Saturday, 6 December 2014

Call for Papers for JBS Vol.4 No.1 (Bengali Music: Bengalis and Music)



Call for Papers for JBS Vol.4, No.1 on the theme of Bengali Music: Bengalis and Music


After the proud publications of our issues on Ognijug, the age of revolutionary nationalism in Bengal (Vol.1, No.1), Bengali Cinema: Bengalis and Cinema (Vol.1, No.2), Bengali Theatre: Bengalis and Theatre (Vol.2, No.1), Science and Technology in History: Modern Bengali Perspectives (Vol.2, No.2), Literature and Movements: Bengali Crossroads (Vol.3, No.1), Kolkata (Vol.3, No.2), Journal of Bengali Studies (JBS), a peer reviewed interdisciplinary online academic journal (ISSN: 2277- 9426) meant for scholarly discussions into the history and culture of the Indic Bengali people, is pleased to announce the Call for Papers for its seventh issue (Vol.4, No.1) on the theme of Bengali Music: Bengalis and Music, due to be published on the occasion of Noboborsho, Bengali New Year, 15 April 2015. The final date for submission of article/review/workshop is 15 March 2015. Commentaries in JBS are accepted by invitation/commission alone. If you want to author a commentary instead of a regular article or review, or want to know how they are different, please get in touch with the editorial board beforehand at shoptodina@gmail.com 



Bengali Music: Bengalis and Music

The theme of JBS Vol.4 No.1 is Bengali Music: Bengalis and Music.
Indian civilisation records it penchant for music which goes back to the earliest Vedic times.
Bengalis of antiquity as well as of modernity have been known for their excellence in music. Classical Sanskrit aesthetics (Bharata's Natyashastra for example) corroborate the existence of distinct eastern/Gaudiya styles and schools of music and dance. In Caryapada (chorjapod), there is a famous mention of a performance of “Buddha play” (Buddha nataka) with the accompaniment of songs and dance. The following informations are provided by Nirharranjan Ray in his Bangalir Itihash Adiporbo (637 -643).
The Chorjas were supposed to be sung as each of them was assigned a specific raag. We find Goudiya and Bongaal raag among others in the the list of the raags.
Gitgobindo of Joydeb was sung with eleven different raags and five taal.
Lochon Pandit's Raagtarangini is an ancient treatise on music from Bengal. Lochon was a contemporary of King Bollal Sen. Lochon mentions a still earlier (but lost) treatise on Bengali music called Tumburu nataka from which he quotes at length; it seems that the Shakto performative tradition which later flourished as Agomoni songs had its origin in the specific form of song and dance called Tumburu.
Further, We find twenty eight raags and seven taals in Bodu Chondidas's Shrikrishnokirton.
During the middle ages, the rise of Gouriyo Boishnob movement made exhaustive use of music in order to propagate the message of Gour and Nitai. Choitonyo himself is reputed to have authored Jagannatha Ashtakam, a beautiful song in Sanskrit in praise of Lord Jagannath.
Almost every other household in Bengal to this day has a custom of music learning.
The topics for contribution will include the following but will not be limited to the same:
Instrumental music across the ages. Durga puja and dhaak, Baul and ektara/dotara.
Folk Music. Bankim's reminiscence of a bhatiyali song on the Ganges in a moonlit night (in his biography of Ishwar Gupta) testifies about the core appeal of Bengali folk music for Bengali psyche. Baul music. Tusu, Bhadu, Jhumur, Bhawaiya, Gombhira, Brotogan.
Songs in folk performing arts. Jatra: Palagan.
Kothokota/narrative songs by Kothok Thakurs/Bengali rhapsodes .
Classical music. The survival of Bishnupuri Gharana.
Religious music. Boishnob kirton and Shakto devotional songs. Songs of Kali (Shyamashongeet) and Songs of Radha and Krishna.
Occasional songs: Shiber Gajon. Raash and Jhulon songs. Agomoni songs on the eve of Durgapujo.
The emergence of Kobigaan.
Toppa, Aakhrai, Half-Aakhrai, Panchali.
Rise of Nationalism and Bengali patriotic songs. Before Bankim's Vande Mataram and after.
The rise of writer-composers of late Victorian and modern period. Tagore, DL Roy, Nazrul.
The advent of Film music. Raichand Boral, Krishnachandra Dey, S D Burman, Hemanta, Shyamal Mitra. Singer actors. K L Saigal, Kanan Debi.
The golden age: Bengali film music of the Uttam-Suchitra era.
The ebb of film music in the 1990s. The rebirth of Bengali film music in the second half of 2000s. Contemporary Bengali film music.
Lyric of film music.
The musical diaspora. Bengali musicians, singers, composers, lyricists in Bollywood and abroad. R D Burman, Kishore Kumar and others.
Theatre and music. Songs of Bengali professional stage. Rise of IPTA and gonoshongeet (people's songs, communism-inspired). Songs in Bengali group theatre to this day.
Bengali Adhunik songs.
First Experiments with western band form. Mohiner Ghoraguli.
The rise and fall of (Kabir) Suman. Nachiketa, Anjan Dutt, Shilajit and other three-in-one (lyricist-singer-composer) performers of the 1990s. The last bow of left liberal sensibility in their works.
The postmodern shift and the contemporary scenario. The rise of Bangla Band and their distinct forms of lyric and music. Anindya, Chandril and Chandrabindu; Rupam Islam and Fossils; Sidhu and Cactus. Other bands.
Dissemination of music. Music commerce. Bengali music from the days of gramophone to the days of mp3. Technologies of music and studio system. Sound engineering.
Bengali music and politics. The case of George Biswas: Bratyojoner Ruddhoshongeet.
Bengali music in the digital age.
General details about submissions to Journal of Bengali Studies:

