I am a literary historian and critic and my research explores colonial and postcolonial South Asian and Southeast Asian anglophone literary cultures, contemporary fiction and conjunctions of writing and politics. My area of expertise includes the work of the Indian author Arundhati Roy, and I am currently writing a monograph on urban fiction of the so-called ‘New India’.
Before joining the Open University in 2011, I taught at the University of York and University of Portsmouth. I studied for a British Academy funded PhD at the University of Leeds, where my thesis explored nationhood and concepts of home in South Asian fiction in English. (My interest in postcolonial and global fiction was sparked by experience working in Egypt and Southeast Asia, and my MA examined the writing of the Egyptian author Naguib Mahfouz.) I gained a Postgraduate Certificate in Teaching and Learning in Higher Education in 2004.
At the Open University I am the Research Lead for English & Creative Writing and Director of the OU’s Postcolonial and Global Literatures Research Group (PGLRG) and have worked on module teams across the English qualification pathway. I am currently chair of the new English MA (A893) in production and I have chaired The Arts Past and Present (AA100) in presentation as well as having written teaching material for OU modules at levels 2 and 3. More broadly, I have wide-ranging teaching experience in anglophone Postcolonial and World Literatures, American Literature, Popular Fiction and forms of critical theory. As the Director of the PGLRG I have organised numerous research events, seminars and workshops, including yearly postgraduate symposia.
I am a member of the South Asian Literature Association and have served on the editorial boards of scholarly journals in my field, including the Journal of Postcolonial Writing, the Journal of Commonwealth Literature, the Southeast Asian Review of English and Wasafiri, and I have acted as region editor on The Year’s Work in English. I have been a judge on the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and on the Indian Association of Commonwealth Literature and Language Studies essay prize. In 2010 I held a visiting fellowship at St John’s College, Oxford.
My research combines three different areas:
A primary strand of my research work is the history of South Asian literature in English, especially early Indian fiction of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. My first published book was a critical edition of the earliest fictional writings by Indian authors in English: short fictions by Shoshee and Kylas Dutt published in the Calcutta Literary Gazette in the 1830s and 40s. I rediscovered these lost works in 2005 and they are now available as Selections from ‘Bengaliana’, which can be accessed here https://onlinestore.ntu.ac.uk/product-catalogue/arts-humanities/trent-editions/trent-editions-ebooks/selections-from-bengaliana-2005-by-shoshee-chunder-dutt-ebook. (This edition will soon be made available as a Kindle edition.) My subsequent AHRC-funded monograph project, Terrorism, Insurgency and Indian-English Literature 1830-1947 (Routledge, 2012), researched terror and anti-colonial violence in fictions by both colonial and Indian writers. It included analysis of writers of the 1857 Rebellion, the fiction of the forgotten Edwardian Indian novelist Sarath Kumar Gosh, and political novels by later writers such as Mulk Raj Anand.
My work on South Asian literature also extends to histories of the present and contemporary writing, particularly the author and political campaigner Arundhati Roy. My 2003 JCL article on Roy has been influential in readings of her work, and my Reader’s Guide to Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Thing (Routledge 2007) is widely used by teachers, undergraduates and academics. In 2016, I edited a collection on recent writing, South Asian Fiction in English: Contemporary Transformations, which analyses key contemporary anglophone fictions from across the subcontinent, and my current work updates this focus in an original assessment of the infrastructural politics of city fictions of the ‘New India’. I am currently co-editing a special issue of Textus (Associazione Italiana di Anglistica) on ‘Millennium’s Children: New Trends in the Post-millennial Indian Novel’.
My research interests also include Chinese and Southeast Asian anglophone writing and Southeast Asian diaspora writing in Britain. Between 2014 and 2019 I was sole editor and contributing author on volume 10 of the Oxford History of the Novel in English: The Novel in South and South East Asia since 1945 (Oxford University Press, 2019). This project involved over forty international contributors and included chapters on national traditions, key themes and major authors in Myanmar, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong and the Philippines. On this project I contributed research on memoirs of the Chinese Cultural Revolution, and historical fiction from Malaysia and the Philippines.
