Department of English
Jamia Millia Islamia
International
Conference
on
Dalit Literature
& Historiography: Resistance and Reconstruction
19th - 21st December 2013
Today it is
widely accepted that history is no longer an undisputed, uncontested terrain.
Every history - history of the world or of a nation or of a people or an
individual - can be seen and narrated from various perspectives. Accordingly,
there have been various Schools of Historiography - Hegelian School, French
School, Nationalist, Marxist and Subaltern - reflecting divergent focus and
concerns of the historians. In a situation where strict historical methodology
is set aside to allow facts, events and documents drawn from all sources to
work together and reconstruct the history of the people the significance of
literature can hardly be missed. Insights from literature enriches our
understanding not only of history but of politics and economics as well and new
horizons of thinking emerge. Not only the Nation but also its ‘fragments’ find
their utterance through Narration. Both Marxist and Subaltern Schools profess
to work towards the goal of writing ‘history from below’, and offer a much
needed corrective to the ‘nationalist’ school which is seen as ‘elitist’.
However, despite its explicit corrective agenda and preoccupation with the
binaries of nation and fragments, men and women, elites and peasants, urban and
rural, haves and have-nots, majority and minority even the Subaltern School
seems to have missed the position of the Dalits in India. They seem to have
missed the fact that in the recent past Dalit literature in India has played a
crucial role to rewrite the ‘history from below.’ Influenced by
Periyar-Ambedkar Movement Dalit writers across the length and breadth of the
country have not only been consciously writing against the hegemonic structure
of the society but also creating parallel ‘histories’ in their writings. While
writers like Om Prakash Balmiki, Sharan Kumar Limbale, Bama, Sivakami, Jayant Parmar, Neerav
Patel et al. compelled national and international attention through their
‘personal narratives,’ many others like Basudev Sunani have taken up the
onerous task of writing the cultural history of their people. Even on the face
of adverse criticism they are silently documenting the oral histories and
mythologies of their people.
In such a
scenario, it has become extremely important at this juncture to engage with Dalit
Literature and Dalit Historiography in different languages. Questions on
ideological positions, methodology adopted, objectives envisioned, similarity
with/difference from other literatures/historiographies will be raised and
debated with utmost rigour and, possibly, we will come up with some new
formulations and insights.
The proposed
Conference aims at providing an interdisciplinary platform for writers, poets,
researchers, academics and non-academics to deliberate upon the trends, issues
and methodologies in Dalit Literature and Dalit Historiography in the true
spirit of exchanging ideas and mapping new horizons.
The seminar will have plenaries, individual presentations
as well as panels.
Themes/Sub-themes of the Conference:
- Revisiting the Subaltern: Dalit Literature and its Discontents
- Dalit Literature: Trends and Issues
- Dalit Literature & Dalit Historiography
- Dalit Historiography: Scope and Challenges
- Dalit Historiography vs Marxist Historiography
- Dalit Historiography vs Subaltern Historiography
- Dalit History: Oral vs Written
- Dalit History: Resistance and Reconstruction
- Dalit Literature: Politics of Translation
- Dalit, Afro-American & Aboriginal Identity: Convergence & Comparative Perspectives
Please send your abstracts (about 500 words) bearing your name and institutional affiliation, if any, to doe.jmi@gmail.com by November 20, 2013.
You will be intimated by November 22, 2013 about the selection of your abstract, in which case you will have to submit the complete paper by December 15, 2013.
Prof M Asaduddin Mr Saroj K Mahananda
Conference Chair Conference Coordinator