Faculty Dr Ritika Verma

Dr Ritika Verma

Assistant Professor

Department of Literature and Languages

Contact Details

ritika.v@srmap.edu.in

Office Location

Cubicle No. 10, Level 3, Homi Bhabha Block

Education

2024
PhD
IIT Kharagpur
India
2016
Masters
EFLU Hyderabad
India
2014
Bachelors
Ravenshaw University
India

Experience

  • July 2019 – December 2023 – Teaching Assistant– IIT Kharagpur
  • January 2021 – December 2022; September 2023- December 2023 – Teaching Assistant– NPTEL (Speaking Effectively and Globalisation and Culture)

Research Interest

  • My research is grounded in trauma and memory studies, especially as it relates to literatures in India, both in English and regional languages. I am interested in the intersection between trauma theory and postcolonialism and how trauma, as well as recovery, may be located within the everyday and represented using Indigenous representational forms.

Awards

  • 2019 – UGC NET-JRF – UGC

Memberships

  • Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
  • Oxford Women’s Leadership Symposium

Publications

  • Unhoming Home: UP Muslims’ Trauma of Partition in Masoom Reza’s Aadha Gaon and Os Ki Boond

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: Contemporary South Asia, Quartile: Q2

    View abstract ⏷

    While the traumatic impact of Partition on Punjab has been extensively examined, this paper undertakes a reading of Masoom Reza’s novels, Aadha Gaon (1960) and Os ki Boond (1970) to examine UP Muslims trauma of Partition in terms of homelessness and their minoritization in postcolonial India. Against a background of historical facts, the paper demonstrates how these novels as literary-testimonies mediate questions of belongingness and nationalism. By reimagining identity in terms of affective place based belongingness to home, they show how conceiving nationalism in terms of communal identities engenders trauma through home becoming an unheimlich space. Depicting the community’s life in the 1940s until the early years of independence, Aadha Gaon paints a poignant picture of loss of home and the reduction of the community to minorities in their own home. Os ki Boond carries forward the narrative in the 1950s and against the backdrop of rise of right-wing Hindu nationalism and growth of Jana Sangh, further probes the socio-political processes of making minority citizen-subjects in independent India. The paper draws upon postcolonial studies of trauma to posit the local genre of anchalik-upanayas (loosely, regional novel) as the medium through which the texts engage with the community’s trauma of long Partition.
  • Ideological Positioning in the Representation of Borders: An Analysis of Recent Hindi Films

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: 75 Years After Partition: India, Pakistan and Bangladesh (Ed. A. Ranjan & F. Sulehria), Quartile: Q2

    View abstract ⏷

    Ideology and cinematic representation are crucially linked even though a film’s positioning of itself with respect to dominant state ideology may differ thus contesting the idea that films always serve as ideological state apparatus. In this context, the paper reflects on the complex ways in which the ideological positioning – advertently or inadvertently – of cinematic representations of Partition in Hindi films of the 2000s interacts with dominant state ideology to frame the relationship between self and other with the terms denoting India/Hindu and Pakistan/Muslim, respectively. Through an analysis of the representation of the India–Pakistan border in four films – Pinjar (2003), Veer-Zaara (2004), Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019) and Kya Dilli Kya Lahore (2014) – the paper argues that mainstream Hindi films are largely reflective of the state ideology, although to varying degrees and at times in spite of themselves. In contrast, a low budget film as Kya Dilli Kya Lahore completely subverts the dominant ideology through its sensitive but incisive critique of the border.
  • Witnessing 1984: Mnemonic Representations of Trauma, Resilience and Hope in Selected Fiction

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma

    Source Title: Sikh Formations: Religion, Culture, Theory, Quartile: Q1

    View abstract ⏷

    Literary narratives constitute memory-archives that challenge state silencing of anti-Sikh pogrom of 1984. The paper draws upon Rigney’sidea of ‘agency of the aesthetic’ in generating memorability to show how cultural representations participate in unforgetting of traumatic pasts. The paper argues that in creating memorability of a difficult history, the texts bring state narrative to a limit and open an alternative space where confrontation with traumatic-memories does not preclude possibility of hope. The texts feed into ‘memory-as-relevance’ as the mediation of memories of trauma, resilience, and hope carries possibility of effectuating subtle changes in the dominant narrative of anti-Sikh pogrom.
  • Cultures of Honour, Cultures of Trauma: A Reading of Amrita Pritam’s Pinjar

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: Amrita Pritam: The Writer Provocateur (Ed. H. Nandrajog & P.K. Srivastava),

    View abstract ⏷

    Reading to Amrita Pritam's Pinjar to highlight the continuity between historical and insidious trauma
  • Ideological Positioning in the Representation of Borders: An Analysis of Recent Hindi Films.

