Prof. Dr. Y. Thaweesak King Mongkuts University of Technology Thonburi, Thailand
Prof. MAEDA Kazuaki Full Professor CHUBU UNIVERSITY Matsumoto-cho, Aichi, JAPAN
Asst. Prof. Saba Yunus Mahila Mahavidyalaya P.G. College, Kanpur, India
Assist. Prof. Siamak Haji Yakhchali Univesity of Tehran, Iran
Prof. Dr. Nuno Alexandre Soares Domingues Instituto Superior de Engenharia de Lisboa and Instituto de Comunicação da NOVA (ICNOVA) FCSH-UNL (Portugal)
DR. HEMANTKUMAR P. BULSARA In charge - Management section, Applied Mathematics and Humanities Department, S. V. National Institute of Technology, Surat, India
Prof. Dr. Dinesh C. Sharma Professor & Head-Zoology, K.M. Govt. Girls P.G. College, Badalpur, UP, India
All Abstracts, Reviews, short articles, Full articles, Posters are welcomed related with any of the following research fields:
Literature explores the written and oral word as an art form, reflecting human culture, psychology, and history.
Literary Genres and Forms
Poetry (Epic, Lyric, Dramatic, Sonnets, Haiku)
Prose Fiction (Novels, Novellas, Short Stories, Flash Fiction)
Drama and Playwriting (Tragedy, Comedy, Melodrama, Absurdist Theatre)
Non-Fiction (Biographies, Memoirs, Essays, Literary Journalism)
Oral Traditions (Folklore, Mythologies, Epics passed down orally)
Literary Theory and Criticism
Formalism and New Criticism (Focus on the text itself)
Structuralism and Post-Structuralism/Deconstruction
Marxist and Socio-Economic Literary Theory
Feminist and Queer Literary Theory
Postcolonial and Decolonial Literature
Psychoanalytic Criticism (Freudian and Jungian approaches to text)
Eco-criticism (Literature and the environment)
Comparative Literature
Cross-cultural literary influences
Translation studies and the adaptation of texts across languages
Transnational and global literatures
Intertextuality (How texts reference and build upon one another)
History of Literature
Ancient and Classical Literature (e.g., Mesopotamian, Greek, Roman, Sanskrit)
Medieval and Renaissance Literature
Enlightenment and Romanticism
Realism and Naturalism
Modernism and Postmodernism
Contemporary 21st-Century Literature
This domain covers both the structural, scientific study of language (Linguistics) and the practical, cultural acquisition of languages.
Theoretical and Structural Linguistics
Phonetics (The physical sounds of speech)
Phonology (The cognitive organization of sounds)
Morphology (The structure and formation of words)
Syntax (The rules governing sentence structure)
Semantics (The literal meaning of words and sentences)
Pragmatics (Language meaning in context and social usage)
Applied and Socio-Linguistics
Sociolinguistics (Language in relation to social factors like class, gender, and ethnicity)
Dialectology and Accentology (Regional variations of language)
Psycholinguistics (Language acquisition and the brain)
Computational Linguistics (Natural Language Processing, AI, and speech recognition)
Historical Linguistics (Etymology, language evolution, and language families)
Language Acquisition and Pedagogy
First Language Acquisition (Child language development)
Second Language Acquisition (SLA theories and methodologies)
Bilingualism and Multilingualism
Translation and Interpretation (Simultaneous, consecutive, and literary translation)
Phylogeny and Language Families
Indo-European, Afroasiatic, Sino-Tibetan, Austronesian, Niger-Congo, etc.
Endangered languages and language revitalization efforts
Constructed languages (Conlangs like Esperanto, Elvish, or Klingon)
Religious Studies examines the beliefs, behaviors, institutions, and histories of world religions from an objective, academic standpoint.
World Religions (Major Traditions)
Abrahamic Religions (Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Bahá'í Faith)
Dharmic Religions (Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism)
East Asian Religions (Taoism, Confucianism, Shinto)
Indigenous, Tribal, and Shamanic Traditions
New Religious Movements (NRMs) and Esotericism
Philosophy of Religion and Theology
Theodicy (The problem of evil and suffering)
Epistemology of Faith (Reason vs. Revelation)
Ontological, Cosmological, and Teleological arguments for the divine
Comparative Theology
Atheism, Agnosticism, Secularism, and Non-religion
Sociology and Anthropology of Religion
Rituals, Rites of Passage, and Sacraments
Sacred Spaces, Pilgrimages, and Architecture
Religious Institutions, Hierarchy, and Authority
Fundamentalism, Extremism, and Orthodoxy vs. Heterodoxy
Secularization thesis and the modern revival of spirituality
Sacred Texts and Hermeneutics
Textual Criticism (Exegesis and Eisegesis)
The Torah, Tanakh, and Talmud
The Holy Bible (Old and New Testaments, Apocrypha)
The Quran and Hadith
The Vedas, Upanishads, and Bhagavad Gita
The Buddhist Tipitaka (Pali Canon) and Mahayana Sutras
The true richness of these fields emerges where they overlap. Below are the key intersections where Literature, Language, and Religion fuse.
Sacred Philology and Etymology
The study of dead or liturgical languages (Classical Arabic, Biblical Hebrew, Sanskrit, Ecclesiastical Latin, Pali, Ge'ez) used exclusively or primarily to preserve religious texts.
How linguistic translation alters theological interpretations (e.g., translating Hebrew or Greek biblical concepts into modern English).
Religious and Mythological Literature
The Bible, Quran, and Mahabharata analyzed purely as literary masterpieces (exploring narrative arcs, characterization, and poetic structure).
Hagiography (The biographies and literary accounts of saints and holy figures).
The Epic Tradition (How religious myths form national identities through literature, like Homer’s Iliad or Valmiki's Ramayana).
Hermeneutics and Semiotics
How literary decoding methods (like structuralism) are applied to interpret religious scriptures.
The study of religious signs, symbols, and metaphors within prose and poetry.
Secularization of Literary Themes
How modern, secular literature adapts religious allegories (e.g., C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, or Salman Rushdie using religious mythos in modern fiction).
The Concept of the "Sublime" in Romantic literature as a substitute for religious transcendence.
Sociolinguistics and Religious Identity
How specific dialects or linguistic registers are used to signify religious devotion or belonging (e.g., the use of specific greetings or vocabulary in Islamic, Jewish, or Christian communities).
Language politics in religion (e.g., the historical pushback against translating the Latin Mass into vernacular languages).
Mystical and Devotional Poetry
Literature written specifically as an act of religious ecstasy or meditation (e.g., the Sufi poetry of Rumi and Hafiz, the Bhakti movement poets like Kabir and Mirabai, or Christian mystics like St. John of the Cross).
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