Journal of Bengali Studies is published in English and is an online journal. A contribution must be electronic and in English language. It should consistently follow any one of these three scholarly styles of citation: MLA style, Chicago Manual of Style and APA style. Contributions must always be 1.5 line-spaced. An article, with notes and bibliography, should not be more than 10000 words. In case of reviews, the upper limit is 2000 words; we welcome reviews of new books as well as old and out of print ones, not necessarily of books written in English alone; we accept reviews of books, texts and artworks (new and old alike) which are related to our theme. From our Cinema issue onwards, we started a section (in addition to articles and reviews) called Workshop: Theory in Practice. This section features creative/critical fieldnotes which are related to our theme. Any kind of creative/literary writing that concerns Bengali music is welcome in this issue; a priority may be given to historical fictions/plays/poetry concerning key musical maestros of Bengal, which may be originally written in Bengali, in which case it has to be in English translation, or it may be originally written in English. In either case, it should focus on our theme and be relevant to the CFP. The workshop may also include critical writings, for example, the narration of one's experiences with Bengali music, exploring the question of one's involvement with the social, cultural, literary, economic and political aspects of Bengali music. Upper Limit of Creative Workshop: 10000 words. We have no lower word limit for the contributions, the authors are free to use their discretion. Contributions should only be in MS Word, Open Office, or RTF format and should be emailed to all of these three email ids: editorbengalistudies@gmail.com, editjbs@gmail.com and shoptodina@gmail.com. Before submission, please see our Submission Guidelines and Terms and Conditions at http://bengalistudies.blogspot.in/. For further details about the objectives of our journal, please see the JBS Manifesto at http://bengalistudies.blogspot.in/.

