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Tuesday, March 29, 2011

'Science needs to be studied in its social context' - Rediff Getahead

'Science needs to be studied in its social context' - Rediff Getahead

JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY FOR ELT

JOURNAL OF TECHNOLOGY FOR ELT

3-Month Free Online Access to "English Today "

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=ENG

UGC-Sponsored National Seminar on Resistance Studies


23 -24 August 2011
Theme: Speaking of the Subaltern: Exploring the Past; Anticipating the future
Organized by The Department of English, Pallagatti Adavappa First Grade College, Tiptur, Karnataka
Venue: Kalpataru Vidya Samsthe  Campus Tiptur, Karnataka, 572202
About the Seminar: A group of Indian scholars brought this term into much popularity and made it focal point of research, investigation, critical scholarship and publication through their Subaltern Studies. The Subaltern studies published nine volumes on South Asian history and society, particularly from "subaltern perspective" during 1982-1996. From then onwards this term attracts the attention of many researchers and scholars especially of social scientists and theologians. The geopolitical, economic, historical, political and social maps of the highly backward Indians of the rural and urban regions guided by their 'subaltern consciousness' make us alert to recurring famine, drought, starvation, malnutrition, disease, superstitious belief, bonded slavery, sexual exploitation and humiliation as the by-product of elite society.
Papers are invited for presentation from researchers and teachers on the following areas and related topics (but not limited to):
·          Discrimination by Caste/ Class/Gender
·          Historiography of India
·          Comparative subaltern movements and cults across the globe
·          Distribution of Power and Wealth
·          Role of physical coercion of the state
·          Ideology of nationalism and class
·          Double colonization of women
Abstract
The abstract in softcopy not exceeding 250 words, with title and author's name as it should appear in certificate, typed in Times New Roman on A4 size, in MS-Word Format, double line spacing should be submitted as an attachment only through  e-mail on or before 10th April 2011, to:

For more details, please contact Dr UdayaRavi at udayaravi.shastry AT gmail.com

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Humanities-Social Sciences Journals

Humanities-Social Sciences Journals

BA EST 431 Literary Theory End Sem Model Question Paper


END SEMESTER EXAMINATION MARCH: 2011
IV SEMESTER

Programme: BA (PSEng, JPE, CEP) Max Marks: 100
Course: Literary Theory Duration: 3 Hrs
Code: EST 431

Answer Any Five of the Following. (5x20=100)
Note:
i. The questions are designed to bring out your positions viz-a-viz the theories you have studied. Please ensure that while clarifying your positions you locate them within or around the theories you have studied. A personal take or a personal narrative not located within the theories you have studied may not be treated as an answer.

1. Would Eagleton’s position that literature is an ideological apparatus, be acceptable to you? Give theoretically sound agruments for you position.
2. Between Plato and Aristotle, whose position is more acceptable to you? Explain with reasons.
3. How does Saussure’s conception of language complicate the idea of language you have inherited. Explain.
4. What structuralist notions of language and ‘reality’ does Derrida complicate? How does he do that? Elucidate.
5. What are the differing ideas of the subject  do Freud and Lacan inaugurate? Explain.
6. Discuss the possibilities and limitations of poststructuralist feminist thought for you as a student of English studies, and Psychology, who mostly lives and studies on parental support and has a different social history that determines your present subjecthood than that of Europe and North America.
7. How does Judith Butler problematise ‘gender and sexuality as categories of essence’? In doing so what new insights does she give into Freud’s thought? Explain.
8. How does Foucault show the relationship between discourse and power/knowledge? Does Foucault affect the way you looked at the social? Elucidate.
9. If we accept Said’s arguments on Orientalism, what political agenda does it set for you as a young undergraduate at the beginning of the twenty first century? Explain with reasons.
10. On what grounds would you argue that the condition you exist is postmodern. Delineate your argument using ideas of different postmodern thinkers you have studied.

BA EST 431 Literary Theory Material for End-Sem Exam

Making this post on the request of Fatema of II PSEng who made that request on behalf of her friends.


All the best. Do well. 

Thursday, March 17, 2011

UNITED NATIONS JOURNALISM FELLOWSHIPS


    *The Dag Hammarskjöld Scholarship Fund for Journalists is now accepting applications from professional journalists from developing countries for its 2011 Fellowship Program. The application deadline is April 6, 2011.* *The Fellowships are available to radio, television, print and web journalists, age 25 to 35, from developing countries who are interested in coming to New York to report on international affairs during the 66th session of the United Nations General Assembly. The Fellowships will begin in mid-September and extend to late November and will include the cost of travel and accommodations in New York, as well as a per diem allowance. * *The Fellowship Program is open to journalists who are native to one of the developing countries in Africa, Asia, South America and the Caribbean, and are currently working full-time for a bona fide media organization in a developing nation. Applicants must demonstrate an interest in and commitment to international affairs and to conveying a better understanding of the United Nations to their readers and audiences. They must also have approval from their media organizations to spend up to two months in New York to report from the United Nations. * *NOTE: For 2011 only, the Fund will not accept applications from the countries of the 2010 Fellows – Nepal, Peru, South Africa and Togo – in an effort to rotate recipient countries. * *The journalists who are awarded Fellowships are given the incomparable opportunity to observe international diplomatic deliberations at the United Nations, to make professional contacts that will serve them for years to come, to interact with seasoned journalists from around the world, and to gain a broader perspective and understanding of matters of global concern. Many past Fellows have risen to prominence in their professions and countries. The program is not intended to provide basic skills training to journalists, as all participants must be working media professionals.* *This is the 50th year the Dag Hammarskjöld Scholarship Fund has sponsored the fellowship program for journalists. The program is administered on a volunteer basis by journalists at the United Nations, who raise money from foundations, corporations and diplomatic missions to finance it. * *Click here <http://unjournalismfellowship.org/node/565> for full eligibility and documentation requirements and Fellowship application form. Questions about the program, eligibility and application process can be directed to info2@unjournalismfellowship.org<http://unjournalismfellowship.org/feedback> All the best Mike Shanahan  Press officer International Institute for Environment and Development 3 Endsleigh Street London WC1H 0DD Tel: 44 (0) 207 388 2117 Fax: 44 (0) 207 388 2826 Email: mike.shanahan AT iied.org www.iied.org  Twitter http://twitter.com/shanahanmike Biodiversity Media Alliance http://biodiversitymedia.ning.com Climate Change Media Partnership roster http://climatechangemedia.ning.com climatechangemediapartnership Reporting COP16 by developing world journalists http://www.climatemediapartnership.org