Authored by
Asha Sen
Title

Asha Sen, Ph.D.

Pronouns
she/her/hers
Placeholder for titles
Professor
Biography

Biography

Originally a native of India, Dr. Sen came to the US for postgraduate work in 1987.  She received her MA and PhD from Purdue University in 1996 and joined the Department of English at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire that same year.  She is currently Foundation Leadership Faculty Fellow at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire where she is Professor of English and an affiliate of the Department of Race, Ethnicity, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.  She received her PhD in Postcolonial Literature and Theory from Purdue University in 1996 and is the author of Postcolonial Yearning: Reshaping Spiritual and Secular Discourse in Contemporary Literature (Palgrave MacMillan, 2013) and numerous peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters.  She recently guest edited a special issue on South Asian Women's writing for the peer-reviewed journal Humanities and serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Global Postcolonial Studies.  She also curated by invitation a section postcolonial literature and religion for the international Religion and Literature digital website co-ordinated by Dr. Sharon Kim.  In addition, Dr. Sen directed the Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies program from 2013-2016, is interested in international education and has participated in international exchanges with Harlaxton University and Delhi University.  In addition to UWEC, Dr. Sen has also taught at Jyoti Nivas College, Bangalore, and Purdue University, and guest lectured at Miranda House College in Delhi, Delhi University, and St. Joseph's College of Commerce, Bangalore.  Her fields of study include postcolonial literature and theory and transnational and women of color feminisms.

Education

Education

  • Ph.D., Purdue University (English Literature)
  • M.A., Purdue University (English Literature)
  • M.A., Bangalore University, India (English Literature)
  • B.A., St. Xavier's College, Calcutta, India (English Literature - Honors)
Teaching and Research Interests

Teaching and Research Interests

Postcolonial Literature and Theory, Transnational Feminisms, Women of Color Feminisms, Postcolonial Postsecularisms

I am currently working on a monograph on gender, sexuality, diaspora and postcolonial postsecularism

 

Published Research

Published Research

Publications:                           

Monographs:                           

Postcolonial Yearning: Reshaping Spiritual and Secular Discourses in Contemporary Literature (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013)

Study Guide for Nectar in a Sieve and The God of Small Things.  Knowing the World through Reading.  South Dakota Humanities Council.  Fall 1998.     

Book Chapters:                       

“Seeking the Sacred in Postcolonial Travel Writing.”  The Cambridge Companion to Postcolonial Travel Writing.   Ed. Robert Clarke.  Cambridge UP, 2017. 177-94. (Solicited chapter)

Current Scholarship:               

As of January 2023, I have started serving on the editorial board of the Journal of Global and Postcolonial Studies.  (By invitation).  The journal is brought out by the University of Florida press; this is one of the oldest and most respected postcolonial journals in the US.

In April 2022 I was invited to edit a special topics issue on South Asian Women Writers for the online peer-reviewed open access journal Humanities. I completed this project in December 2023.

 I am also by invitation curating a postcolonial literature and religion website for the Religion and Literature digital project run by a scholarly collective of internationally renowned scholars.  I used my Fall 2023 URCA to complete much of the project.  It has since gone live.       

Peer-Reviewed Articles:        

 “’Touch vs. Technology: Towards a Politics of Affect in Mohsin Hamid’s Exit West (2017) and Kamila Shamsie’s Home Fire (2017).”  Journal of Global and Postcolonial Studies. 9. (Spring 2021): 47-60.

“Looking Back, Looking Forward: Examining Pre-Colonial Identities in Mahesh Dattani’s Dance Like a Man.”  ARIEL: A Review of International English Literature 41.2 (2011): 129-38.

“Re-Visioning Bapsi Sidhwa’s Cracking India in a Post-National Age.”  Kunapipi General Issue. 9.  66-82.

“From National to Transnational: Three Generations of South Asian American Women Writers.” Asiatic: IIUM Journal of English Language and Literature. Vol. 4 No. 1 (June 2009).

“Feminist Ethnographies of Desire and Resistance in Lalithamabika Antherjanam’s ‘The Goddess of Revenge’ and Ismat Chughtai’s ‘Lihaaf.’”  South Asian Review. XXVIII. 2. 2007.

“Allegories of Nation, Woman, and Empire in Salman Rushdie’s East, West Stories.”  Kunapipi 13.2 (2001): 121-44.

 “Rewriting History: Hanif Kureishi and the Politics of Black Britain.”  Passages: A Journal of Transnational and Transcultural Studies.  2.1 (2000): 61-80.