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: India Review, Quartile: Q2

    View abstract ⏷

    Ideology and cinematic representation are crucially linked even though a film’s positioning of itself with respect to dominant state ideology may differ thus contesting the idea that films always serve as ideological state apparatus. In this context, the paper reflects on the complex ways in which the ideological positioning – advertently or inadvertently – of cinematic representations of Partition in Hindi films of the 2000s interacts with dominant state ideology to frame the relationship between self and other with the terms denoting India/Hindu and Pakistan/Muslim, respectively. Through an analysis of the representation of the India–Pakistan border in four films – Pinjar (2003), Veer-Zaara (2004), Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019) and Kya Dilli Kya Lahore (2014) – the paper argues that mainstream Hindi films are largely reflective of the state ideology, although to varying degrees and at times in spite of themselves. In contrast, a low budget film as Kya Dilli Kya Lahore completely subverts the dominant ideology through its sensitive but incisive critique of the border.

Patents

Projects

Scholars

Doctoral Scholars

  • Ms Satarupa Nandi

Interests

  • Partition Studies
  • South Asian Literature
  • Trauma Studies

Thought Leaderships

There are no Thought Leaderships associated with this faculty.

Top Achievements

Research Area

No research areas found for this faculty.

Education
2014
Bachelors
Ravenshaw University
India
2016
Masters
EFLU Hyderabad
India
2024
PhD
IIT Kharagpur
India
Experience
  • July 2019 – December 2023 – Teaching Assistant– IIT Kharagpur
  • January 2021 – December 2022; September 2023- December 2023 – Teaching Assistant– NPTEL (Speaking Effectively and Globalisation and Culture)
Research Interests
  • My research is grounded in trauma and memory studies, especially as it relates to literatures in India, both in English and regional languages. I am interested in the intersection between trauma theory and postcolonialism and how trauma, as well as recovery, may be located within the everyday and represented using Indigenous representational forms.
Awards & Fellowships
  • 2019 – UGC NET-JRF – UGC
Memberships
  • Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
  • Oxford Women’s Leadership Symposium
Publications
  • Unhoming Home: UP Muslims’ Trauma of Partition in Masoom Reza’s Aadha Gaon and Os Ki Boond

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: Contemporary South Asia, Quartile: Q2

    View abstract ⏷

    While the traumatic impact of Partition on Punjab has been extensively examined, this paper undertakes a reading of Masoom Reza’s novels, Aadha Gaon (1960) and Os ki Boond (1970) to examine UP Muslims trauma of Partition in terms of homelessness and their minoritization in postcolonial India. Against a background of historical facts, the paper demonstrates how these novels as literary-testimonies mediate questions of belongingness and nationalism. By reimagining identity in terms of affective place based belongingness to home, they show how conceiving nationalism in terms of communal identities engenders trauma through home becoming an unheimlich space. Depicting the community’s life in the 1940s until the early years of independence, Aadha Gaon paints a poignant picture of loss of home and the reduction of the community to minorities in their own home. Os ki Boond carries forward the narrative in the 1950s and against the backdrop of rise of right-wing Hindu nationalism and growth of Jana Sangh, further probes the socio-political processes of making minority citizen-subjects in independent India. The paper draws upon postcolonial studies of trauma to posit the local genre of anchalik-upanayas (loosely, regional novel) as the medium through which the texts engage with the community’s trauma of long Partition.
  • Ideological Positioning in the Representation of Borders: An Analysis of Recent Hindi Films

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: 75 Years After Partition: India, Pakistan and Bangladesh (Ed. A. Ranjan & F. Sulehria), Quartile: Q2