Editor-in-Chief: Tamal Dasgupta
Editorial Board: Sourav Gupta
Mousumi Biswas Dasgupta
Joydeep Bhattacharya







Friday, 31 October 2014

Publication of JBS Vol.3 No.2 (Themed on Kolkata) on the Occasion of Jogoddhatri Pujo, 1 November 2014

After the proud publications of our issues on Ognijug (Vol. 1, No.1), Bengali Cinema (Vol.1, No.2), Bengali Theatre (Vol.2, No.1), Science and Technology in History: Modern Bengali Perspectives (Vol.2, No.2), Literature and Movements: Bengali Crossroads (Vol.3, No.1) Journal of Bengali Studies is happy to announce the online publication of its Autumn Issue, 2014 (Vol.3, No.2), on the theme of Kolkata on the occasion of Jogoddhatri Pujo, 1 November 2014. You can read the issue by clicking on the cover image
 JBS Vol.3, No.2 (Theme: Kolkata)

ISSN: 2277-9426

Journal of Bengali Studies
Vol. 3, No. 2
1 November 2014
Jogoddhatri Pujo, 14 Kartik 1421
Autumn Issue
Kolkata


Editor: Tamal Dasgupta


Contents

Editorial


Article
CoordiNation and Deferral of Bengali Nation-Consciousness: Ishwarchandra Gupta in Nineteenth Century Kolkata
Tamal Dasgupta 16
Kolkata Corporation and Subhas Chandra Bose: Death of a Dream
Chandrachur Ghose 84
Echoes from the Past: Revisiting ‘Old Kolkata’ in Gorosthane Sabdhan
Kallol Gangopadhyay 126
A Lesson in Living Life: The Portrayal of Kolkata in Satyajit Ray’s Short Stories
Zenith Roy 147
Demographic and Behavioral Profile of Street Children in Kolkata
Atanu Ghosh 164
Cottage and Small Scale Industries in the Slums of Kolkata: Growth and Constraints in Twentieth Century
Subrata Nandi 176
Kolkata's Intellectual Response to Shakespeare: Academia, Stage and Little Magazines
Arindam Mukherjee 191


Tracing the Historical Roots of Kolkata's North-South Divide
Madhusree Chattopadhyay 229


Review
Scanning Kolkata Stage through the Eyes of Five Doyens: A Review of Bratya Basu's Book of Interviews
Sourav Gupta 247


Workshop
Love and Kolkata: Six Poems
Tamal Dasgupta 251


Commentary
Sister Nivedita in Kolkata: A Nation Awakens
Mousumi Bandyopadhyay 267
Living Heritage: Boats of Kolkata
Swarup Bhattacharyya 278
Traditional Sanskrit Learning in Kolkata
Somnath Sarkar 298

 




Saturday, 24 May 2014

Call for Papers for JBS Vol.3, No.2 on the theme of 'Kolkata'

After the proud publications of our issues on Ognijug, the age of revolutionary nationalism in Bengal (Vol.1, No.1), Bengali Cinema: Bengalis and Cinema (Vol.1, No.2), Bengali Theatre: Bengalis and Theatre (Vol.2, No.1), Science and Technology in History: Modern Bengali Perspectives (Vol.2, No.2), Literature and Movements: Bengali Crossroads (Vol.3, No.1), Journal of Bengali Studies (JBS), a peer reviewed interdisciplinary online academic journal (ISSN: 2277- 9426) meant for scholarly discussions into the history and culture of the Indic Bengali people, is pleased to announce the Call for Papers for its sixth issue (Vol.3, No.2) on the theme of Kolkata due to be published on the occasion of Kalipujo, 23 October 2014. The final date for submission of article/review/workshop is 30 September 2014. Commentaries in JBS are accepted by invitation/commission alone. If you want to author a commentary instead of a regular article or review, or want to know how they are different, please get in touch with the editorial board beforehand at shoptodina@gmail.com

Kolkata

The theme of this issue is Kolkata. Dinesh Chandra Sen writes in his Brihot Bongo (where one of the main theses runs as that the Bengalis are the inheritors of the ancient flourish of philosophy, culture, politics and science which eastern India witnessed since the rise of Magadh) that Kolkata, via medieval Nabadwip and ancient Gour, is the legacy bearer of the ancient Magadhan civilisation (174). So, we begin by suggesting that Kolkata is not (merely) a colonial legacy, that it was not established by one Job Charnock, and that the place in all likelihood derives its name from Kalikhetro.

