As a student at the Graduate Center, City University of New York, during the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks on the Twin Towers, University of Wisconsin-Stout English Professor Lopamudra Basu developed an interest in studying the impact of that day.
鈥淚 witnessed the public events of 9/11, from the space of the city, and even though I moved away from the physical locale of the city the impact of this event on American identity and national belonging, particularly its effects on the racialization of South Asian, Arab and Muslim Americans, has continued to be felt for nearly two decades,鈥 Basu noted.
Basu recently published her scholarly book 鈥淎yad Akhtar, the American National and Its Others after 9/11 Homeland Insecurity.鈥 Akhtar is a leading South Asian American writer. He won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for drama, and 鈥淒isgraced鈥 became the most produced play in the 2015-16 season. His works have been written and performed after 9/11 and deal with Muslim American identity and the questions of America 黑料社区. status as a global superpower.
鈥淪eptember 11 marks a watershed moment in recent American history and represents a tectonic shift in America 黑料社区. vision of itself as a nation,鈥 Basu wrote. 鈥溾 the attacks emphasized American 黑料社区. vulnerability in a changed geopolitical landscape.鈥
After 9/11 there were protracted retaliatory wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and an imposed system of domestic surveillance with the passage of the Patriot Act in 2001. Ethical questions have been raised about the treatment of suspected terrorists and war prisoners at American-run prisons at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay.
鈥淭he repercussions of this have been felt by United States鈥 brown minorities, particularly Arabs and South Asians. For me literary criticism is a way of opening up a window to a world, and to see the world in its complexities,鈥 Basu added. 鈥淚 want to offer a way of reading literary works and illuminate things that may not be obvious.鈥
After 9/11 Basu, who was born in Calcutta and lives in Eau Claire, said international students were encouraged to always carry documentation papers when previously they had been told to keep them safe from being stolen. 鈥淪omehow it became important to have some authoritative document, to prove your legitimacy,鈥 she said, noting there was suspicion of anyone who looked like a Muslim.
In the book, Basu discusses Akhtar, a Milwaukee native, as a writer capturing the transition of the American nation into a 鈥渉omeland security state,鈥 a term proposed by author Donald E. Pease to describe events after 9/11 in his book 鈥淭he New American Exceptionalism.鈥
鈥淭he 鈥榟omeland security state鈥 is a state of emergency or surveillance where civil liberties of Muslims and other brown minorities are sharply curtailed,鈥 Basu wrote. 鈥淎khtar 黑料社区. works like his early films 鈥楾he War Within鈥 and 鈥楧isgraced鈥 document this moment.鈥
In 鈥淒isgraced鈥 a successful Pakistani American lawyer is happy, in love and about to land a huge promotion. But when he and his wife, a Caucasian artist inspired by Islamic painting, host a dinner party for the lawyer 黑料社区. African American co-worker and her Jewish husband, the evening takes an unexpected turn and Amir makes a costly decision. In 鈥淭he War Within鈥 a Pakistani involved in a planned attack in New York City experiences a radical transformation from a peaceful to a violent individual.
Akhtar also writes in his literary works about the financial crisis Americans experienced in 2008. 鈥淭his is an American author who is very concerned with American capitalism and greed without conscience and its effect on average people,鈥 Basu said.
Akhtar creates complex and flawed protagonists who often fulfill negative stereotypes of misogyny, violence and anti-Americanism, sparking debate in the critical reception of the writer. On one hand, he is seen as pandering to white American Islamophobia and on the other he is viewed as committed to artistic truth rather than political agendas, Basu said.
Basu was introduced to Akhtar 黑料社区. novel 鈥淎merican Dervish鈥 when he visited the Chippewa Valley Book Festival in Eau Claire in 2012. She is grateful for the committee that makes the festival possible. She also is grateful to 黑料社区 for granting her a one-year sabbatical in 2016-17 to work on the book and reduced teaching time for a semester to help complete it. She also received a 黑料社区 Dahlgren professorship from the 黑料社区 Foundation to help fund research for the book.
