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Ranjana Khanna, Professor of English

Ranjana Khanna
Office Location:  304GH Allen Bldg, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708
Office Phone:  +1 919 684 2741
Email Address:  send me a message

Teaching (Fall 2024):

  • English 290-7.02, Sp top in lang & lit Synopsis
    Allen 326, TuTh 11:45 AM-01:00 PM
    (also cross-listed as GSF 290.02, LIT 290.02)
Office Hours:

Fall 2022 Semester:

T 9:00-10:00 am (304GH Allen)

Th 9:00-10:00 am B193 Smith Warehouse Bay 4/5

By appointment over zoom; contact Avery Rhoades for an appointment: avery.rhoades@duke.edu.
Education:

  • Ph.D. University of York (United Kingdom) 1993
  • B.A. University of York (United Kingdom) 1988

Specialties:

Critical Theory
Postcolonial Literature
Gender & Sexuality Studies
Modern to Contemporary
Novels
Research Interests:

Ranjana Khanna is Professor of English, Women's Studies, and the Literature Program at Duke University. She works on Anglo- and Francophone Postcolonial theory and literature, and Film, Psychoanalysis, and Feminist theory. She has published widely on transnational feminism, psychoanalysis, and postcolonial and feminist theory, literature, and film. She is the author of Dark Continents: Psychoanalysis and Colonialism (Duke University Press, 2003) and Algeria Cuts: Women and Representation 1830 to the present (Stanford University Press, 2008.) She has published in journals like Differences, Signs, Third Text, Diacritics, Screen, Art History, positions, SAQ, Feminist Theory, and Public Culture. Her current book manuscripts in progress are called: Asylum: The Concept and the Practice and Technologies of Unbelonging.

Representative Publications   (More Publications)
  1. Khanna, R. Algeria Cuts: Women and Representation, 1830 to the Present. November, 2007.
  2. "Frames, Contexts, Community, Justice."  Summer 2003. However, the issue appeared in November 2005. Diacritics 33:2 (2005): 11-41.
  3. Khanna, R. "Signatures of the Impossible." Duke Journal of Law and Gender Policy  (2004).
  4. Khanna, R. Dark Continents: Psychoanalysis and Colonialism.  Duke University Press, April, 2003.
  5. with Khanna, R; Burton, B; Ibryamova, N; Mazurana, DE; Mendoza, SL. "Cartographies of Scholarship: The Ends of Nation-States, International Studies, and the Cold War." Encompassing Gender: Integrating International Studies and Women’s Studies  (2002): 21-45.
  6. Khanna, R. "Taking a stand for Afghanistan: Women and the left." SIGNS 28:1 (Fall, 2002): 464-465. [Gateway.cgi], [doi]
  7. Khanna, R. "The Experience of Evidence: Language, Law and the Mockery of Justice." Algeria in and Out of French  (January, 2001).
  8. Khanna, R. "The Ambiguity of Ethics: Specters of Colonialism." Feminist Consequences: Theory for the New Century  (January, 2001).
  9. Khanna, R. "’Araby’ (Dubliners): Women’s Time and the Time of the Nation."  Refereed Joyce, Feminism, Colonialism/Postcolonialism/European Joyce Studies  (1998): 81-101.
  10. Khanna, R. "From Third to Fourth Cinema." Third Text  (1998): 13-32.
  11. Khanna, R. "The Construction of the Dark Continent: Agency as Autobiography." Women’s Lives/Women’s Times  (December, 1997): 103-20.
  12. with Khanna, R; Engle, K. "Forgotten History: Myth, Empathy, and Assimilated Culture." Feminism and the New Democracy  (1997): 67-80.
  13. Khanna, R. "Feminism and Psychoanalysis: Repetition, Repression and the Unconscious." New Directions in Cognitive Science  (1995): 358-67.

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