The topics for contribution will include the following but will not be limited to the same:

The ancient and medieval recorded mentions of Kolkata prior to British arrival. A riverine history of Kolkata. Kolkata waterbodies.

Chouranginath, the ancient Nath saint (reputed to be a Pal prince) and Chowringhee.

The related history of South Bengal kingdoms since ancient times and Kolkata's rootedness in that history; vicinity to the Bay of Bengal, sea port of Tamralipta, the Gangariddae of Ptolemy.

Kolkata and the empire of Pratapaditya of Jessore.

Kalighat.

Kolkata and other Europeans prior to the British East India Company. British arrival and the Hindu response; Hindu consolidation against the misrule of Siraj. Beginning of Durgapujo by Nabakrishna of Kolkata and Krishnachandra of Nadia to celebrate the overthrow of Islamic rule.

Bengali compradorship. The dialectics of collaboration and conflict. Tagore family as a type. Collision of the east and west resulting in early Renaissance: Rammohan Roy. The flourish of Brahmo Movement and Debendranath Tagore.

The beginning of a Native resistance and Hindu revival. Rani Rashmoni.

Bengal Renaissance: Giants like Vidyasagar, Michael, Bankim, Vivekananda.

Kolkata and the flourish of periodicals, newspapers, journals and magazines. Kolkata and little magazines. Kolkata's printing press and publishing industry. Chapbooks and Bot tola. Kolkata bookshops.

The rise and fall of Bengali business class. Kolkata's eventual domination by non-Bengali business interests.

Kolkata and literature (Bengali and English): Poetry, Novels, Short Stories, Essays.

Kolkata's dialect of Bengali: Kolkata's spoken tongue.

Kolkata and food: Kolkata's food history. Kolkata cuisine, Kolkata eateries.

Kolkata's landmarks. Kolkata streets and crossroads. Tematha, Coumatha and Panchmatha. Kolkata's urban space. North versus South. Officepara. Shahebpara. College Street. Kolkata's entry points: Sealdah and Howrah. Kolkata's new townships and satelites.

Kolkata: music and poetry. From Gojla Guin to Nidhubabu to Bangla band. Kolkata and Kobiyals. Ishwar Gupta and Kolkata. Rupchand Pokkhi and urban decadence.

Kolkata and politics. Kolkata and movements. Congress. Kolkata and the anti-partition movement of 1905. Kolkata and the Revolutionary Nationalists. Kolkata and C R Das; Kolkata and Subhash Bose. Kolkata and the communists. Kolkata and Muslim League. Suhrawardy. Direct Action Day. The Great Calcutta Killing. Partition of 1947. Kolkata and East Bengal refugees.

Kolkata and erudition; Kolkata and academia.

Kolkata and theatre. Kolkata and cinema.

Kolkata's downtrodeen: slums, pavement dwellers, homeless. Kolkata underworld and Kolkata's fictional as well as historical detectives.

Kolkata and the Bengali babudom.

General details about submissions to Journal of Bengali Studies:
Journal of Bengali Studies is published in English and is an online journal. A contribution must be electronic and in English language. It should consistently follow any one of these three scholarly styles of citation: MLA style, Chicago Manual of Style and APA style. Contributions must always be 1.5 line-spaced. An article, with notes and bibliography, should not be more than 10000 words. In case of reviews, the upper limit is 2000 words; we welcome reviews of new books as well as old and out of print ones, not necessarily of books written in English alone; we accept reviews of books, texts and artworks (new and old alike) which are related to our theme. From our Cinema issue onwards, we started a section (in addition to articles and reviews) called Workshop: Theory in Practice. This section features creative/critical works which are related to our theme. Any kind of creative/literary writing that concerns Kolkata is welcome in this issue; a priority may be given to historical fictions/plays/poetry, which may be originally written in Bengali, in which case it has to be in English translation, or it may be originally written in English. In either case, it should focus on our theme and be relevant to the CFP. The workshop may also include critical writings, for example, the narration of one's experiences in Kolkata, exploring the question of one's involvement with the social, cultural, literary, economic and political aspects of Kolkata. Upper Limit of Creative Workshop: 10000 words. We have no lower word limit for the contributions, the authors are free to use their discretion. Contributions should only be in MS Word, Open Office, or RTF format and should be emailed to all of these three email ids: editorbengalistudies@gmail.com, editjbs@gmail.com and shoptodina@gmail.com. Before submission, please see our Submission Guidelines and Terms and Conditions at
http://bengalistudies.blogspot.in/. For further details about the objectives of our journal, please see the JBS Manifesto at http://bengalistudies.blogspot.in/.

