow, and on the bane and dream of belonging at NIAS, Amsterdam. My vigorous cross-disciplinary collaborations with political scientists on the war in Afghanistan, with lawyers on the deportation of refugees, and with a colleague in the Smith School of Business on neo-colonialism and corporate social responsibility have been exciting and illuminating. To remind myself that I am a literary scholar and pedagogue, I have co-authored forthcoming essays for Oxford Bibliographies and for Teaching Anglophone South Asian Diasporic Literature (MLA).

Research Interests

Studies in Forced Migration and Involuntary Displacement; Necropolitics; Violence, Human Rights and Humanitarian Intervention; Decolonizing Cultures, Institutions and Pedagogies; Adorno and the Legacy of the Frankfurt School; Global Cinema; Race, Gender and Sexuality Studies.

Selected Publications
  • 鈥溾楾he Wordshop of the Kitchen鈥: Impressions of Austin Clarke and Paule Marshall.鈥 鈥楳embering Austin Clarke. Ed. Paul Barrett. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2020. 98-108.
  • 鈥淏een Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me鈥: Rethinking the Humanities in (Times of) Crisis.鈥 With Jeremy De Chavez. Special Issue of Critical Arts: South-North Cultural and Media Studies. Guest Editor Pier Paolo Frassinelli. 2019.
  • 鈥淪traight from the Heart鈥: A Pedagogy for the Vanquished of History.鈥 Decolonisation and Feminisms in Global Teaching and Learning. Eds. Sara de Jong, Rosalba Icaza, and Olivia Rutazibwa. London: Routledge, 2018.
  • 鈥溾榠deas with broken wings鈥: Critical Theory and postcolonial theory.鈥 The SAGE Handbook of Frankfurt School Critical Theory. 3 vols. Eds. Beverley Best, Neil Larsen, Werner Bonefeld and Chris O鈥橩ane. London: Sage Publishing, 2018. 1398-1416.
  • 鈥淗ow to Kick Ass when Life鈥檚 a Bitch鈥: A Human Rights Bulletin from India.鈥 The Social Work of Narrative: Human Rights and the Cultural Imaginary. Eds. Gareth Griffiths and Philip Mead. Stuttgart: ibidem-Verlag/Columbia University Press, 2018. 139-161.
  • 鈥溾楾he world is spoilt in the white man鈥檚 time鈥: Imagining Postcolonial Temporalities.鈥 With Tim Wyman-McCarthy. After Colonial Governmentality: Biopolitics and Memory in the Postcolony. Ed. Michael Griffiths. Ashgate Press, 2016. 103-121.
  • 鈥溾榟alf sick of shadows鈥: Figure and Ground in Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak鈥檚 Imagination of the Subaltern.鈥 Cultural Studies 30.4 (2016): 730-753. Special Issue, Relocating Subalternity: Scattered Speculations on the Conundrum of a Concept. Eds. Sara de Jong and Jamila Mascat.
  • 鈥淢ichael Ignatieff, Romeo Dallaire, Stephen Lewis, and the Making(s) of a Canadian Global Conscience.鈥 University of Toronto Quarterly. 82.2 (Spring 2013): 352-374. Special Issue, Canadian Literature and the Politics of Representation and Empathy: Writing the Foreign in Canadian Literature and Humanitarian Narrative. Guest Editor, Smaro Kamboureli.
  • 鈥淏etween Securocratic Historiography and the Diasporic Imaginary: Framing the Transnational Violence of Air India Flight 182.鈥 With Raji Singh Soni. TOPIA: Journal of Canadian and Cultural Studies 27 (Spring 2012): 177-195. Refereed. Feature section, Air India Flight 182: A Canadian Tragedy?
  • 鈥淪ubjectivity.鈥 Intercultural Discourse - Key and Contested Concepts. Eds. Monika Kirloskar-Steinbach, Gita Dharampal-Frick, and Minou Friele (Hg.). Verlag Karl Alber, 2012. 112-121.
  • 鈥淭he Language of the Unrequited: Memory, Aspiration, and Antagonism in the Utopian Imagination of Edward Said.鈥 Edward Said: A Legacy of Emancipation and Representation. Eds. Adel Iskandar and Hakem Rustom. University of California at Berkeley Press, 2010. 448-462.
  • 鈥淣ick Hornby鈥 in Twentieth-Century British Humourists. Ed. Paul Matthew St. Pierre. Dictionary of Literary Biography. Vol.352. Detroit: Gale, 2010. 103-111.
  • 鈥淓ric Idle鈥 in Twentieth-Century British Humourists. Ed. Paul Matthew St. Pierre. Dictionary of Literary Biography. Vol.352. Detroit: Gale, 2010. 125-134.
  • 鈥淗anif Kureishi鈥 in Twentieth-Century British Humourists. Ed. Paul Matthew St. Pierre. Dictionary of Literary Biography. Vol.352. Detroit: Gale, 2010. 142-153.
  • 鈥淯nsettling the Legacy of Harold Bloom鈥檚 Anxiety of Influence.鈥 Modern Language Quarterly 69.4 (December 2008): 461-80. Special issue ed. Andrew Elfenbein.
  • 鈥淎fterword: The Phenomenology of Violence and the Politics of Becoming.鈥 Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East 28.1 (2008): 124-141. Special Issue. Eds. Nouri Gana and Heike Harting entitled 鈥淣arrative Violence: Africa and the Middle East.鈥
  • Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1995.
Awards and Recognition
Project Lead on eCampus Ontario $90,000 grant to develop an online open-access course on Race, Migration and Nation, 2021.
Principal鈥檚 Promoting Student Inquiry Teaching Award, 2021.
IASH-SSPS Visiting Research Fellowship, University of Edinburgh, 2019.
Graduate Supervision

Studies in Cosmopolitanism; Creolization; Mourning and Melancholia; "Tripping"; Love, Nostalgia, and Affect; Nation and Narration; Crowds and Processions; Hardboiled Detective Fiction; The Discourse of Mental Health; Agape and Emancipation; Authorship in the Age of Terror; Cynicism and Modernity; The Travails of Whiteness; Maimed and Dead Dogs in the American Cultural Imaginary; Contemporary Travel Writing.

Additional Information

Website:

Department of English, 澳门六合彩开奖现场 University

Watson Hall
49 Bader Lane
Kingston ON K7L 3N6
Canada

Telephone (613) 533-2153

Undergraduate

Graduate

澳门六合彩开奖现场 is situated on traditional Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabe territory.