I am involved in researching Chinese and Southeast Asian migrant and diaspora communities in Britain, primarily through a collaborative research project with colleagues at the University of Liverpool, SOAS and Keele University to archive a narrative history of British Chinese writings in English. This project has already involved public impact workshops with members of the Liverpool Chinese British community, and scoping work on relevant authors. My focus in this research is the work of the Chinese Belgian author Han Suyin, a bestselling novelist and pro-Chinese commentator of the 1950s and 60s.
Lastly, my work has consistently traced political aspects of postcolonial literature in relation to territory, space and infrastructure. My earliest published work dealt with travel writing and colonial mapping in India and more recently I have been involved in a Leverhulme-funded project with colleagues at Oxford, Warwick and King’s College London on ‘Planned Violence: Post/colonial Urban Infrastructures and Literature’. This research led to a co-edited special issue of the Journal of Postcolonial Writing on contemporary fictions of Delhi, which was published as a Routledge book, Delhi: New Literatures of the Megacity in 2020. My current research project develops these interests in a more far-reaching study of the civic politics of the contemporary Indian English novel, City Fictions of the New India: Literature, Infrastructure, Citizenship.
Publications
A full list of my publications can be found here http://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/at7392.html
I have taught extensively on OU modules and worked on The Arts Past and Present (AA100) as Module Team Chair and Deputy Chair from 2013 to 2019. I have also taught on Reading and Studying Literature (A230) and acted as Deputy Chair on The Nineteenth-Century Novel (AA316). My direct contribution to OU teaching materials includes units for Literature in Transition: From 1800 to the Present (A335) and Telling Stories: The Novel and Beyond (A233). On the former module I contributed units on Henry David Thoreau’s Walden and Jhumpa Lahiri’s Unaccustomed Earth and produced a location video on Thoreau, as well as acting as a block editor. On the latter module, I authored two chapter on Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things for Book 1: ‘Realisms’.
I have developed strong international links with academics in India, Pakistan, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong and the United States, and have organised conferences at Jawaharlal Nehru University and collaborated on events in Southeast Asia, activities which were part of my editing work on The Oxford History of the Novel in English, Vol 10. I am currently collaborating with academics at Nanyang Technological University on new research on the author Han Suyin. Since joining the OU I have acted as external examiner for PhDs at Oxford, Sheffield and SOAS, University of London in the UK, and for universities in Australia, Hong Kong and Singapore.
Name | Type | Parent Unit |
---|---|---|
Postcolonial Literatures Research Group | Group | Faculty of Arts |
Role | Start date | End date | Funding source |
---|---|---|---|
Co-investigator | 01 Oct 2014 | 30 Sep 2019 | AHRC Arts & Humanities Research Council |