Editor: Tamal Dasgupta

Issue Editor: Subrata Nandi

Editorial Board: Sourav Gupta

Mousumi Biswas Dasgupta






Sunday, 11 May 2014

JBS Current Issue Vol.3 No.1 (Literature and Movements: Bengali Crossroads) is published


After the proud publications of our issues on Ognijug (Vol. 1, No.1), Bengali Cinema (Vol.1, No.2), Bengali Theatre (Vol.2, No.1), Science and Technology in History: Modern Bengali Perspectives (Vol.2, No.2) Journal of Bengali Studies is happy to announce the online publication of our Summer Issue 2014 (Vol.3, No.1), on the theme of Literature and Movements: Bengali Crossroads on the occasion of Buddhapurnima, 14 May 2014. You can read the issue by clicking at this link: Literature and Movements: Bengali Crossroads (JBS Vol.3 No.1)





http://www.scribd.com/doc/223387769/Journal-of-Bengali-Studies-Vol-3-No-1

ISSN: 2277-9426

Journal of Bengali Studies


Vol. 3, No. 1

14 May 2014
Buddhapurnima, 30 Boishakh 1421

Summer Issue


Literature and Movements:

Bengali Crossroads



Editor: Tamal Dasgupta
Contents


Editorial 7
Articles

The Radha Idea at the Crossroads of History, Culture and Politics:Gitagovindaand the Boishnob Movement in Bengal
Tamal Dasgupta 14

Shakto Literature and the ‘Durga-Kali’ Paradigm: Prabhat Kumar Mukhopadhyay’s “The Goddess” as Satyajit Ray’s Devi
Kaustav Kundu 43
Bratya Basu’s Plays: Challenging Hegemony from between the Eyebrows of Time
Sourav Gupta 71
From Suffering to Revolt and Rejection: A Study of the Bengali Dalit Narratives by Jatin Bala and Utthanpada Bijali
Asit Panda 90
Nitai in Boishnob Movement and Literature
Sayantan Thakur 106

The Movement Within: A Secret Guide to Esoteric Kaayaasaadhanaa inCaryaapada
Debaprasad Bandyopadhyay 113

Partition of India and the Chronicle of the Eastern Frontier: Mapping the Short Fictions in Bengali on Migration, Displacement and Refugee Struggle
Kallol Gangopadhyay 128
Michael Madhusudan’s Collaboration and Collusion with Dominant Colonial Culture inMeghanadbadh Kavya
Deb Dulal Halder 136
Literature & Movement in the Mahishasurmardini-Selected Verses of the Devi Mahatmya/ Durga Saptashati and the Bengali Crossroads
Sanjay Kumar 148

Reviews
Liberal Individualism in the Early Career of Utpal Dutt and Nationalism in the Twilight of Amritalal Basu's Life: A Review of Encore and Roshoraajer Roshokothon
Mousumi Biswas Dasgupta 172

Dhorai Charita Manas: A Documentation of Gandhian Myth and Indian Freedom Movement
Saptarshi Maity 177

Workshop
Seeing, Beyond Seeing: Poetry of Movement and Movement of Poetry
Debanjan Das 181
Commentaries
Boats in Chuyachandan
Swarup Bhattacharya 185
Hungry Movement after 50 Years
Nachiketa Bandyopadhyay 189











Wednesday, 19 March 2014

Announcement

Message from the Editorial Board

Hello, season's greetings, and best wishes for the upcoming Bengali New Year 1421!

