Sunday Reads: Check out this review of John McLeod's "Postcolonial London: Rewriting the Metropolis" by Molly Slavin on our GPS website!
https://t.co/djehHzR0PH
Sunday Reads: Palak Taneja's review of "This Side, That Side: Restorying Partition, Graphic Narratives from Pakistan, India, Bangladesh" by Vishwajyoti Ghosh
https://t.co/NprYUriQ42
Everything has a legacy, and architecture's imbrications with colonialisms reveal that space, though seemingly "objective," is never really neutral: https://t.co/r2psXhAcgz
Curious about the overlaps and incommensurabilities between Postcolonial Theory and African American Studies? Read our helpful primer to find out: https://t.co/uB7lgXklt1
@marzia_milazzo @raginits & here are more voices on how Global Anglophone affects practices of hiring and research in the last few years, including my intro of this 2019 @AtPost45 cluster. Pls let me know your thoughts if interested! Clearly I haven't figured this out yet :) https://t.co/3YDwYOhchx
Sunday Reading from the Archives — check out Caroline Schwenz's review of Ankhi Mukherjee's "What is a Classic? Postcolonial Rewrite and Invention of the Canon"
https://t.co/rxIE0ktD1c
Is racism the virus? #FeminismsUnbound addresses racist attacks against Asian people and how HIV, Ebola, H1N1, Avian Flu were attached to particular racialized populations in ways that cast suspicion on sexual/intimate proximities with humans and animals.
https://t.co/VWcHnmhVPK
"Not much of the world saw Yemen’s version of revolution. In accounts of the Arab Spring, Yemen is often left out" @kasinof reflects on war, humanitarian crisis and collapse in #Yemen in aftermath of the chaos of Arab Spring protests https://t.co/b88iaVURAK
Join us for an exciting upcoming book talk: “Far from Mecca: Globalizing the Muslim Caribbean” with Dr. Aliyah Khan in conversation with Emory WGSS PhD candidate Suzanne Persard. March 25, 2021 at 12pm. Register here: https://t.co/tJn61fyQyI
Check out Emory grad student Natalie Catasús’s incredibly insightful, new book review of DUP’s 2017 “Archipelagic American Studies,” edited by Brian Russell Roberts and Michelle Ann Stephens, on our GPS website now!
https://t.co/yF7WdcOqFm
Please join us in celebrating @EmoryUniversity's 2020-21 International Awards Winners on Thursday, February 4! Event details and registration for the virtual ceremony: https://t.co/PVSv4XhXPR
"An aerial photograph exposes the human condition twice: first, by depicting the scope of tragedy we have at best allowed, and at worst caused—and then, by confronting us with the distance from which we have chosen to view it," writes Anna Badkhen https://t.co/euPg0pOPsd
Southern edges, littorals, latitudes, margins-and the stories we tell along, through, with them. #SouthernLives preliminary engagement today linking five continents, four of them southern @OxLifeWriting@WolfsonCollege
We're looking forward to getting our hands on the new issue of Wasafiri - issue no 104 on Human Rights Cultures: Rwanda, Kenya, Colombia and Argentina. Guest Edited by Billy Kahora and Zoe Norridge. @WasafiriMag https://t.co/1H8imDyy24