Research questions will revolve around the twin themes of perceptions of the enemy/populace, and experiences of violence: 1. What were attitudes towards combatants, general populace, ‘suspect’ populations and areas, and prisoners and detainees? How did these change during each campaign, and across campaigns? 2. What was the impact of: rules of engagement, past ‘repertoires of action’, and tendencies towards ‘rough justice’ and other tropes. 3. What policies, environments, attitudes and enemy approaches tended to fuel excessive violence, and which to limit violence in the first place, or to reverse the tide of excessive violence? 4. How did British troops perceive ‘race’ and culture, and how did this change across 1945-97, given changes in attitudes to race and multiculturalism in the UK? 5. How did troops experience and deal with violence and trauma, both as its authors and its victims? Applying these questions across 3-5 of the campaigns listed below will provide an overarching picture of troop mentality or ‘pysche’ and its changes. 1. Malayan Emergency: a rural Cold War campaign against an enemy perceived as ideological, with strong elements both of ‘counter-terror’ and of soft power and ‘winning hearts and minds’. 2. Mau Mau: a rural campaign with the enemy perceived as ‘non-rational’/primitive/tribal. 3. Cyprus: a predominantly urban campaign against an ethnic nationalist enemy. 4. Northern Ireland: a largely urban campaign when human rights and civil rights expectations were increasing. 5. Afghanistan: at an epilogue level, for how this echoes earlier trends or not, raising the question of continuities/discontinuities into the future. Most of the above campaigns have been the cause of major court cases raising the possibility of in-depth study and comparison of particular incidents. All can be studied using a blend of soldiers’ diaries (IWM, Army Museum, select regimental museums), oral history records, and the National Archives. Outputs: 1. A thesis of up to 100,000 words, with publication potential in entirety or parts. 2. Web output. The student should develop skills in bridging the archive/museum, academic world, and the public, by providing working papers, documents and commentary on topical parts of their work online, including through The OU’s unique OpenLearn platform, and its Research Centres. |
[Book review] Dominic Davies, The broken promise of infrastructure. London, Lawrence Wishart, 2023 (2024)
Tickell, Alex
Journal of Postcolonial Writing ((Early access))
The Work of Art in the Age of Transnational Reproduction: Form and Intertextuality in Xiaolu Guo’s A Concise Chinese-English Dictionary for Lovers and A Lover’s Discourse (2023)
Tickell, Alex
Studies in the Novel, 55(1) (pp. 76-92)
Han Suyin: The little voice of decolonizing Asia (2021)
Cui, Feng and Tickell, Alex
Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 57, Article 1(2) (pp. 147-153)
Han Suyin’s Cold War fictions: Life-writing, intimacy, and decolonization (2021)
Tickell, Alex
Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 57(2) (pp. 241-254)
Postcolonial Fiction and the Question of Influence: Arundhati Roy, The God of Small Things and Rumer Godden (2020)
Tickell, Alex
Postcolonial Text, 15(1)
Writing in the Necropolis: Arundhati Roy's The Ministry of Utmost Happiness (2018-06-01)
Tickell, Alex
Moving Worlds: A Journal of Transcultural Studies, 18, Article 7(1) (pp. 100-112)
Delhi: New writings on the megacity (2018)
Tickell, Alex and Ranasinha, Ruvani
Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 54(3) (pp. 297-306)
The 1990s: An Increasingly Postcolonial Decade (2015-09)
Boehmer, Elleke and Tickell, Alex
Journal of Commonwealth Literature, 50(3) (pp. 315-352)
An Interview with Manju Kapur (2015-06)
Tickell, Alex
Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 51(3) (pp. 340-350)
Review Essay: 'Elementary My Dear Hameed': Postcolonial Crime Fiction; Nels Pearson and Marc Singer, ed Detective Fiction in a Postcolonial and Transnational World; Ibne Safi The Laughing Corpse; Ibne Safi Dr Dread; M C Dutton The Singhing Detective (2013-09)
Tickell, Alex
Wasafiri(75) (pp. 73-76)
The Perils of Certain English Prisoners: Charles Dickens, Wilkie Collins and the limits of colonial government (2013-03)
Tickell, Alex
Nineteenth-Century Literature, 67(4) (pp. 457-489)
Cawnpore, Kipling and Charivari: 1857 and the politics of commemoration (2009-10)
Tickell, Alex
Literature and History, 18(2) (pp. 1-19)
Kipling's famine-romance: masculinity, gender and colonial biopolitics in “William the Conqueror” (2009)
Tickell, Alex
Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 45(3) (pp. 251-263)
New Literatures [The Indian Subcontinent and Sri Lanka] (2006)
Abodunrin, Femi; Dale, Leigh; Tiffin, Chris; Lane, Richard; Scafe, Suzanne; Tickell, Alex; Chambers, Claire and Wattie, Nelson
Year's Work in English Studies, 85(1) (pp. 978-1130)
New Literatures [India] (2005)
Dale, Leigh; Tiffin, Chris; Lane, Richard; Mills, Chester St. H.; Tickell, Alex and Wattie, Nelson
The Year's Work in English Studies, 84(1) (pp. 945-1020)
Writing the nation's destiny: Indian fiction in English before 1910 (2005)
Tickell, Alex
Third World Quarterly, 26(3) (pp. 525-541)
Negotiating the landscape: travel, transaction and the mapping of colonial India (2004)
Tickell, Alex
Yearbook of English Studies, 34 (pp. 18-30)
Terrorism and the Informative Romance: Two Early South-Asian Novels in English (2003-06)
Tickell, Alex
Kunapipi, 25(1) (pp. 73-82)
The God of Small Things: Arundhati Roy's Postcolonial Cosmopolitanism (2003-03)
Tickell, Alex
Journal of Commonwealth Literature, 38(1) (pp. 73-89)
"How many Pakistans?" questions of space and identity in the writing of partition (2001-07)
Tickell, Alex
Ariel: A Review of International English Literature, 32(3) (pp. 155-179)
Footprints on the Beach: Traces of Colonial Adventure in Narratives of Independent Tourism (2001-04)
Tickell, Alex
Postcolonial Studies, 4(1) (pp. 39-54)
The road less travelled: Pather Panchali in translation (2000-03)
Tickell, Alex
Journal of Commonwealth Literature, 35(1) (pp. 147-162)
Terrorism, Insurgency and Indian-English Literature, 1830-1947 (2012-01)
Tickell, Alex
Routledge Research in Postcolonial Literatures
ISBN : 978-0-415-87715-2 | Publisher : Routledge | Published : London
Arundhati Roy's The God of Small Things (2007)
Tickell, Alex
Routledge Guides to Literature
ISBN : 9780415358422 | Publisher : Routledge | Published : Abingdon
Non-Alignment and Maoist China: Eastern Horizon in the Era of Decolonisation, 1960-1981 (2024-08)
Tickell, Alex and Wetherilt, Anne
In: Finkelstein, David; Johnson, David and Davis, Caroline eds. The Edinburgh Companion to British Colonial Periodicals. Edinburgh Companions to Literature and the Humanities (pp. 446-462)
ISBN : 978-1-3995-0063-0 | Publisher : Edinburgh University Press | Published : Edinburgh, UK
Introduction: Delhi: New writings on the megacity (2020)
Tickell, Alex and Ranasinha, Ruvani
In: Tickell, Alex and Ruvani, Ranasinha eds. Delhi: New Literatures of the Megacity (pp. 3-13)
Publisher : Routledge | Published : Abingdon
Introduction (2019-03-05)
Tickell, Alex
In: Tickell, Alex ed. The Oxford History of the Novel in English Volume 10: The Novel in South and South East Asia since 1945. The Oxford History of the Novel in English (xvii-xxxiv)
ISBN : 9780198745419 | Publisher : Oxford University Press | Published : Oxford
Life-Writing, Testimony and Biographical Fiction (2019-03-05)
Tickell, Alex
In: Tickell, Alex ed. The Oxford History of the Novel in English: The Novel in South and South East Asia since 1945 (pp. 428-442)
ISBN : 9780198745419 | Publisher : Oxford University Press | Published : Oxford
History, Memory, and Cultural Identity in the Novel of South East Asia (2019-03-05)
Tickell, Alex and Gabriel, Sharmani
In: Tickell, Alex ed. The Novel in South and South East Asia since 1945. The Oxford History of the Novel in English (pp. 398-413)
ISBN : 978–0–19–874541–9 | Publisher : Oxford University Press | Published : Oxford
‘Writing the City and Indian English Fiction: Planning, Violence and Aesthetics’ (2018-11-29)
Tickell, Alex
In: Boehmer, Elleke and Davies, Dominic eds. Planned Violence: Post/colonial Urban Infrastructure, Literature & Culture (pp. 195-211)