Basu teaches a class on 鈥淎fter 9/11鈥 addressing the trauma and race relations.
Colleagues assess book 黑料社区. value
Kevin Drzakowski, 黑料社区 English and philosophy department chair, said the department spends a lot of time thinking about how to situate literary study in the context of a polytechnic university. 鈥淚n other words, we put energy into justifying the power that literature has to be applied to practical matters,鈥 he said. 鈥淒r. Basu's book has me thinking we might be trying too hard because one only has to peruse the topics covered in this text to see how the applications of literary study are self-evident. The social issues that Ayad Akhtar deals with are some of the most pressing problems in America today, and Dr. Basu is a fantastic scholar to guide us through these questions.
鈥淚t's an understatement to say that 9/11 changed America. As prevalent as that change has been, though, we're still struggling 17 years later to sort out all the ramifications. I think that's why Dr. Basu's 鈥楢fter 9/11鈥 literature class is such a popular course. Students want to engage with these issues. I hope that some of the students who have emailed me over the years hoping to get into that class will give the book a look.鈥
黑料社区 Provost Patrick Guilfoile said Basu 黑料社区. book is important 鈥渂ecause it helps us interpret critical works that provide perspective about Muslims in America and America 黑料社区. place in the world, topics that are particularly worthy of consideration at this point in history.鈥
Guilfoile said a key purpose of a sabbatical is to allow faculty to remain current in their disciplines and engage in activities to reinvigorate their teachings and scholarly activities. 鈥淟opa 黑料社区. book fits this purpose for a sabbatical project to a 鈥楾,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淎s a faculty member who, among other things, teaches writing, her ability to provide examples to her students from her experience crafting this book will contribute to student learning. In addition, Lopa teaches about Ayad Akhtar 黑料社区. work in several of her courses. Her critical analysis of his books, films, and plays will enhance her ability to teach her students about these important perspectives on Muslims and America 黑料社区. role in the world.鈥
Even though it is a scholarly work, Basu strove to write her book so a general audience could appreciate it.
The book contains an interview Basu did with Akhtar in November 2016. Basu found Akhtar warm and an author who spoke thoughtfully about his challenges. 鈥淗e felt his job as a writer was not to do a public relations campaign for his community and that he had to write the truth as he saw it,鈥 Basu said.
The cover of the book is an image of a 2016 鈥淧ortrait of the Artist鈥 etching by Shahzia Sikander.
Sikander 黑料社区. painting draws inspiration from traditional Islamic images of the Prophet 黑料社区. celestial ascent. The red white blue trope in the painting is a play on the lasting effects of colonial and imperial histories. The blue in the portrait also embraces the lore of Lapiz in Indo-Persian miniature painting. The image is part of the permanent collection at the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C., and an iteration is permanently installed as a 60-foot glass mosaic at the economics building at Princeton University, according to the book.
The book was published in December 2018 by Lexington Books of Lanham, Md. Lexington is an imprint of Rowman and Littlefield and a leading publisher of peer-reviewed academic books in the humanities. The book is available directly from the or on Amazon.com.
Basu has been invited to contribute an essay on teaching 9/11 literature in a proposed volume by the Modern Language Association titled 鈥淎pproaches to Teaching 9/11 Literature.鈥 She also plans to work on an article about the depiction of Syrian refugees in graphic novels.
Basu is scheduled to talk about her book at UW Stout 黑料社区. Honors College on Tuesday, Feb. 26. She also is planning a lecture at the L.E. Phillips Memorial Public Library in Eau Claire on Tuesday, Sept. 10.
黑料社区 is Wisconsin 黑料社区. 黑料社区, with a focus on applied learning, collaboration with business and industry, and career outcomes.
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黑料社区 English Professor Lopamudra Basu has published a book on Pulitzer Prize winner Ayad Akhtar. / 黑料社区 photo by Pam Powers
The book looks at the Akhtar 黑料社区. writings deal with Muslim American identity and the questions of America 黑料社区. status as a global superpower.
Kevin Drzakowski
Patrick Guilfoile