DEPARTMENT.FACULTY
- DEPARTMENT_STAFF.QUALIFICATION
Ph.D, M. Phil., M.A. English Literature
- DEPARTMENT_STAFF.DESIGNATION
Professor
- DEPARTMENT_STAFF.THRUST_AREA
American Literature, Translation Studies
- DEPARTMENT_STAFF.ADDRESS
C-3, Nazir Ahmad Road, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh,
- DEPARTMENT_STAFF.MOBILE
9897502975 ,
- DEPARTMENT_STAFF.EMAIL
munira.wc@amu.ac.in ,
- DEPARTMENT_STAFF.TIME_TABLE
Dr. Munira T is a Professor in the Department of English (Women's College) at Aligarh Muslim University. She has many publications in national and international journals to her credit. She has attended several international and national conference and seminars in the area of American Literature, Translation Studies, Indian English Writings, and English Language Teaching. She has conducted online workshops on Communication Skills and Personality Development. She has also been a resource person of English Access Microscholarship Programme under Regional English Language Office (RELO), American Centre for eight years. She was invited to visit the United States of America by the Department of State for attending the International English Teachers Conference. It was the International Visitor Leadership Program (IVLP) in 2012.
- Vocalizing the Voiceless: Struggle to find a Personal Voice - Maxine Hong Kingston's The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhood among Ghosts
- Clash of Cultures and a Search for Identity in Qaisra Shahraz's Revolt
- Twice Marginalised: A Postcolonial Feminist Reading of Sunlight on a Broken Column
- Anxiety of Representation in Minoritarian Studies: Muslim Women’s Fiction
- Funny Short Stories as Motivators for Language Learning
- The idea of Anti-hero in Upamanyu Chaterjee's English August: An Indian Story
- Representation of Love, Revenge and Sacrifice in Khushwant Singh's Train to Pakistan
- Objectivism as a way of Life: Ayn Rand's Philosophy
- Gendered Self: Postmodernist Handling of a Sensitive Issue in Mahesh Dattani's Tara
- Pearl S. Buck's My Several Worlds: A Multicultural Biography
- Self and Other Dichotomy and the Voice of Humanity in Select Plays of Asif Currimbhoy
- Communicative Games: Towards Better Language Acquisition
- Culture in Transition: Pearl S. Buck's East Wind: West Wind
- He deserves the real appreciation: Contribution of Asif Currimbhoy to Post-Independence Indian English Drama
- Selfishness as Virtue: Ayn Rand's Objectivism