5th Annual Rustgi Undergraduate Conference on South Asia (April 1, 2023, University at Buffalo, SUNY)

Walter Hakala's picture
Type: 
Conference
Date: 
April 1, 2023
Location: 
New York, United States
Subject Fields: 
Asian American History / Studies, Asian History / Studies, South Asian History / Studies

 

2023 RUSTGI UNDERGRADUATE CONFERENCE ON SOUTH ASIA

Identity & Cultural Dissonance

Saturday, April 1, 2023 

In-Person (10 Capen Hall) + Zoom (register for link) 

 

NYC Council Member Shahana Hanif, Keynote Speaker

Saturday, April 1st at 4 PM EST 

 Being the First Muslim Woman Elected to the New York City Council: What This Means For the Muslim Community and the Future of our Democracy

Council Member Shahana Hanif is the Council Member for Brooklyn’s 39th District. She was born and raised in Kensington, Brooklyn, and is the daughter of Bangladeshi Muslim immigrants. She is the product of public schools, an activist, community organizer, and public servant. Shahana is the first Muslim woman ever elected to the New York City Council and the first woman council member for the 39th District. She currently serves as the chair of the Immigration Committee and is one of the two co-chairs of the Progressive Caucus. 

Featuring Student Speakers & Panelists 

Join student speakers, both domestic and international, as well as panel chairs from the University at Buffalo as they speak about some of the most important issues in South Asia. We will cover a diverse range of topics, discussing political, social, and environmental issues. 

 

This hybrid event is free, but registration is required.

To register visit https://bit.ly/rustgiregistration2023 

For more information please contact southasiaundergradconf@gmail.com


 

Program Schedule 

Saturday, April 1st 

Breakfast: 8:00 am – 8:45 am

Opening Remarks: 8:45 am to 9:00 am

 

Panel 1: Resisting Monolithic Narratives of Identity in a Post-Colonial World

9:00 am - 10:15 am 

Panel Chair: TBD

Imaan Azeem, Habib University, “Language and Identity in a Post-colonial Context: An ethnographic study amongst students in Karachi” 

Rajkishore Mukherjee, University of Calcutta, “Identity, and its Role in South Asian Democracies”

Malavika Kannan, Stanford University, “Spirited Wives: Critiquing Early Nationalism Through the Life-Writings of 20th Century Women” 

 

Panel 2: Expressions of Cultural Resilience                                                                         

10:30 am - 12:15 pm 

Panel Chair: Dr. Nadine Shaanta Murshid, University at Buffalo 

Caitlyn Marentette, University at Pennsylvania, “Emotion, Language, and Identity Politics in East Pakistan”

Neha Melwani, University at Toronto, “Creating Colonial Identities: The Impacts of British Colonial Forestry on Indian People” 

Spoorthi Niranjan, FLAME University, “Caste Resistance to Caste Assimilation: The Brahminization of the Lingayat Community”

Kavya Srikanth, Stanford University, “Linguistic Identity Formation in Independent India”

 

Lunch Break 12:15 pm - 1:00 pm 

Panel 3: Transforming Cross-Cultural Depictions Across Entertainment

1:00 pm - 2:15 pm

Panel Chair: TBD

Clara Walling, Hamilton College, “Artistic Dreaming and the Role of Sound in Diasporic Longing”

Leela Cullity, Occidental College, “Cross-Cultural Love in the South Asian Diaspora: A Comparative Analysis of Michael Showalter’s The Big Sick and Mira Nair’s The Namesake”

Nithya Balakrish, Michigan State University, “A Queen by any Other Name: The Construction of Hijras in Indian Cinema”

 

Panel 4: Community Implications of South Asian Diasporic Ties

2:30 pm - 3:45 pm

Panel Chair: Dr. Christopher Lee, Canisius College 

Vansh Ruhela, University of Toronto, “The Quota-Caste System: A Double-Edged Sword”

Kush Chaudhari, Vanderbilt University, “The Complexity of the Hindu Mother Cow Gives Rise to Diverse Hindu American Perspectives”

Jaret Rushing, Vanderbilt University, “Conceiving Hindu-Muslim Translation: Shared Materiality and Kinship in the Indo-Persian Cosmopolis”

 

Keynote Talk 4:00 pm - 5:30 pm 

New York City Council Member Shahana Hanif 

“Being the First Muslim Woman Elected to the New York City Council: What This Means For the Muslim Community and the Future of our Democracy”

 

The fourth annual Rustgi South Asian Undergraduate Research Conference is made possible by a generous gift from the families of Dr. Vinod Rustgi and Dr. Anil Rustgi, as well as funding from the University at Buffalo Asia Research Institute and Asian Studies Program.

 

Contact Info: 

Walter Hakala

Associate Professor, Department of English and Asian Studies Program

University at Buffalo, SUNY

 

Contact Email: