2016 Conference Program

Cultural Practices in the South Asian Public Sphere

You can download the 2016 Conference Program here as a PDF file. You can also read the Conference Abstracts here or download them as a PDF file.

Keynote Address: “In the Age of UAVs: Targeted Killings, Collateral Damage, and Drones in the Public Sphere”
Prof. Barbara Harlow, University of Texas at Austin

Barbara HarlowBarbara Harlow is the Louann and Larry Temple Centennial Professor of English Literature at The University of Texas at Austin. She is the author of Resistance Literature (1986), Barred: Women, Writing, and Political Detention (1992), After Lives: Legacies of Revolutionary Writing (1996), and co-editor with Mia Carter of Imperialism and Orientalism: A Documentary Sourcebook (1999) and Archives of Empire  (edited with Mia Carter): 1. From the East India Company to the Suez Canal  and 2. The Scramble for Africa (2003). She has taught in Egypt (Cairo), Ireland (Galway), and South Africa (Pietermaritzburg and Durban) In addition to an intellectual biography of the South African activist, Ruth First, she is working on a project examining historical connections between international humanitarian/human rights law and “third world” literature.

MONDAY; JANUARY 4, 2015
6:00-9:00 PM MEETING: Executive Committee (Room: Lake Austin)

DAY 1: TUESDAY; JANUARY 5, 2016
8:00 AM onward REGISTRATION (Lobby)

9:00-9:30 AM CONFERENCE WELCOME: Moumin Quazi, SALA President
OPENING: Abdollah Zahiri & Jana Fedtke, Conference Co-Chairs
(Room: Lake Austin)

9:30-10:45 AM SESSION 1 (PANELS 1A, 1B, & 1C)
Panel 1A Kashmir Unfinished: Aesthetics, Politics, and Solidarity
(Room: Lake Austin)
Panel Chair: John Maerhofer, City University of New York
1. The Work of Mourning: Affective Law and the Search for Disappeared Men
in Kashmir
Ather Zia, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley
2. Emerging Kashmiri Literature: Rethinking Violence and Resistance in a “State of Exception”
Amrita Ghosh, Seton Hall University
3. Hands Blossoming into Fists: Agha Shahid Ali’s The Country without a Post
Office and the Ideology of the Deep State
John Maerhofer, City University of New York

Panel 1B Pakistan in the Public Sphere: Literature, Pop Music, Drones, and Film
(Room: Executive Learning Center)
Panel Chair: Jana Fedtke, American University of Sharjah
1. “No sir! Na janaab! Ehtesaab bas ehtesaab!”: Pakistani Popular Music as Resistance
Saba Pirzadeh, Purdue University & Tehmina Pirzada, Purdue University
2. Drone-Zone as a Camp: A New Public Space in Pakistan
Muhammad Waqar Azeem, Binghamton University-State University of New York
3. “…that shithole”: A Post-9/11 Portrayal of a Public and Private Pakistan in Season 4 of Homeland
Jana Fedtke, American University of Sharjah

Panel 1C Translation, Nation-Building, and Censorship
(Room: San Gabriel)
Panel Chair: Maryse Jayasuriya, University of Texas at El Paso
1. The Polyglot Colonial and Precolonial Translations of the Qissa-i-Kamroop-o-Kala
Zeeshan Riyaz Reshamwala, University of Denver
2. Pedagogy of Alienation: Epistemic Hegemony of the Mental Space and Fatal
Fault Lines in the National Space
Shahzeb Khan, University of the Punjab, Lahore
3. The Murder of the Author: Censorship and Indian Public Sphere
Sourit Bhattacharya, University of Warwick

11:00 AM-12:15 PM SESSION 2 (PANELS 2A, 2B, & 2C)
Panel 2A The Private and the Public: Self-Representation, the Media, and Literature
(Room: Lake Austin)
Panel Chair: Afrin Zeenat, University of Dhaka
1. The Courtyard House and the City: Private and Public Spatial Consciousness in South Asian Muslim Women’s Literary Self-Representation
Diviani Chaudhuri, State University of New York at Binghamton
2. Let the Women Speak: Colonized Representations of Muslim Women in Media
Sobia Khan, Richland College, Dallas
3. Literary Public Sphere/s and the History of Pakistani Literature in English
Waseem Anwar, Forman Christian College University, Lahore

