Center for Research and Training (CRT): Recent submissions

  • Iqbal, Iftekhar (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    Studies of the forest have received intense and varied attention in the past few decades, generating three major trends. One relates to the discourse of destruction of forest regimes. The intervention of colonial capital ...
  • Sazzad, Rehnuma (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    Every time he puts pen to paper, said takes up scholarly, moral and political responsibilities of one kind or the other. Said's intellectual commitments, in fact led him towards developing groundbreaking methodologies in ...
  • Ainy, Salma (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    This paper aims at discussing the pros and cons of using poetical works or poetry in the language classroom. There is an attempt made to justify the use of poetry in language teaching by throwing some light on the existing ...
  • Bhowmik, Subrata Kumar (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    Grammar instruction is a contentious issue in the field of second language acquisition. There are arguments about whether or not grammar instruction helps L2 learning. The paper reviews literature on second language ...
  • Akter, Zahid (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    In this article, I take the case of Malaysia's indigenous language endangerment into consideration. Because of Malaysia's geopolitical similarities to that of Bangladesh, I believe the study will have significant ramifications ...
  • Idris, Farhad B. (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    Salman Rushdie's The enchantress of Florence glances at history on a grand scale. This, his ninth novel, offers a comparative view of two worlds:Mughal India and Medici Italy. The two dynasties ruled at about the same time- ...
  • Zeenat, Afrin (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    Critical response to E.M. Forster's A passage to India remains diverse. While some commend Forster's depiction of the India, others express their misgivings at his portrayal of Indians attributing his delineation of the ...
  • Ahmed, Sayed Salahuddin (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    Fanny Brawne, Keats’s beloved, to whom he was betrothed, was a source of both pleasure and pain for him. Fanny filled Keats;s mind with love and affection when he was going through physical, mental and economic crisis. ...
  • Miah, A.S.M. Shamim (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    The poem "Kubla Khan" is quite inexplicable. It is full of ambiguity and seemingly bizarre implications. Many critics have seen it as a poem full of ethereal music, but, i find it a mysterious reflection on humen sexuality. ...
  • Karim, Sajjadul (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    The Duchess of Malfi is a revenge tragedy, but Webster has used the form for much more than just its entertaining value. He has utilized it as a vehicle for the exploration of some themes relevant to the society of his ...
  • Rao, E. Nageswara (East West University, 1/1/2010)
    Contrary to general assumptions, Bernanrd Shaw's writing has contemporary relevance. His views on cruelty to animals, censorship, democracy, medical profession, women's status etc., are all live issues ever today. His plea ...
  • Abedin, Manzoorul (East West University, 1/1/2008)
    Freud might have overstated the case in claiming that everything people do can be linked to sex, but his ideas have had a deep impact on the development of theories and research models about sex and consumption patterns. ...
  • Chaudhury, Rafiqul Huda; Chowdhury, Zafrullah (East West University, 1/1/2008)
    The present study examines the impact of non-biological factors such as age, birth-order, education, smoking, anaemia, and tetanus vaccination on maternal mortality using data on maternal deaths collected by Gonoshayastha ...
  • Shahidullah, Md. (East West University, 1/1/2008)
    English courses and textbooks are meant to cater to learners' academic and professional needs of English. However, this does not seem to happen in Bangladesh; university students in the country appear to have difficulties ...
  • Haque, Md. Shahriar (East West University, 1/1/2008)
    In this age, the constant desire to be the best, to achieve the highest, to attain the most power, seems to be making us compromise our moral standards. The endeavor to strive and go to the next level may not always be ...
  • Ahsanuzzaman, Ahmed (East West University, 1/1/2008)
    The paper attempts an intensive reading of Jhumpa Lahiri's story, "when Mr. Pirzada came to Dine " with a view to placing its central character, Lilia, against the two forms of "mottled background', not in a 'harmonizing' ...
  • Malik, Tanvir Hasan (East West University, 1/1/2008)
    This article attempts to explore the plight of the protagonist of George Orwell's Burmese Days. He is an Englishman feeling ill-at-ease in a Burmese outpost named Kyauktada during the Raj. Revolted by British racism and ...
  • Zayed, Hasan Al (East West University, 1/1/2008)
    Edward Said's reading of Foucault essentializes the Frenchman's notion of resistance to a kind of fatalism that Foucault's writings cannot be reduced to. In two famous essays- "Traveling Theory" and "Foucault and the ...
  • Shirazi, Hasan (East West University, 2/1/2008)
    The role and significance of " change agents" in organizations has become a subject of interest over the last decades. During the 1980s, the "change master" and "transformational leadership" literature presented leaders ...
  • Sen, Dr. Dilip Kumar; Khan, Sadana Islam (East West University, 1/1/2008)
    The present study addresses itself to the challenges that human service administrators face in maintaining and moving their organizations forward. The study has identified twelve leadership challenge dimensions, explored ...

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