Works are currently in full swing for our Vol.3, No.1 (Literature and Movements: Bengali Crossroads). It would be published on the occasion of Buddha Purnima. Please note that the final date of submission has been modified to 20 April 2014 owing to editorial compulsions. We solicit co-operation from our contributors in this regard.

The Call for Papers for Vol.3, No.2 will be uploaded soon.

We are glad to announce that we shall henceforth be live at www.bengalistudies.com. We shall of course continue publishing our materials on this blog.

From this upcoming issue, we shall provide separate exclusive links to every individual author's articles, reviews etc. We shall soon provide the same for our old issues as well. Check out www.bengalistudies.com for details.

Thank you very much!






Thursday, 9 January 2014

Call for Papers for JBS Vol.3, No.1 (Literature and Movements: Bengali Crossroads)

After the proud publication of our inaugural issue on Ognijug, the age of revolutionary nationalism in Bengal, and the consecutive issues respectively on Bengali Cinema: Bengalis and Cinema (Vol.1, No.2), Bengali Theatre: Bengalis and Theatre (Vol.2, No.1), Science and Technology in History: Bengali Perspectives (Vol.2, No.2), Journal of Bengali Studies (JBS), a peer reviewed academic interdisciplinary online journal (ISSN: 2277- 9426) meant for discussions into the history and culture of the Indic Bengali people, is pleased to announce the Call for Papers for its fifth issue on the theme of Literature of Movements: Bengali Crossroads (Vol.3, No.1), due to be published on the occasion of Buddha Purnima, 14 May 2014. The final date for submission of article/review/workshop is 30 April 2014.

Literature and Movements: Bengali Crossroads

The theme of this issue is centred on the interrelationship between the literature produced by the Bengalis (not necessarily written in Bengali alone) during a given historical period and the social, cultural and political ferments of that age. We argue that since antiquity, Bengal witnesses a number of intellectual, cultural and social ferments which have actively interacted with literature; here it may be pertinent to recall Tamal Dasgupta's theorisation of the interactions between history and literature from his article "Understanding Hi-story" in JBS inaugural issue:

 






The relationship between history and story (narrative/art/literature) works at multiple levels. Historical fiction in Bengal is well established as a genre that began with Bankim Chandra. Secondly, fictionalised history (different from historical fiction) is a popular format and just like popular science it offers documentary-fiction, and as a classic example of that we have Sailesh Dey's
Ami Subhash Bolchi (This is Subhash Speaking). In recent times, Shankar's Ami Vivekananda Bolchi (This is Vivekananda Speaking) is a specimen that falls within this genre. Thirdly, history can be made by stories as well, so the novels of Bankim which created nationalist history, like Anandamath did, constitutes another category; stories which gave birth to history. A similar example from abroad is the Russian novel What is to be Done by Nikolai Chernyshevsky (Lenin, who was a lifelong admirer of Chernyshevsky, took the title of his eponymous history-making treatise from this novel). Another category, the fourth one includes the plethora of narratives and legends and stories/songs/poems which accompanied the events of revolutionary nationalism, for instance Sharatchandra's Pother Dabi (The Demand of the Path), and the revolutionary songs and poems of Nazrul Islam (both the writers were actively involved with the revolutionaries); later on, similar narratives were made to describe the continuity, legacy and heritage of the revolutionary nationalist movement as inherited by the communist party.

 

Thus the relationship between literature and movements during a given historical period is dynamic, multi-faceted and interactive.
The relationship is never one way, and literature is never simply a reflection of social, cultural and political movements: literature is sometimes the most significant determinant of those movements.