 “Locating South Asian Feminisms within the context of Postcolonial Theory.”  Proceedings of the Twenty-Third Annual Conference of the University of Wisconsin System’s Women’s Studies Consortium.  Ed. Katherine Rhoades and Ann Statham.  WI: Madison, 1999.  244-56.

  “Rohinton Mistry: A Profile.”  Post-War Literatures in English. The Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff uitgeivers. 45 (June 1999): 1-9 +A-1+B-1.

 “Child Narrators in The Shadow Lines, Cracking India, and Meatless Days.”  World Literature Written in English 37.1 & 2 (1998): 190-206.

 “Crossing Boundaries in Amitav Ghosh’s The Shadow Lines.”  Journal of Commonwealth and Postcolonial Studies.  5.1 (Fall 1998): 46-58.

  “Hanif Kureishi: A Profile.”  Post-War Literatures in English.  The Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff uitgeivers.  39 (March 1998): 1-12+ A-1+ B-1+.

Short Article:                           

“Community Radio is Countering Voice-Poverty in Bangladesh.”  With AHM Bazlur Rahman and Ashish Chandra Sen.  Centre for Research and Information (CRI).  September 18, 2021.

“None of Her Lord’s Blessings Would She Deny: Towards a Feminist Reading of Monica Ali’s Brick Lane.”  NAWCHE: National Association for Women in Catholic Higher Education newsletter.  Women’s Studies Dept., Dept. of Sociology.  Boston College, Massachussetts.

Local Lit:                                  

“’Dearest Ma’: Letters from an Immigrant daughter to her Mother back Home.”  Volume One.  August 18, 2020.

“Crossing the Artificial Divide between Academic and Creative Writing.”  Interview with Krisany Blount.  Writing the Valley.  Chippewa Valley Writers Guild.  October 29, 2020.

“In the Mix: Finding Peace.”  Volume One.  October 16, 2021.

Entries and Reviews:              

“The Promise of Postcolonial Postsecularism.”  Journal of Global Postcoloial Studies 10.1 (2022): 78-89. (published December 2023)     

Contributed entries on Bharati Mukherjee and “Jasmine” for Twentieth Century Literature (ABC-CLIO, Inc.), 2018.  E-book. Publd. 2021.    

Entries on Ravinder Randhawa, Gurinder Chadha, Suniti Namjoshi, and the Asian Women Writers’ Collective for the Routledge Companion to Contemporary Black British Culture.  Ed. Alison Donnell.  London: Routledge, 2000.

Review of David Punter’s Postcolonial ImaginingsModern Fiction Studies 48.4 (Summer 2003): 398-400.

Review of The Good ParsiPassages: A Journal of Transnational and Transcultural Studies.  1.2 (1999): 307-09.

Review of M. Keith Booker’s Colonial Power, Colonial Texts: India in the Modern British NovelModern Fiction Studies.  44.4 (Winter 1998): 1035-37.

Review of A Map of Where I LiveIndia Current (Spring 1998): 32.

Review of Teresa Hubel’s Whose India?: The Independence Struggle in British and Indian FictionModern Fiction Studies.  43.2 (Spring 1997): 535-37.

 Review of Hanif Kureishi’s The Buddha of Suburbia.  “Enlightenment Comes to Postcolonial England: Hanif Kureishi’s The Buddha of Suburbia.”  SAMAR: South Asian Magazine for Action and Reflection 4 (Winter 1994): 29-30.

 Review of Sudhir Chandra’s The Oppressive Present: Literature and Social Consciousness in India and Rajeswari Sunder Rajan ed. The Lie of the Land: English Literary Studies in IndiaModern Fiction Studies 39.1 (Spring 1993): 215-18.

Honors And Recognition

Honors And Recognition

Grace Lau Senior Fellow (2023-2027) Awarded in Spring 2023

University Research and Creative Activity (URCA) grant (Fall 2023)Feminist Mentor Award (April 2021)

Max Schoenfeld Distinguished Professorship (2017-2018)

Feminist Teacher award for Service (Spring 2016)

Diversity Mentoring grant (2015-2016)

Honored at the UW System 20th Anniversary Women of Color awards (Fall 2015)

Feminist Teacher award for Teaching (2014)

Recognized at the Tenth Anniversary of the Annual Women of Color Awards ceremony at UW-Madison (2005), and invited to propose a session for the conference

UWEC Woman of Color honoree (UW System Award) (2002)

Faculty Reading Seminar Proposal (UW System Institute on Race and Ethnicity) (2001)