Call for Papers
The  Department of English, Gauhati University, has been organizing a series  of international seminars on literature emerging from India and its  neighbours, with two seminars already held on Sri Lanka and Pakistan.  This year, we are shifting our focus to Afghanistan, the nation, and its  diaspora.
Modern Afghanistan is often regarded as an isolated,  troubled, violence-ridden territory in the global imaginary, in the  light of its occupation by the Soviets in the Cold War era and by the US  in the aftermath of 9/11. However, this representation, as with any  representation, comes with its own political and ideological baggage.  Seamus Heaney, in “Crediting Poetry”, his Nobel lecture, in speaking of  the violent history of Northern Ireland, said that “history is about as  instructive as an abattoir; ... peace is merely the desolation left  behind after the decisive operations of merciless power”. This suggests  the ‘universal’ nature of violence in the history of any race, and to  speak of certain parts of the world as being prone to more violence is  politically motivated.
In terms of language and culture,  Afghanistan retains a rich heritage that not merely dates back to  thousands of years but also charts a transnational trajectory in the  form of a Persian literary culture that includes countries like Turkey,  Iran and India in its ambit. Apart from Dari (Persian), Pashto, the  other major language of Afghanistan, also possesses a wealth of  literature, both oral and written. Afghan writing in English, however,  seems to be a relatively recent phenomena compared to the rich literary  histories of Dari and Pashto, with only a few writers like Khaled  Hosseini and Nadia Hashimi writing in English. Other eminent  contemporary writers who are visible globally, like Atiq Rahimi, have  had their writings translated into English. Given this, to merely look  at Afghan fiction in English would be to ignore the larger literary  scenario that includes not merely Pashto and Dari but also other genres  like poetry. In fact, poetry and fiction have been the dominant forms  through which Afghan writers have articulated the trauma of violence,  terror, displacement and loss of identity and home. 
A discussion of  politics and the political cannot be avoided in speaking of  representation; this is all the more so when one looks at contemporary  Afghan literature, especially the fact that the writers choosing English  as the medium of their representation are diasporic rather than  resident writers. This is not to say that writing in English is not  possible in Afghanistan itself but to underline the fact that the  particular political engagements of writers are consciously undertaken  to provide alternative versions of reading and representing Afghanistan  rather than the politically dominant Western view of the nation being  just a den of violence under Taliban rule until it was occupied by the  United States of America and transformed into a ‘democratic’ nation. A  similar preoccupation can be seen in the works of writers looking at the  Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in a similar light. Another important  aspect is the experiences of women who find themselves repressed in  terms of tradition, religion and politics. Writers as well as  journalists highlight the grim challenges that women in Afghanistan face  in present times. Even though the thrust of this series of seminars is  on fiction in English, we would, however, like to welcome papers on  texts translated into English as well as on forms other than fiction, if  they conform thematically to the central focus of the seminar, which  is, to attempt to understand the specific ways in which contemporary  Afghan literature has responded to and addressed the drastic political  and cultural changes in Afghanistan since the second half of the  twentieth century as well as certain repressive aspects of tradition  that perpetuate from the past well into the present.    
We invite  papers that look into the complex cultural, historical and political  contexts that underpin the literature emerging from both within  Afghanistan and the Afghan diaspora since the last two decades, roughly  under, but not limited to, the following sub-themes:
- Gender and the nation
- The body
- Ethnicity
- Home
- Exile, migration and displacement
- Identity, nation and literature
- Religion and violence
- Narrative and history
- Orality and culture
- The Soviet Occupation of Afghanistan
- The Taliban occupation
- 9/11 and the US presence in Afghanistan
- Politics and literature
- The folk and the popular
- Terrorism and children
- Everyday life in Afghanistan
- Tradition and modernity in Afghanistan
- Afghanistan and the West
Interested participants are requested to submit a 300-word abstract by 15 June 2018 to:
Participants whose papers are selected for presentation will be notified by 30 June 2018.  Paper presenters will get 20 minutes each to present their papers,  followed by 5 minutes of discussion. The full papers should be e-mailed  to us by 31 December 2018.
For further details, please contact:
Manashi Bora (+91 9864034773)
Dolikajyoti Sharma (+91 9864111289)
Convenors
Department of English
Gauhati University
Guwahati - 781014
