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Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa, and the Middle East seeks
critical essays for a special issue entitled "Comparative
(Post)colonialisms: The Literary Issue."

We are interested in papers
that explore comparative perspectives on postcolonial literature and
theory, that critically examine the hegemony of colonial languages
within postcolonial studies, and that investigate how postcolonial
theory might be enriched, critiqued, nuanced, or exposed through the
perspectives of non-colonial (indigenous or "lesser taught")
languages, comparative literature, or area studies. How does the
field of postcolonial studies as currently constituted in the academy
contribute to the linguistic, cultural, or institutional dominance of
English? What kinds of texts, discourses, or practices elude, or are
repressed by, this framework?  What "blind spots" are revealed in
postcolonial theory from the perspective of texts or traditions not
in a colonizer’s language? What ideological or strategic roles do
specific languages play in texts, institutional contexts, politics,
or history?

Please submit essays of between 5,000 and 12,000 words (note and
reference inclusive), by September 15, 2002.  Essays should be
formatted in Chicago style and use the Library of Congress
transliteration system for romanization, without diacritical marks.
We prefer electronic submissions to Waïl Hassan ([log in to unmask])
and Rebecca Saunders ([log in to unmask]), though essays may also be
submitted in hardcopy to Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa,
and the Middle East, Department of English, Box 4240, Illinois State
University, Normal, IL  61790-4240. Relevant books for review are
also welcome.







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