Panel 2B History, Religion, and the Law in Public Spaces
(Room: Executive Learning Center)
Panel Chair: J. Edward Mallot, Arizona State University
1. Art as Representation of Contestations within the Public Sphere: The Case of the Indian Statue of Mother Mary
Richa Raj, Jesus and Mary College, University of Delhi
2. Hierarchies and Counterpublics in Chaitanya Tamhane’s Court
Shakti Jaising, Drew University
3. Volatile Virtuopolis: Contemporary Feminist Movement and Mobilization in Urban India
Shreyosi Mukherjee, National University of Singapore

Panel 2C Alternative Publics
(Room: San Gabriel)
Panel Chair: Nalini Iyer, Seattle University
1. Locational Counterpublics, Human Rights, and Sexuality in India
Kanika Batra, Texas Tech University
2. Sitthani—Verbal Porn Performed in the Public Sphere during a Pious Ceremony
Rajnish Dhawan, University of the Fraser Valley
3. Speaking for the ‘Other’: In/authenticity of Representation: A Study of Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss
Meena Sharma, Dibrugarh University, Assam

12:15-1:45 PM LUNCH on your own

1:45-3:00 PM SESSION 3: PRESIDENTIAL ROUNDTABLE
Panel 3A “Censorship and Intolerance in the Indian Public Sphere”
(Room: Lake Austin)
Participants:
Josna Rege, Worcester State University
Nalini Iyer, Seattle University
Sourit Bhattacharya, University of Warwick
Amritjit Singh, Ohio University

3:15-4:30 PM SESSION 4 (PANELS 4A, 4B, & 4C)
Panel 4A Travel Narratives, Food Blogs, and the Digital Public Sphere
(Room: Lake Austin)
Panel Chair: Moumin Quazi, Tarleton State University
1. Refeudalization of the Public Sphere in Relation to the Tibetan Question
Abheeshta Nath, Govt. College for Women, Kerala University
2. Desi Food Blogs in the Diaspora & the Transnational Public Sphere
Sukanya Gupta, University of Southern Indiana
3. “We Are All Untouchable Until No One Is”: Dalit Women, Dissidence, and the Digital Public Sphere
Ruma Sinha, Syracuse University

Panel 4B Phantasms of Neoliberalism and the South Asian Public Sphere
(Room: Executive Learning Center)
Panel Chair: Gautam Basu Thakur, Boise State University
1. Dawn of the Living Dead: South Asian Zombie Films and Social Critique
Amit Rahul Baishya, University of Oklahoma
2. Fathers and Sons: Amitabh Bachchan, Shahrukh Khan and the Bombay
Melodrama in the Age of Neoliberalism
Anustup Basu, University of Illinois
3. The Accidental Selfie: Queen and the Indian Metropolar Public Sphere
Gautam Basu Thakur, Boise State University

Panel 4C Public Spaces in Novels of the South Asian Diaspora
(Room: San Gabriel)
Panel Chair: Summer Pervez, Forman Christian College University, Lahore
1. An Ear to the Spheres: Attending to National and Transnational Political Communities in Three Novels of the South Asian Diaspora
Josna Rege, Worcester State University
2. Lying in Public(s): The Multiple Public Spheres of Meera Syal’s Anita and Me
Asha Jeffers, York University
3. Personalising the Public: Reading Jhumpa Lahiri’s The Lowland
Nasmeem Akhtar, Dibrugarh University, Assam

END OF SESSIONS FOR DAY 1

4:30-5:30 PM GRADUATE CAUCUS
(Room: Lake Austin)

5:30-6:30 PM GENERAL BUSINESS MEETING
(Room: Lake Austin)

6:30-8:15 PM DINNER on your own

8:15-10:00 PM HAMARA MUSHAIRA: LITERARY ARTS EVENT
(Room: Lake Austin)
Organized and moderated by Amritjit Singh, Ohio University
Invited Readers: Chaitali Sen (Austin, TX) and Roshni Rustomji (Alameda, CA) and featuring several readers of the SALA membership

DAY 2: WEDNESDAY; JANUARY 6, 2016
8:00- 8:45 AM REGISTRATION (Lobby)