    View abstract ⏷

    Ideology and cinematic representation are crucially linked even though a film’s positioning of itself with respect to dominant state ideology may differ thus contesting the idea that films always serve as ideological state apparatus. In this context, the paper reflects on the complex ways in which the ideological positioning – advertently or inadvertently – of cinematic representations of Partition in Hindi films of the 2000s interacts with dominant state ideology to frame the relationship between self and other with the terms denoting India/Hindu and Pakistan/Muslim, respectively. Through an analysis of the representation of the India–Pakistan border in four films – Pinjar (2003), Veer-Zaara (2004), Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019) and Kya Dilli Kya Lahore (2014) – the paper argues that mainstream Hindi films are largely reflective of the state ideology, although to varying degrees and at times in spite of themselves. In contrast, a low budget film as Kya Dilli Kya Lahore completely subverts the dominant ideology through its sensitive but incisive critique of the border.
  • Witnessing 1984: Mnemonic Representations of Trauma, Resilience and Hope in Selected Fiction

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma

    Source Title: Sikh Formations: Religion, Culture, Theory, Quartile: Q1

    View abstract ⏷

    Literary narratives constitute memory-archives that challenge state silencing of anti-Sikh pogrom of 1984. The paper draws upon Rigney’sidea of ‘agency of the aesthetic’ in generating memorability to show how cultural representations participate in unforgetting of traumatic pasts. The paper argues that in creating memorability of a difficult history, the texts bring state narrative to a limit and open an alternative space where confrontation with traumatic-memories does not preclude possibility of hope. The texts feed into ‘memory-as-relevance’ as the mediation of memories of trauma, resilience, and hope carries possibility of effectuating subtle changes in the dominant narrative of anti-Sikh pogrom.
  • Cultures of Honour, Cultures of Trauma: A Reading of Amrita Pritam’s Pinjar

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: Amrita Pritam: The Writer Provocateur (Ed. H. Nandrajog & P.K. Srivastava),

    View abstract ⏷

    Reading to Amrita Pritam's Pinjar to highlight the continuity between historical and insidious trauma
  • Ideological Positioning in the Representation of Borders: An Analysis of Recent Hindi Films.

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: India Review, Quartile: Q2

    View abstract ⏷

    Ideology and cinematic representation are crucially linked even though a film’s positioning of itself with respect to dominant state ideology may differ thus contesting the idea that films always serve as ideological state apparatus. In this context, the paper reflects on the complex ways in which the ideological positioning – advertently or inadvertently – of cinematic representations of Partition in Hindi films of the 2000s interacts with dominant state ideology to frame the relationship between self and other with the terms denoting India/Hindu and Pakistan/Muslim, respectively. Through an analysis of the representation of the India–Pakistan border in four films – Pinjar (2003), Veer-Zaara (2004), Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019) and Kya Dilli Kya Lahore (2014) – the paper argues that mainstream Hindi films are largely reflective of the state ideology, although to varying degrees and at times in spite of themselves. In contrast, a low budget film as Kya Dilli Kya Lahore completely subverts the dominant ideology through its sensitive but incisive critique of the border.
Contact Details

ritika.v@srmap.edu.in

Scholars

Doctoral Scholars

  • Ms Satarupa Nandi

Interests

  • Partition Studies
  • South Asian Literature
  • Trauma Studies

Education
2014
Bachelors
Ravenshaw University
India
2016
Masters
EFLU Hyderabad
India
2024
PhD
IIT Kharagpur
India
Experience
  • July 2019 – December 2023 – Teaching Assistant– IIT Kharagpur
  • January 2021 – December 2022; September 2023- December 2023 – Teaching Assistant– NPTEL (Speaking Effectively and Globalisation and Culture)
Research Interests
  • My research is grounded in trauma and memory studies, especially as it relates to literatures in India, both in English and regional languages. I am interested in the intersection between trauma theory and postcolonialism and how trauma, as well as recovery, may be located within the everyday and represented using Indigenous representational forms.
Awards & Fellowships
  • 2019 – UGC NET-JRF – UGC
Memberships
  • Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
  • Oxford Women’s Leadership Symposium
Publications
  • Unhoming Home: UP Muslims’ Trauma of Partition in Masoom Reza’s Aadha Gaon and Os Ki Boond

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: Contemporary South Asia, Quartile: Q2

