Tuesday 22 May 2018

CFP: Dibrugarh University Journal of English Studies (DUJES) Volume 27 (March, 2019)












About DUJES
Since its inception in 1976-77, the Dibrugarh University Journal of English Studies (DUJES) (ISSN 0975- 5659) has been providing a space for analysis, intervention and research across a wide range of areas related to English Studies. It is an annual peer-reviewed journal which publishes full-length articles on all aspects of English Studies, both theoretical and practical. The journal invites relevant contributions in areas such as Literature(s) in English as well as English translations, literary criticism and theory, issues related to research and research methodology, linguistics, ELT, and related fields of study. The journal also publishes reviews of texts, reference books and scholarly work related to the discipline. It is a peer-reviewed journal and all contributions are sent out anonymously to the Board of Reviewers for evaluation. Therefore, the name of the contributor and his/her full official address along with a short biographical note (not exceeding 100 words) and e-mail id should be given in a separate page to facilitate confidential peer reading. The contributors are expected to conform strictly to the following guidelines: 
Manuscripts of the full-length articles should be between 4000-8000 words (inclusive of works cited and endnotes) and the Reviews must not exceed a word limit of 2000. 
The manuscripts should be prepared strictly according to the MLA Handbook (7th edition) style. 
Endnotes must be used rather than footnotes. 
Works cited should be included in the manuscript. 
Simultaneous submission of the same manuscript for publication in other journals is not allowed and the work should not have been published previously. 


The next issue of DUJES (Vol. 27) is scheduled for publication in March, 2019. Contributions for possible inclusion must reach the Editors: Dr. Meena Sharma, Assistant Professor, Department of English, Dibrugarh University, and Dr. Basil N. Darlong Diengdoh, Assistant Professor, Department of English, Dibrugarh University, by 31st October, 2018, at dujes78@gmail.com.











Contact Info:
The research papers for publication may be sent in the following email id: dujes78@gmail.com.


For further information and queries, write to:
The Editors, DUJES (Vol. 27)
Department of English,
Dibrugarh University,
Dibrugarh-786004
Assam, India.






Email:- basildarlongdiengdoh@dibru.ac.in for any further queries and concerns.

Contact Email: dujes78@gmail.com
URL: http://www.dibru.ac.in

Thursday 10 May 2018

CFP Themed Issue: Human Rights and Literature (Ed. Prof. Pramod Nayar)










Special Issue: Human Rights and Literature (Vol. 10, No. 4, September 2018)


To be edited by

Prof. Pramod K Nayar
Dept. of English, the University of Hyderabad, India


Human Rights and Literature has now acquired considerable standing as an ‘interdiscipline’, as one anthology characterizes it. With a keen political, both state and humanitarian-activist, interest in refugees, the displaced and the injured, not to mention a market for misery, the last decades of the twentieth  century has seen the rise of varied narratives – memoirs, testimonies, eyewitness accounts, and literature – by and around these categories of humans.

Critics have examined the narrative traditions of Human Rights, the idea of the ‘person’ in this discourse, literary genres most congenial to mapping the ‘human’ and the human’s rights. Distinguished literary-cultural scholars such as James Dawes, Joseph Slaughter,  Elizabeth Goldberg, Alexandra Schultheis, Domna Stanton, Elizabeth Anker, Lynn Hunt, among several others, have pioneered the study of the narrativization of the human, and therefore of Human Rights. With a quickening interest in ‘precarious lives’ in the work of Judith Butler, Adriana Cavarero, Bryan Turner, and others, conditions and narratives of precarity as documented in Literature have also come in for attention. Tangentially, the work of scholars like Hillary Chute on graphic novels have illuminated the role the medium and the genre plays in documenting suffering and the ‘personhood’ of victims.
























This special issue seeks papers on the interface, Literature and Human Rights. Essays can examine a single text or group of texts/authors as these develop ideas about the person, her/his ‘social ontology’ and rights. We are interested in areas such as ecological crisis and Human Rights, biomedicine and Human Rights, canonical authors and their constructions of victims, the human and the subhuman, to mention a few possible realms for exploration.
Completed essays, within 5000 words, must reach the Guest Editor by 10 July 2018. Preliminary enquiries, preferably clearly focused ones, are welcome.














How to submit:
Please your submission to pramodknayar@gmail.com and editor@rupkatha.com following the Submission Guidelines at http://rupkatha.com/submissionguidelines.php. Please do not submit through the Submission Portal (http://rupkatha.com/review/index.php/rjis). This applies only to this issue.
Submission Deadline: July 10, 2018

Tentative Publication Month: September 2018