ISBN : 978-3-319-91387-2 | Publisher : Palgrave Macmillan | Published : Cham
'An Idea Whose Time Has Come': Indian Fiction in English After 1991 (2016-06)
Tickell, Alex
In: Tickell, Alex ed. South-Asian Fiction in English: Contemporary Transformations (pp. 37-58)
ISBN : 978-1-137-40354-4 | Publisher : Palgrave Macmillan | Published : Houndmills, Basingstoke
Introduction (2016-06)
Tickell, Alex
In: Tickell, Alex ed. South-Asian Fiction in English: Contemporary Transformations (pp. 1-18)
ISBN : 978-1-137-40353-7 | Publisher : Palgrave Macmillan | Published : Basingstoke
Some Uses of History: Historiography, Politics and the Indian Novel (2015-07-31)
Tickell, Alex
In: Anjaria, Ulka ed. A History of the Indian Novel in English (pp. 237-250)
ISBN : 9781107079960 | Publisher : Cambridge University Press | Published : Cambridge
Driving Pinky Madam (and Murdering Mr Ashok): Social Justice and Domestic Service in Aravind Adiga's The White Tiger (2015-04-17)
Tickell, Alex
In: Malreddy, Pavan Kumar; Heidemann, Birte; Laursen, Ole Birk and Wilson, Janet eds. Reworking Postcolonialism: Globalisation, Labour and Rights (pp. 150-164)
ISBN : 978-1-137-43592-7 | Publisher : Palgrave Macmillan
Scholarship-terrorists: the India House Hostel and the 'student problem' in Edwardian London (2011)
Tickell, Alex
In: Ahmed, Rehana and Mukherjee, Sumita eds. South Asian Resistances in Britain, 1858-1947 (pp. 3-18)
ISBN : 9781441117564 | Publisher : Continuum | Published : London
Excavating histories of terror: thugs, sovereignty and the colonial sublime (2010)
Tickell, Alex
In: Boehmer, Elleke and Morton, Stephen eds. Terror and the Postcolonial: A Concise Companion (pp. 177-201)
ISBN : 9781405191548 | Publisher : Wiley-Blackwell | Published : Oxford
The Discovery of Aryavarta: Hindu nationalism and Early Indian Fiction in English (2005-01-20)
Tickell, Alex
In: Tickell, Alex and Morey, Peter eds. Alternative Indias: Writing, Nation and Communalism. Cross Cultures Readings in Post/Colonial Literatures in English (82) (pp. 25-52)
ISBN : 90-420-1927-1 | Publisher : Rodopi | Published : Amsterdam
Miraculous Realities: Postcolonial Identity and the Limits of Form in the Work of Salman Rushdie and Intizar Husain (2000-01-01)
Tickell, Alex
In: Damodaran, Vinita and Unnitahn-Kumar, Maya eds. Postcolonial India: History, Politics, Culture (pp. 325-339)
ISBN : 8173043817 | Publisher : Manohar | Published : New Delhi
Delhi: New Literatures of the Megacity (2020-03-31)
Tickell, Alex and Ranasinha, Ruvani eds.
ISBN : 9780367363390 | Publisher : Routledge | Published : Abingdon
The Novel in South and South East Asia since 1945 (2019-03-05)
Tickell, Alex ed.
The Oxford History of the Novel in English
ISBN : 9780198745419 | Publisher : Oxford University Press | Published : Oxford
South-Asian Fiction in English: Contemporary Transformations (2016-06)
Tickell, Alex ed.
ISBN : 978-1-137-40353-7 | Publisher : Palgrave Macmillan | Published : Houndmills, Basingstoke
A335 Literature in Transition: from 1800 to the Present. Book 2 'Movements' (1870-1940) (2016)
Tickell, Alex ed.
Publisher : Open University | Published : Milton Keynes
Alternative Indias: Writing, Nation and Communalism (2005)
Tickell, Alex and Morey, Peter eds.
Cross Cultures Readings in Post/Colonial Literatures in English
ISBN : 90-420-1927-1 | Publisher : Rodopi | Published : Amsterdam
Selections from 'Bengaliana' by Shoshee Chunder Dutt (2005)
Tickell, Alex ed.
ISBN : 1-84233-049-7 | Publisher : Trent Editions | Published : Nottingham, UK
1962’s Sino-Indian border war lasted four weeks – internment of India’s Chinese community lasted years (2022-11-07)
Tickell, Alex
The Conversation
Introduction to 'Beyond the Law: Postcolonial Writing, Legality and Legitimacy' (2010)
Tickell, Alex
Journal of Postcolonial Writing, 46(5), pp. 439-445