    View abstract ⏷

    While the traumatic impact of Partition on Punjab has been extensively examined, this paper undertakes a reading of Masoom Reza’s novels, Aadha Gaon (1960) and Os ki Boond (1970) to examine UP Muslims trauma of Partition in terms of homelessness and their minoritization in postcolonial India. Against a background of historical facts, the paper demonstrates how these novels as literary-testimonies mediate questions of belongingness and nationalism. By reimagining identity in terms of affective place based belongingness to home, they show how conceiving nationalism in terms of communal identities engenders trauma through home becoming an unheimlich space. Depicting the community’s life in the 1940s until the early years of independence, Aadha Gaon paints a poignant picture of loss of home and the reduction of the community to minorities in their own home. Os ki Boond carries forward the narrative in the 1950s and against the backdrop of rise of right-wing Hindu nationalism and growth of Jana Sangh, further probes the socio-political processes of making minority citizen-subjects in independent India. The paper draws upon postcolonial studies of trauma to posit the local genre of anchalik-upanayas (loosely, regional novel) as the medium through which the texts engage with the community’s trauma of long Partition.
  • Ideological Positioning in the Representation of Borders: An Analysis of Recent Hindi Films

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: 75 Years After Partition: India, Pakistan and Bangladesh (Ed. A. Ranjan & F. Sulehria), Quartile: Q2

    View abstract ⏷

    Ideology and cinematic representation are crucially linked even though a film’s positioning of itself with respect to dominant state ideology may differ thus contesting the idea that films always serve as ideological state apparatus. In this context, the paper reflects on the complex ways in which the ideological positioning – advertently or inadvertently – of cinematic representations of Partition in Hindi films of the 2000s interacts with dominant state ideology to frame the relationship between self and other with the terms denoting India/Hindu and Pakistan/Muslim, respectively. Through an analysis of the representation of the India–Pakistan border in four films – Pinjar (2003), Veer-Zaara (2004), Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019) and Kya Dilli Kya Lahore (2014) – the paper argues that mainstream Hindi films are largely reflective of the state ideology, although to varying degrees and at times in spite of themselves. In contrast, a low budget film as Kya Dilli Kya Lahore completely subverts the dominant ideology through its sensitive but incisive critique of the border.
  • Witnessing 1984: Mnemonic Representations of Trauma, Resilience and Hope in Selected Fiction

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma

    Source Title: Sikh Formations: Religion, Culture, Theory, Quartile: Q1

    View abstract ⏷

    Literary narratives constitute memory-archives that challenge state silencing of anti-Sikh pogrom of 1984. The paper draws upon Rigney’sidea of ‘agency of the aesthetic’ in generating memorability to show how cultural representations participate in unforgetting of traumatic pasts. The paper argues that in creating memorability of a difficult history, the texts bring state narrative to a limit and open an alternative space where confrontation with traumatic-memories does not preclude possibility of hope. The texts feed into ‘memory-as-relevance’ as the mediation of memories of trauma, resilience, and hope carries possibility of effectuating subtle changes in the dominant narrative of anti-Sikh pogrom.
  • Cultures of Honour, Cultures of Trauma: A Reading of Amrita Pritam’s Pinjar

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: Amrita Pritam: The Writer Provocateur (Ed. H. Nandrajog & P.K. Srivastava),

    View abstract ⏷

    Reading to Amrita Pritam's Pinjar to highlight the continuity between historical and insidious trauma
  • Ideological Positioning in the Representation of Borders: An Analysis of Recent Hindi Films.

    Dr Ritika Verma, Dr Ritika Verma, and A. Gera Roy

    Source Title: India Review, Quartile: Q2

    View abstract ⏷

    Ideology and cinematic representation are crucially linked even though a film’s positioning of itself with respect to dominant state ideology may differ thus contesting the idea that films always serve as ideological state apparatus. In this context, the paper reflects on the complex ways in which the ideological positioning – advertently or inadvertently – of cinematic representations of Partition in Hindi films of the 2000s interacts with dominant state ideology to frame the relationship between self and other with the terms denoting India/Hindu and Pakistan/Muslim, respectively. Through an analysis of the representation of the India–Pakistan border in four films – Pinjar (2003), Veer-Zaara (2004), Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019) and Kya Dilli Kya Lahore (2014) – the paper argues that mainstream Hindi films are largely reflective of the state ideology, although to varying degrees and at times in spite of themselves. In contrast, a low budget film as Kya Dilli Kya Lahore completely subverts the dominant ideology through its sensitive but incisive critique of the border.
Contact Details

ritika.v@srmap.edu.in

Scholars

Doctoral Scholars

  • Ms Satarupa Nandi