 

The important topics for contribution will include the following (but will not be exclusively limited to the same):

Ancient times to the early middle ages and the flourish of literature in Bengal. Sanskrit and Prakrit literature produced in Bengal and the Indic religious and social ferments. Chorjapod and Buddhism;
the seeds of tantra, shakti, mystical cults of baul-sahajiya etc.

Jayadeva's Gitgovinda and Vaishnavism. Jayadeva as an essentially Bengali poet whose Gitgovinda celebrates Radha-idea which is in tune with Bengal, not with the Jagannath worship of Orissa (for historical evidences of Jayadeva as a Bengali poet, one may refer to P K Dasgupta's excellent treatise, Jayadeva and Some of His Contemporaries).

Chandidas's ShriKrishnaKirtan. The flourish of Vaishnav literature in the middle ages and Chaitanya movement.

Social engineering of the middle ages and Mongol Kabyo.

Shakto literature and the flourish of Shakti worship: from late middle ages to the modern period; beginning of Durga Puja and Agomoni songs. Shyama songs and Kali puja.

Bengal Renaissance and literature.

Registers of popular ferments: literature of Bot tola.

Hindu Revival and literature: Bankim Chandra and others.

Literature celebrating the glorious past of Bengal, and Bengali nationalism.

Literature and Ognijug.

Literature and the communist and naxalite movements.

Literature and the refugees; registering the trauma of the Hindus uprooted from East Bengal, the experiences of Noakhali, Marichjhapi and post-independence Bangladesh. Taslima Nasrin's Lajja, Amitav Ghosh's Hungry Tides.

The Eurocentric turn of modern and postmodern Bengali literature (Buddhadeb Basu wanted to emphasise that Bengal was culturally a province of Europe) and the dominant left-liberal-universalist milieu of the bhadralok-comprador classes. Globalisation and contemporary Bengali literature.

Group theatre movement and Bengali theatrical literature.

The Hindu response to Eurocentrism:
The non-communist, non-materialistic movements of literature, most notably the works of Kamal Kumar Majumdar.

Poetry and politics in Bengal.

Literature and the overturning of the communist regime: Bratyo Basu's plays, Joy Goswami's poetry and Kabir Suman's songs.



General details about submissions to Journal of Bengali Studies:

Journal of Bengali Studies is published in English and is an online journal. A contribution must be electronic and in English language. It should consistently follow any one of these three scholarly styles of citation: MLA style, Chicago Manual of Style and APA style. Contributions must always be double spaced. An article, with notes and bibliography, should not be more than 10000 words. In case of reviews, the upper limit is 2000 words; we welcome reviews of new books as well as old and out of print ones, not necessarily of books written in English alone; we accept reviews of books, texts and artworks (new and old alike) which are related to our theme. From our Cinema issue onwards, we started a section (in addition to articles and reviews) called Workshop: Theory in Practice. This section features creative/critical works which are related to our theme. Any kind of creative/literary writing that concerns the relationship between Bengalis and social, cultural and political movements is welcome in this issue; a priority may be given to historical and political fictions/plays/poetry, which may be originally written in Bengali, in which case it has to be in English translation, or it may be originally written in English. In either case, it should focus on our theme and be relevant to the CFP. The workshop may also include critical writings, for example, the narration of the experiences in one's creative/literary/artistic field/profession, exploring the question of a writer's involvement with social, cultural and political movements. Upper Limit of Creative Workshop: 10000 words. We have no lower word limit for the contributions, the authors are free to use their discretion. Contributions should either be in MS Word, Open Office, or RTF format and should be emailed to all of these three email ids: editorbengalistudies@gmail.com, editjbs@gmail.com and shoptodina@gmail.com. Before submission, please see our Submission Guidelines and Terms and Conditions for further details at
http://bengalistudies.blogspot.in/. For further ideas about the objectives of our journal, please see the JBS Manifesto at http://bengalistudies.blogspot.in/.

Editor: Mousumi Biswas Dasgupta

Editorial Board: Tamal Dasgupta (founder-editor), Sourav Gupta, Joydeep Bhattacharya, Saptarshi Mallick.