Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Sanglap: Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry (ISSN: 2349-8064)
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Editorial Team
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Publication Ethics and Malpractice Statement
    • Copyright, Information & Access
    • Contact
  • Submissions
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Author Guidelines
    • Peer Review Process
    • Sanglap Style Guide
  • Current
  • Archives
  • Considerations
  • Out of the blox
  • Announcements
  • Search
Search
  • Register
  • Login
  1. Home /
  2. Archives /
  3. Vol. 3 No. 2 (2017): City, Space and Literature

Vol. 3 No. 2 (2017): City, Space and Literature

					View Vol. 3 No. 2 (2017): City, Space and Literature
Published: 2022-12-01

Articles

  • Introduction

    Anuparna Mukherjee, Arunima Bhattacharya
    1-26
    • HTML
    • PDF
  • Writing Johannesburg into Being Rituals of Mobility and the Uneven City in Mark Gevisser, Ivan Vladislavić and Lindsay Bremner’s Writing

    Rebekah Cumpsty
    27-65
    • HTML
    • PDF
  • A Flâneur for the 21st Century: DeLillo’s Cosmopolis

    Haydon Hughes
    66-91
    • HTML
    • PDF
  • Unreliable Physical Places and Memories as Posthuman Narration in Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go

    Megan E. Cannella
    92-126
    • HTML
    • PDF
  • Crossing the Threshold: Women in Colonial City Space

    Sanchayita Paul Chakraborty
    127-165
    • HTML
    • PDF
  • Confronting Epochs The Many Faces of Colonial and Postcolonial Park Street in Kolkata

    Arjab Roy
    166-203
    • HTML
    • PDF
  • The Bombay of Rohinton Mistry Mapping the cityscape in A Fine Balance and Such a Long Journey

    Sarbani Mohapatra, Tirtha Pratim Deb
    204-239
    • HTML
    • PDF
  • Dreams of Minsk A Journey through Aesthetics of Utopia within a European Experience

    Heloisa Rojas Gomez
    240-285
    • HTML
    • PDF
  • Cities from Above in Literature Moscow, Kolkata1

    Sujaan Mukherjee
    286-320
    • HTML
    • PDF

Opinion

  • A Home at the End of the World Eritrean and Sudanese Asylum Seekers in Tel Aviv, Israel

    David Clinton Wills
    321-349
    • HTML
    • PDF

Artwork

  • The Perforated Curtain: Configuring the Public and the Private in Calcutta’s Cabin Culture

    Twisha
    350-355
    • HTML
    • PDF

Sanglap

Announcements

CFP for Sanglap 11.2 on Politics of Waterscapes

April 3, 2024

CFP for Sanglap 11.2

We draw from this use of the term and want to explore how water has been commodified or enclosed for profit as a resource, generating complex power dynamics. Issues of access in terms of caste, race, or gender related discrimination have also mobilised conversations around pitching water at the centre of discussions for community and economy. In many cases, these thinkers have gone to literature to support their arguments, as literary scholars have argued for water’s significance for community building and historical documentation. Water’s agentic power has also made recent incursions into critical studies where questions of fluidity and power have led to the emergence of the subfield, ‘blue humanities’.

It is this framework of understanding water as a source of energy, resource, commodity, as well as philosophy, politics, and culture that we wish to explore in this issue through studies of how water is represented in literature and culture. Recent and burgeoning work on hydropolitics, riparian fiction, liquid modernity allows to think where we stand with the question of water in literature as we enter the second quarter of the 21st century.

Current Issue

  • Atom logo
  • RSS2 logo
  • RSS1 logo

Browse

  • Categories
    • Considerations
    • Out of the blox

Information

  • For Readers
  • For Authors
  • For Librarians
Keywords

Indexed in DOAJ

Indexed in Index Copernicus

Archived in US Library of Congress

Archived in The British Library

Twitter

Facebook

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter 

 

More information about the publishing system, Platform and Workflow by OJS/PKP.