Monday, 30 September 2019

Shringaar Rass in Malhar Fest at NWZCC, Udaipur (September, 2019)



Noth West Zone Centre Staff -Sh.Durgeshji, Sh.Sodha Sb., Sh.Bhupendra Kothari, Sh. Pandeyji with Guests and Performing Artists

 
Dr.Jayshree Singh, Kathak Dancers  fromJaipur Gharana, Ritvika Singh




Kathak Dancer from Jaipur Gharana, Add.Director Shri.S Singh, Dr.Prem Bhandari, Col.Bains














Media Communication and Hind Swaraj - The Two sessions

















Title of the Two Sessions:
 - MediaW and Digital Knowledge
 - Mahatma Gandhi's ' Hind Swaraj'

Media Workshop conducted by S. S. Dogra at Bhupal Nobles University
Lecture on "Hind Swaraj" by Prof. Sharad Srivastava


Udaipur, 30th Sept.,  A Media Workshop workshop was conducted by the department of English HOD, B N P G Co.Ed. College in the aegis of Bhupal Nobles' University, Udaipur in the Seminar Hall for two hours from 10:00am - 12:00pm. The Resource Person was S.S.Dogra-Journalist-Author-filmmaker originally from Himachal Pradesh, working in Delhi with Media and Communication, successfully conducted a Media Workshop with around eighty students of the University.The theme of the Workshop was "Media Communication and Digital Knowledge". The objective of the workshop has been to instil among graduates and post- graduate youth the sense of being Human by way of understanding the concept of digital human in media communication skills, human development skills, people's skill, and personal- professional skill. The aim is to make youth understand the sources of raising their digital knowledge by way of community services, human mentors, library resources etc. During this media workshop one short film "Library" from Sure Shot Productions & directed by S. S. Dogra also screened to students. The main objective of showing the film was to motivate the students to spend time in the library & learn new information and gather knowledge to do better in their life. Even Mr. Dogra gave some very useful tips to make maximum of technology for the betterment of the students Life & create better career to contribute for for welfare & development of the country as well as for the World. Mr. Dogra has also written two books on Media-education & conducted more than 150media workshops across the country.

The organiser of the workshop was Asso.Prof. Dr. Jayshree Singh,English HOD, and presided by  resources etc. The organiser of the workshop was Asso.Prof. Dr.Renu Rathore, Dean Science Faculty - Principal BNPG Co.Ed.College; and other participant faculty was
Asso. Prof. Dr. Bhanu Kapil, History HOD;

 Asstt.Prof.Manisha Shekhawat, English;
Asstt.Prof. Pradeep Purohit, Geography HOD;
 Asstt. Prof. Jyotiraditya Singh, Pol.Sc.HOD;  Asstt. Prof. Hemendra Shaktawat, Geography;  News Reporter Bhavesh Rawal ATN News.
In addition to the vibrant, vociferous and vital workshop on digital discipline, dissemination, diversity of knowledge, there was another session to commemorate the 150th birth cenetary  year of Mahatma Gandhi's Birthday as the UNO declared day for celebrating as the Day of Non- Violence. The Extension Lecture on the Gandhi's seminal book " Hind Swaraj" (1909)

was delivered by the Former Head and Dean of U.C.S.S.H., Mohanlal Sukhadia University, Udaipur. The Professor focused the relevance of the study of this book in contemporary times, for it speaks of adhering to truth i.e. understanding 'yours' and 'mine' truth - Satyagrah; Ahimsa, Swaraj, Swadeshi and Sarvodaya. He said the dialogic conversational Hind Swaraj book clarified how Soul force, passive resistance is powerful than brute force in building global and national peace. The session was presided by the Dean of the Soc.Sc. and Humanities - Asso.Prof. Dr.Prem Singh Rawlot and  the other English department faculty members - Associate Dean Dr. Aparna Sharma, Asso.Prof. the convener, Madhavi Rathore. It was held in the Maharani Sahiba Nirupama Kumari Hall, B.N.P.G.Girls College, BNU, Udaipur, Rajasthan.




Wednesday, 11 September 2019

Abstract ACLA 2020 Portal 9 AM close September 23, 2019.


Hello all,

On behalf of the ACLA Annual Meeting 2020 Committee leadership group, you are invited to submit a paper proposal to the seminar organized by Dr. Jayshree Singh for ACLA 2020, held March 19-22 in Chicago.

