Jaishree Odin
Jaishree Odin is a literary scholar who is the director and a professor of the Program of Interdisciplinary Studies at the University of Hawaii.[1] Her research relates to cultural studies of science and technology, literary and political ecology, ecology and ethics, system's ecology, and eco-literacy.[2] Her work ranges from German philosophy[3] and the feminist angle to mysticism.[citation needed] She has also considered the current relevance of Shaivite theories of higher consciousness.[citation needed]
Jaishree is sister of computer scientists Avinash Kak and Subhash Kak.
Education[]
Odin obtained a Master of Science degree in Chemistry from India, following which she went on to earn a doctorate in comparative literature from the State University of New York at Stony Brook.[citation needed]
Work[]
Odin teaches in the Liberal Studies program at the University of Hawaii. Besides, she is the director of a Sloan foundation-funded online distance learning project at the university, which is intended to increase access to higher education in the state of Hawaii.[4]
She is one of the translators of Lalleshvari, the famed 14th century Kashmiri mystic and poet.[5][6] She has also translated Kashmir's early Sufi poetry, especially that of Nunda Reshi.[7] Odin's essays have been published in Commonwealth Studies and in the collection Postcolonialism and American Ethnicity.[8]
Odin has written extensively on technology-mediated narrative forms as well as the role of technology in re-visioning higher education.[9] Some of her published articles on electronic literature have dealt with the potential of the electronic media in depicting contemporary experience in multiple ways.[10] Ponzanesi and Koen claim: "As Jaishree Odin has so aptly written, both the hypertext and the postcolonial are discourses are characterized by multivocality, multilinearity, open-endedness, active encounter and traversal. Both disrupt chronological sequences and spatial ordering (1997), allowing for a contestation of master narratives and the creation of subaltern positioning."
Odin's work includes critical exploration of shattered visual metaphors in contemporary literature[11]
For her work, she has been awarded various awards and grants, including a Fulbright Research Fellowship, the Alfred Sloan Foundation award and UH Relations Research Award.
Bibliography[]
- Computers and Cultural Transformation. University of Hawaii at Manoa (1997).
- "The Edge of Difference: Negotiations Between the Hypertextual and the Postcolonial". MFS Modern Fiction Studies 3 (43): 1997. pp. 598–630
- Globalization and Higher Education. Manoa: University of Hawaii (2004). ISBN 0-8248-2826-7
- Hypertext and the Female Imaginary. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press (2010). ISBN 0-8166-6670-9
- To the other shore: Lalla's life and poetry. Hillsboro Beach: Vitasta (1999). ISBN 81-86588-06-X
- Mystical Verses of Lalla. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass (2009). ISBN 9788120832558
- Lalla to Nuruddin: Rishi-Sufi Poetry of Kashmir. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass (2013). ISBN 9788120836907
References[]
- ^ UHawaii site
- ^ "Jaishree Odin | Interdisciplinary Studies". manoa.hawaii.edu. Retrieved December 18, 2015.
- ^ Nissler, Paul J.; University, The Pennsylvania State (2006). Overlapping aesthetic perspectives as international, revolutionary space in presentations from the German revolution to the Spanish Civil War. pp. 390–. ISBN 978-0-549-99193-9. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
- ^ "ELO State of the Arts Symposium: Jaishree Odin". eliterature.org. Retrieved December 18, 2015.
- ^ To the other shore: Lalla's life and poetry. Hillsboro Beach: Vitasta (1999)
- ^ J. Odin Kak, Mystical Verses of Lalla. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass (2009)
- ^ J. Odin, Lalla to Nuruddin: Rishi-Sufi Poetry of Kashmir. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass (2013)
- ^ "Jaishree K. Odin – The Edge of Difference: Negotiations Between the Hypertextual and the Postcolonial – Modern Fiction Studies 43:3". yorku.ca. Retrieved December 18, 2015.
- ^ Manicas and Odin, Globalization and Higher Education. Manoa: University of Hawaii (2004)
- ^ Ponzanesi, S. and Koen, L. On digital crossings in Europe. Crossings: Journal of Migration & Culture, Volume 5, Number 1, March 1, 2014, pp. 3–22
- ^ J. Odin, Hypertext and the Female Imaginary. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press (2010)
External links[]
- Living people
- American women writers of Indian descent
- University of Hawaiʻi faculty
- American women philosophers
- 21st-century Indian philosophers
- Kashmiri writers
- American people of Kashmiri descent
- American academics of Indian descent
- 21st-century Indian chemists
- 21st-century Indian women scientists
- Indian women philosophers
- American women non-fiction writers
- 21st-century American women writers