Dr Muzna Rahman

My profile

Biography

Academic and professional qualifications

University of York: BA in English and Related Literatures

University of Manchester: MA in Post-1900s Theories, Literatures and Cultures

University of Manchester: PhD in Postcolonial Literature and Writing

Previous employment

University of Manchester: Graduate Teaching Assistant 2009-2012

University of Lincoln: Lecturer 2013-2015

International Centre for Climate Change and Development, Dhaka Bangladesh: Visiting Researcher 2015-2016

Languages

English and Bangla

Interests and expertise

I am a Senior Lecturer of Critical English Studies. My research focuses primarily on contemporary Postcolonial writing and film, and more specifically how this intersects with the interdisciplinary field of Food Studies. My other research and teaching interests include contemporary American Literature and Media, Popular Culture, Critical Race Studies, Feminism and Eco-criticism. 

Teaching

Why do I teach?

I am a lecturer in contemporary postcolonial and world literature generally, more specifically I look at representations of food and hunger in literature and film. I love reading and watching movies, and I find myself in the lucky position of examining fascinating texts for a job. I get great joy of being able to share this love with energetic students.

How I’ll teach you

I love teaching and I really enjoy my time in the classroom and lecture theatre. My approach is laid back but firm - I believe students respond well to being intellectually challenged. I always strive to build a clear and collegial classroom identity and continuously innovative my pedagogic approach with new ideas and methodologies.

Why study…Global Literatures?

The study of world literature is incredibly important in our ever increasingly globalized world. I hope that students gain valuable international perspective in their study of writing and film from countries and cultures outside of the usual British/western canon. It is vital these globally-focused texts are read alongside and against more familiar texts in order to recuperate historical narratives that may be hidden or covered over by more dominant understandings of how the world works and how it became that way, especially when important contexts such as colonialization and imperialism are involved.

Subject areas

Contemporary Postcolonial Writing, World Literature and Food Studies

Supervision

Feth-Ella Mahi, project – ‘Transcolonial Algerian Diasporic Writing. Director of Studies.

Research outputs

Monographs

Hunger and Postcolonial Writing. Routledge, 2022. 

Press and media

“The historical roots of your lockdown sourdough obsession” in The Conversation. Reprinted in ‘i’ News, Yahoo! News, Inverse Magazine and RTE, May 2020, https://theconversation.com/the-historical-roots-of-your-lockdown-sourd…