Seminar theme - "Contemporary Short Stories: The Touchstones to Discover Cultural, Social, Political and Legal Strands of Experiences” invites abstract for papers. The full seminar description and link to submit your abstract is here:

It would be a concerted and difficult effort to explain and to understand the socio-cultural and political-legal phenomena – in what way are the societies of the world are leveraged by the aesthetics of short story genre? Short stories’ genre is a sort of ‘literary Darwinism’ in order to reconstruct and regenerate invaluable insights through their literary work not only for the majority of the submerged population pre-occupied in mechanic schedule of life, but also for the dominant or domineering groups that involve in abatement of civility, culture and nature. Short stories directly or inadvertently respond to the economic and political surroundings through the extensive use of metaphorical language. Mostly they expose the narrow-minded protectionism and gender inequality. The short stories tender energetic and cognitive ties to evolve human mind to destroy self-destructive tendencies and to create melting-pot for survival, sustenance and prevention of mankind from being exploitative, violative and volatile. Michael S. Duke’s World of Modern Chinese Fiction speaks about catastrophic events of Modern Chinese History in Taiwan and Hong Kong inflicted due to Chinese historical travails from the late 1890s to the present day. Since after the failure of the hundred days’ reform of 1898, and the escape of Liang Qichao (1873-1929) to Japan, the Chinese writers have discovered the relevance of “spiritual transformation through literature in order to save the nation” (Lu Xun 1881-1936). Doris Lessing’s The Sun between Their Feet’- Collected African Stories poses a challenge to the previous ethnic canons that romance with cultural relativity and historiography of the text that “has conveyed a picture of Black people as being docile and imitative, stupid and parasitic children, primitives and buffoons” (Wright, Bobby. 1969). The Penguin Book of Modern Indian Short Stories, edited by Stephen Alter and Wimal Dissanayake raises voices of protest in opposition to the social and political structures and criticizes the narrow-minded school of linguistic protectionism that restrains national and international exposure. The book Unforgettable Heart: Short Stories by African-American Women 1859-1993, edited by Asha Kanwar outpours its literary sensibility upon the Civil Rights, Black Power and Women’s Liberation Movements of the Sixties, the teachings of Martin Luther King Jr. and the revolutionary rhetoric of Malcolm X.  The book titled Cuentos Chicanos: A Short Story Anthology edited by Rudolph A Anaya and Antoniyo Marquez explicates social protest, social-political movement known as EL Movimie that not only enunciates the Declaration of Chicano’s right to the heritage within the American society, but it was an avenue for literary creativity that has captured the dimensions, nuances, subtleties and paradoxes of Chicano’s life and culture in Mexico. The Zubaan book of stories titled Inner Line by Indian women, canonizes the women’s dependency, deprivation and desolation in the Third World Cultural Studies. The Indian women writers in the short stories convey that oppressive structures, oppressive traditions and oppressive patriarchy marginalise women’s position and they develop low self-perception in the social and cultural contexts and in biosphere context with regard to oppressive predatory notions. Intizar Hussain’s Short Stories from Pakistan gives exploratory commentary regarding the changes that have occured in the society of Pakistan since after its independence in 1947 and the holocaust of communal partition faced by both India and Pakistan in 1948. The author problematizes the question of their historical-cultural continuity of their roots and identity. The Seminar aims to raise discussion with regard to  political, legal, cultural and social occurrences and experiences - remembering home, logics of belonging, rewriting emotions of migration, exile, appropriating identity issues; remapping immigration, stratification and power, racialism in evolving ethnicity and minority tradition; global transformations on account of interracial consciousness, historical crossings of racial frontier, contemporary discourses of citizenship, politics of domesticity and beyond,  essentialism in politics of global feminism etc.


Information about the ACLA conference and submission process through the website is copied below, and the deadline for your paper submissions is 9AM Eastern Standard Time on Monday September 23rd. If you have any questions about the seminar or would like to share your abstract in advance of submission, please email me (dr.jayshree.singh@gmail.com).
Abstracts with the limit of 150 words or 200 characters are invited for the above-mentioned seminar topic along with biodata in 50 characters. The abstracts are to be submitted through login of your account by accessing the webpage of https://www.acla.org/annual-meeting and paper-presenters are to open their account by signing in or signing up and until the acceptance is sent by ACLA organisers, no registration - fee is to be deposited. Paper submissions through the portal will open August 31st and close September 23rd, 2019.
Dr. Jayshree Singh
Associate Professor
 Deptt. Of English, 
Faculty of Social Science and Humanities
Bhupal Nobles University, Udaipur-313001
Rajasthan
India
Mobile: 91-9828375535



Dear All,
We are pleased to announce that the paper submission portal for ACLA 2020 (Sheraton Grand Hotel, Chicago, March 19-22, 2020) is now open and available at https://www.acla.org/seminars. Follow the link to select a seminar for which you would like to submit a paper abstract. After you have clicked on the seminar, you will find a link at the top saying "Submit a paper for this seminar." Please fill out all necessary fields in the online form to propose a paper. Abstracts must be received by 9 AM EST on Monday, September 23, 2019.