8:00-9:00 AM GRADUATE STUDENT PROFESSIONALIZATION
(Room: Lake Austin)
Panel Chair: Aniruddha Mukhopadhyay, University of Florida
1. Moumin Quazi (Tarleton State University) – will speak on the importance of service experience to a candidate’s marketability
2. Cynthia Leenerts (East Stroudsburg University) – will speak on the ways in which young scholars can expand their research and teaching horizons beyond their specializations
3. Melanie Wattenbarger (University of Mumbai) – will speak on the challenges of doing international research in the field of South Asian Studies, particularly as a woman

9:15-10:30 AM SESSION 5 (PANELS 5A, 5B, & 5C)
Panel 5A A New Feminist Public Sphere
(Room: Lake Austin)
Panel Chair: Reshmi Mukherjee, Boise State University
1. The Millennial Indian Woman and an After-life of the Public Sphere
Manisha Basu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
2. Indian Women Food Bloggers: Creating Contradictory Knowledge of “Home,” Domestic Labor and Culinary Creativity
Nandini Dhar, Florida International University
3. Cyber Rhetoric and Indian Women’s Empowerment
Reshmi Mukherjee, Boise State University

Panel 5B Islamophobia: The Public Muslim and the Critical Muslim
(Room: Executive Learning Center)
Panel Chair: Amrita Ghosh, Seton Hall University
1. The Muslim (as) Terrorist in Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s One Amazing Thing
Atreyee Gohain, University of North Florida
2. The Indian Interwebs, Islamophobia, and Its Counterpublics
Afrin Zeenat, University of Arkansas
3. “A Tense Terrain”: Family Mirroring Nation in Wajahat Ali’s The Domestic Crusaders
Elizabeth Redwine, The Abbey Theatre

Panel 5C Sri Lanka in the Public Sphere
(Room: San Gabriel)
Panel Chair: Amritjit Singh, Ohio University
1. Memoir and the Public Sphere: Running in the Family and the Shape of its
Audience
Roger McNamara, Texas Tech University
2. Bricks, Mortar, Words: Memorializing Public Spaces Destroyed in the Sri Lankan Ethnic Conflict
Maryse Jayasuriya, University of Texas at El Paso
3. Public History Embodied
Kathleen Hewett-Smith, American University of Sharjah

10:45 AM-12:00 PM SESSION 6 (PANELS 6A, 6B, & 6C)
Panel 6A Literary Elites and Canon Formation
(Room: Lake Austin)
Panel Chair: Dorothy Lane, Luther College, University of Regina
1. Radioactive Masculinity: Anxious Atomic Publics and the Postcolonial Bomb
Dibyadyuti Roy, West Virginia University
2. Lit, Elite: A Postcolonial Inquiry into the Role of Public Sphere of Imagination as an Informal Participant in Region-Making and Shaping of Gujarati Identity
Chirag Trivedi, B K Majumdar Institute of Business Administration, Ahmedabad University
3. Literary Public Culture: From AIPWS to Jaipur
Michaela Henry, Brandeis University

Panel 6B Social Justice in the Public Sphere
(Room: Executive Learning Center)
Panel Chair: Abdollah Zahiri, Seneca College
1. Tossing Caste, Nation, Economics and Race into the Public Sphere: Arundhati Roy’s “The Doctor and the Saint”
Pennie Ticen, Virginia Military Institute
2. Writing the Modern, Re-writing the Social: Communist Aesthetics and the Early Public Sphere in Kerala
Ardra N.G., Jawaharlal Nehru University
3. Diasporic Agency: Deepa Mehta’s Centripetal Reading of Caste/Indigenous Colonialism in Water
Abdollah Zahiri, Seneca College

Panel 6C Graphic Novels, Young Adult Fiction, and Film in South Asian Diasporic Spaces
(Room: San Gabriel)
Chair: Kathleen Hewett-Smith, American University of Sharjah
1. Marvel’s No Normal, Religion, and the Public Sphere
Umme Al-wazedi, Augustana College
2. Learning to Love The(ir) World: Feminist Spaces and Cosmopolitan Impulses in Queen (2014) and English Vinglish (2013)
PrathimMaya Dora-Laskey, Alma College/ University of Oxford
3. Speaking for Diasporic Youth: Tanuja Desai Hidier’s Young Adult Novels
Nalini Iyer, Seattle University

