Amity Institute of English Studies and Research
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Research & Publication

Students at AIEBC are inspired and nurtured to enhance the critical aptitude necessary for any research work. Students are required to carry out research in their final semesters which initiates them in the cogitative culture and cultivates the critical faculty which gives them an edge over the students from other universities in India. This approach facilitates panoramic understanding of literature and the interdisciplinary areas that constitute the modern world. Mentored and nurtured in a cogitative environment, students in AIEBC have produced some quality research in the past few years illustrating intellectual excellence that goes past core curriculum. The dedication and the explorative tendency have earned them accreditation in universities abroad purely on the basis of their research work at AIEBC.

A consolidated view of the scholarly achievements by the students at AIEBC:

Year: 2010

Dissertation | M.A. English

 

  1. Sakshi Garg, “Literature as Social Semiotics: A Study in Postcolonial Writings”.
  2. Kavita Iyer, “Natya and Drama: An Estimate of Oriental and Occidental Dramaturgy”.
  3. Ramkrishna Mitra, “Crisis and Recovery Of “Self”: Rediscovering Truth through Narrative Discourse”.
  4. Swati Chopra, “Gothic As a Source of Sublime: Contesting Archetypal Realities”.
  5. Chetna Sharma, “Moksha and Salvation through the Mahabharata and the Iliad”.
  6. Ruchi Tomar, “Narration or Moralization: Contemplating Children’s Literature”.

Term Papers | B.A. English.

  1. Adiba Sahab, “Concept of Home in Diasporic Literature”.
  2. Barnashree Khasnobis, “Dystopia in Margaret Atwood’s Novels – Oryx and Crake and The Handmaid’s Tale The Influence of Dystopia in Cinematic Representation”.
  3. Chhavi Singh, “Matrix of Relations in D.H Lawrence's Novels with a Special Reference to Sons and Lovers and Women in Love”.
  4. Karishma Naqvi, “Voices in Silence:  A Geocentric Perspective of Women”.
  5. Mehak Zubair, “Reconstructing America through Literary Landscape”.
  6. Neha Sarna, “A Study of Modernism through the Looking Glass of Popular Culture”.
  7. Ngawang Trinley, “Concept of Individualism in Old Man and the Sea”.
  8. Punita Kaur Mann, “Individualism as a Response to American Ethos:  A Study of Narrative Fiction”.
  9. Rohan Ghose Chaudhuri, “Code Switching and Code Mixing and   Popular Social Discourse: A Study in Discourse Analysis”.
  10. Sangita Baruah, “Gothic Undercurrents in Popular Literature and Motion Pictures”.
  11. Siddharth Bhagat, “Modernism: A Borrowed Theory”.
  12. Subha Paul, “Conflict Between European And African Culture In Things Fall Apart and Devil On The Cross”.
  13. Vinamra Cheemra, “Chasing the American Dream: A Study in Narrative Fiction”.
  14. Aakriti Jain, “Viewing Culture through Fiction: Re understanding Things Fall Apart and Heart of Darkness”.

 

Year 2009

Dissertation | M.A. English

  1. Antriksh, “Embedding Western Idea and Oriental Thoughts: A Discourse On human Existence”.
  2. Neha Roy, “Refurnishing Society and Retracing Life in Study of English Novels”.
  3. Priyanka Sharma, “The Politics of Pedagogy: An Indian Perspective”.

 

Term Papers | B.A. English

  1. Amit Kumar, “Emergence of Women Writers in Indian Subcontinent”.
  2. Amrita Hazra, “Culture Resistance and Hybridization in African Postcolonial Literature”.
  3. Gesmy Dhingra, “Gender Politics and Consumerism a Study in Feminine Discourse”.
  4. Kamini Chauhan, “Retracing Of History by Aboriginal Writer Sally Morgan”.
  5. Krishma Tayagi, “Emergence of New Women in African Fiction”.
  6. Mahima Adarsh, “Instinctual Desire: A Study in English Drama and Novel”.
  7. Neha Puri, “Disseminating Discourses: Derrida and the Spectres of Text Analysis”.
  8. Pallavi Pandit, “Subjugation of Women In Indian Epics: Sita as a Feminist Prototype”.
  9. Pallavi Sadh, “Politics of Sex in Indian English Literature”.
  10. Saurav Chaudhary, “The Confrontations of Human Wars and Battles on the Papyrus of Literature”.
  11. Swati Mathur, “Cultural Politics of Gender: A Study from Oriental Perspective”.

 

Year: 2008

Dissertation | M.A. English

  1. Gauri Mahalwar, “Operation Of 'Conscience' in Elizabethan Tragedies Portray   'Alienation' of Characters from Society: A Comparative Study of Dr. Faustus, Hamlet, Othello and Iago”.
  2. Smita Shome, “Unbecoming Women: George Eliot”.
  3. Snigdha Bhattacharjee, “Nation, History and Narrative: A Critical Study of Midnight's Children”.
  4. Nidhi Kumar, ‘Imprisonment and Escape in Confessional Poetry: A Comparative Study of Sylvia Plath’s Poetry”.

 

Term Papers | B.A. English

    • Devina Rastogi, “Cultural Hypocrisy, Gender Politics and Literature: The Aspect of Sin, Suffering and Resistance in The Scarlet Letter”.
    • Divya  Juneja, “Quest  For Identity In V.S Naipaul’s House For Mr. Biswas.
    • Jayeeta Kundu, “Culture, Nation and the African Fiction”.
    • Shweta Sharma, “‘Gender Politics and Consumerism in Margaret Atwood’s The Edible Woman.
    • Supriya Chatterjee, “Nation, Identity and Autobiography: My Place As an Account of Sally Morgan’s Tryst with Her Identity”