Current ACLA guidelines specify that each ACLA member may submit only ONE PAPER to ONE SEMINAR for consideration for the 2020 Annual Meeting. We urge all prospective presenters to be in touch with seminar organizers prior to submission; contact information for seminar organizers is available on the page for each seminar.

Don't see the form to propose a paper?
Be sure to log in. Please note that this is your login information for your acla.org user account. If you do not have an account, you can create one. You do not need to purchase a membership to submit a paper proposal.
If you are logged in and the form is still not appearing for you on this page, it is because the system has detected that you have already proposed a paper.
Please contact info@acla.org if you have any questions.
A few helpful reminders
Submitting a paper here does NOT guarantee your participation in the conference. The organizer of the seminar to which you are submitting your paper will review and provisionally accept or decline your submission by Monday, September 30th at 9am EST.

The ACLA Program Committee will then review all seminar proposals during October and notify seminar organizers of acceptance or rejection during the first week of November.

As a participant, you agree to:
Be current in your ACLA membership and registered for the ACLA 2020 Annual Meeting by midnight PST Tuesday, January 15, 2020.  Please note that 2020 Memberships and Registrations will be on sale beginning on Oct. 1, 2019.
Reply promptly to all requests for information from the seminar organizer and the ACLA Secretariat, including requests for final program copy.
Attend all sessions of the seminar.
Notify the organizer of your seminar AND the ACLA Secretariat immediately if you are unable to attend the conference.
Communicate all special requests to the seminar organizer and the Secretariat so as to ensure that they are considered.
Add info@acla.org to your list of "safe senders" in your email account, ensuring that email communications with you will be delivered.
Please review your information carefully before you submit. Contact info@acla.org with any questions.

Hotel Block
If you are making travel plans already, please note that the ACLA has a block of rooms set aside at the Sheraton Grand Hotel where the conference will be held. Please reserve your room using the following link:
https://book.passkey.com/event/49969423/owner/2233/home  Please note that the reservation MUST be made using this link in order to secure the special rate.


Sincerely,

ACLA Secretariat
info@acla.org
 Twitter | Facebook | ACLA |
Copyright © 2019, American Comparative Literature Association, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you are or were a member of the American Comparative Literature Association.
Our new mailing address is:
American Comparative Literature Association
323 E. Wacker Dr., #642
Chicago, IL 60601
Tel: (312) 600-8072

Dear All,
We are pleased to announce that the paper submission portal for ACLA 2020 (Sheraton Grand Hotel, Chicago, March 19-22, 2020) is now open and available at https://www.acla.org/seminars. Follow the link to select a seminar for which you would like to submit a paper abstract. After you have clicked on the seminar, you will find a link at the top saying "Submit a paper for this seminar." Please fill out all necessary fields in the online form to propose a paper. Abstracts must be received by 9 AM EST on Monday, September 23, 2019.

Current ACLA guidelines specify that each ACLA member may submit only ONE PAPER to ONE SEMINAR for consideration for the 2020 Annual Meeting. We urge all prospective presenters to be in touch with seminar organizers prior to submission; contact information for seminar organizers is available on the page for each seminar.

Don't see the form to propose a paper?
Be sure to log in. Please note that this is your login information for your acla.org user account. If you do not have an account, you can create one. You do not need to purchase a membership to submit a paper proposal.
If you are logged in and the form is still not appearing for you on this page, it is because the system has detected that you have already proposed a paper.
Please contact info@acla.org if you have any questions.
A few helpful reminders
Submitting a paper here does NOT guarantee your participation in the conference. The organizer of the seminar to which you are submitting your paper will review and provisionally accept or decline your submission by Monday, September 30th at 9am EST.

The ACLA Program Committee will then review all seminar proposals during October and notify seminar organizers of acceptance or rejection during the first week of November.