12:00-1:30 PM LUNCH on your own

1:30-2:45 PM SESSION 7 (PANELS 7A, 7B, & 7C)
Panel 7A Myths and Spirituality
(Room: Lake Austin)
Panel Chair: Umme Al-wazedi, Augustana College
1. The Cultural Manifestation of Surpanakha and Her Necessary Promiscuity
Devaleena Das, University of Wisconsin Madison
2. Cinema and Social Space: A Perspective on Images of Femininity and Practices of Viewership in Hindi Cinema
Nisha Tiwari, Independent Scholar
3. Urban Space and the “Uncinematic”
Pragya Trivedi, University of California, Irvine

Panel 7B Imagining the South Asian Body
(Room: Executive Learning Center)
Panel Chair: Kanika Batra, Texas Tech University
1. The Neo-Intimate Hindu Sphere: Sexual ‘Purity’ in the Neometropolitan Indian City
Debojoy Chanda, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
2. Egocentric Monitoring within the Public Sphere: Imagining the South Asian Body
Mayuri Deka, The College of the Bahamas
3. “That Turning Blur is Me”: The Photographed Body in Mukul Kesavan’s Looking Through Glass and Hari Kunzru’s The Impressionist
J. Edward Mallot, Arizona State University

Panel 7C Public Spaces
(Room: San Gabriel)
Panel Chair: Asha Jeffers, York University
1. Rural/Urban Imagination
Sarika Chandra, Wayne State University
2. Engendering Urban Spaces in Aditya Vikram Sengupta’s Asha Jaoar Majhe
Aniruddha Mukhopadhyay, University of Florida
3. Spirituality and Public Space
Asha Sen, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire

3:00-4:15 PM SESSION 8 (PANELS 8A, 8B, & 8C)
Panel 8A Theory in Contexts: Travel, Ecology, and Politics
(Room: Lake Austin)
Panel Chair: Waseem Anwar, Forman Christian College University, Lahore
1. Disinherited Migrant Refugees: Neither the Past, the Present nor the Future
Belongs to the Silenced Lives of the Tide Country
Hema Chari, California State University, Los Angeles
2. A Strange Encounter of Aesthetics with an Imperial Public Sphere in Alex Strick van Linschoten and Felix Kuehn’s Poetry of the Taliban
Yubraj Aryal, University of Montreal
3. Sites of Encounter – Sites of Exchange
Dorothy Lane, Luther College, University of Regina

Panel 8B Gender in South Asia and the Caribbean Diasporas
(Room: Executive Learning Center)
Panel Chair: Melanie Wattenbarger, University of Mumbai
1. Publicity of the Privacy of Purdah: Studying a Memsahib’s Depiction
Susmita Roye, Delaware State University
2. Challenging the Colonial Narrative: An Exploration of Interviews with Formerly Indentured Women
Alison Klein, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
3. Indo-Trinidadian Women and the Indian Public Sphere: Women under the Influence?
Delphine Munos, University of Liège

Panel 8C Transnational Public Spheres
(Room: San Gabriel)
Panel Chair: Sobia Khan, Richland College, Dallas
1. The Diasporic South Asian Public Sphere: Disconnections and Connections in Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss
Joya Uraizee, Saint Louis University
2. The Orient Writes Back: Hamid’s The Reluctant Fundamentalist as a Counter-orientalist Narrative
Binod Paudyal, University of Utah

END OF SESSIONS FOR DAY 2

4:30-5:45 PM RECEPTION
(Room: Lake Austin)

6:00-7:15 PM CONFERENCE KEYNOTE ADDRESS
(Room: Lake Austin)
In the Age of UAVs: Targeted Killings, Collateral Damage, and Drones in the Public Sphere
Prof. Barbara Harlow
Louann and Larry Temple Centennial Professor of English Literature at UT Austin

SALA 2016 AWARDS CEREMONY
(Room: Lake Austin)
Prof. Barbara Harlow
Louann and Larry Temple Centennial Professor of English Literature at UT Austin,
SALA Distinguished Achievement Awardee

8:00-10:00 PM SALA CONFERENCE DINNER (tickets $25)
Bombay Bistro, 4200 S. Lamar Blvd., Austin, TX (512-462-7227)