As a participant, you agree to:
Be current in your ACLA membership and registered for the ACLA 2020 Annual Meeting by midnight PST Tuesday, January 15, 2020.  Please note that 2020 Memberships and Registrations will be on sale beginning on Oct. 1, 2019.
Reply promptly to all requests for information from the seminar organizer and the ACLA Secretariat, including requests for final program copy.
Attend all sessions of the seminar.
Notify the organizer of your seminar AND the ACLA Secretariat immediately if you are unable to attend the conference.
Communicate all special requests to the seminar organizer and the Secretariat so as to ensure that they are considered.
Add info@acla.org to your list of "safe senders" in your email account, ensuring that email communications with you will be delivered.
Please review your information carefully before you submit. Contact info@acla.org with any questions.

Hotel Block
If you are making travel plans already, please note that the ACLA has a block of rooms set aside at the Sheraton Grand Hotel where the conference will be held. Please reserve your room using the following link:
https://book.passkey.com/event/49969423/owner/2233/home  Please note that the reservation MUST be made using this link in order to secure the special rate.


Sincerely,

ACLA Secretariat
info@acla.org
 Twitter | Facebook | ACLA |
Copyright © 2019, American Comparative Literature Association, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you are or were a member of the American Comparative Literature Association.
Our new mailing address is:
American Comparative Literature Association
323 E. Wacker Dr., #642
Chicago, IL 60601
Tel: (312) 600-8072
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Sunday, 4 August 2019

Rendezvous at University de Macau - ICLA 2019, XXII Congress




















With Prof. Zhang Longxi, University of China, The President of the ICLA Congress 2019 at Macau, dt. 03-08-2019, E4 Hall classroom at 9:00 - 10:00am





https://www.medmeeting.org/home/programEN/8045?uid=1638905





Date




Time




Hall




Session




Role




Title



Name
2019-07-30
11:20-11:30
E3-1043
Theorizing the Literary across Cultures
Oral Presentation
Bondage and Liberation in the East and West Poetics
Jayshree Singh
2019-07-30
16:00-17:30
E4-1063
Conversations across Differences
Moderator

Jayshree Singh
2019-07-30
14:50-15:00
E4-1063
Conversations across Differences
Oral Presentation
The Major, Minor and Marginal Characters in the Contemporary South Asian Fiction.
Jayshree Singh
2019-07-31
14:00-14:20
E3-2033
South Asian Literature as World Literature: Issues of Recognition, Reception and Resistance
Panel/Workshop
An Illustrious Poetic Genre “Veer Rasa” in Indian Folk Literature

Jayshree Singh








2019-08-01
09:00-10:30
E3-3042
Cultural Constructs and Legal Structures in Literary Discourses, Texts and Film
Moderator
Jayshree Singh
2019-08-01
11:30-11:40
E3-3042
Cultural Constructs and Legal Structures in Literary Discourses, Texts and Film
Oral Presentation
The Convict System: The Mask of Predatory Tactics
Jayshree Singh
2019-08-01
11:00-12:30
E3-3042
Cultural Constructs and Legal Structures in Literary Discourses, Texts and Film
Moderator
Jayshree Singh


09:00-10:30 [R3-Literary, Cultural, and Temporal (Un)Translatability] Cultural Constructs and Legal Structures in Literary Discourses, Texts and Film
Time
Subject
Speaker
09:00-09:12
Memory, Medium and Justice in Naked Among Wolves 3.0, or How Writing History is Making History

09:12-09:24
Writing Memory, Practicing Resistance: A Selective Study of Naga Women’s Writings

09:24-09:36
Manto’s New Constitution: Law's Duality of Emancipation and Coercion

09:36-09:48
Reconstruction and AlterNative Anthropology in Mahasweta Devi & Italo Spinneli’s Gangor

09:48-10:00
Cultural Construct and Social Exclusion in Manipur

10:00-10:30
Q&A


11:00-12:30 [R3-Literary, Cultural, and Temporal (Un)Translatability] Cultural Constructs and Legal Structures in Literary Discourses, Texts and Film
Time
Subject
Speaker
11:00-11:10
Bolaño and Patricio Pron: archives of evil in Latin American contemporary literature

11:10-11:20
The Promise of New Narrative Voices in Post-Conflict Peru

11:20-11:30
Translation of the epic "Kitabi-Dede Gorgud"

11:30-11:40
The Convict System: The Mask of Predatory Tactics

11:40-11:50
Trauma: Memory in Palestinian Exilic Narrative

11:50-12:00
Jews of America

12:00-12:30
Q&A