SEARCH ARTICLE

09 Pages : 82-90

http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gssr.2020(V-III).09      10.31703/gssr.2020(V-III).09      Published : Sep 2020

Glocal Game of Chess in South Asia: A Tridimensional Study of Rahman's In the Light of What We Know

    With Dirk C. Van Raemdonck's theory of 'tridimensional game of chess in South Asia', this study explores how the Great Game of chess has encompassed the board of Afghanistan into the strategic and economical range of global as well as local nations. In this regard, this study delimits Zia Haider Rahman's 'In the Light of What We Know' to examine the role of great (US, India), little (Pakistan, Saudi Arabia), and local (ISI, UNAMA, AfDARI, militants, etc.) players respectively. The three-level players struggle to win their politicoeconomic and geostrategic motives. The delimited novel exposes that the little and local players are playing the game of proxy to fetch their own designs. This study concludes that great global players/forces ensnare little and local players and misuse them as white and/or black pieces respectively to win their gains.

    Globalization, Glocalization, Great Game, South Asia, War on Terror
    (1) Atta -ul- Mustafa
    PhD Scholar, Department of English, Govt. College University Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan.
    (2) Ali Usman Saleem
    Assistant Professor, Department of English, Govt. College University Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan.
    (3) Qasim Shafiq
    PhD Scholar, Department of English, National University of Modern Languages Islamabad, Pakistan.

39 Pages : 409-414

http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gssr.2020(V-II).39      10.31703/gssr.2020(V-II).39      Published : Jun 2020

The Clash of Economic and Religious Fundamentalism in Aslam's The Blind Man's Garden

    This study aims to understand the clashes between American economic fundamentalists and Islamic religious fundamentalists in South Asia regarding Nadeem Aslam's The Blind Man's Garden (2013). The study explores that the economic entrepreneurs of the neo-imperialists give birth to counterproductive acts of religiosity. It shows how the ugliness of economic hunger is adroitly hidden behind the polished face of globalization, just as the priggish and snobbish religiosity of Muslim fundamentalists encloses their avarice for power and wealth. Using Tariq Ali's theory of Clashes of Fundamentalisms, the study proves that the root cause of civilizational clashes is the outcome of conflicts of interests between Western economic fundamentalists and Muslim religious fundamentalists. The study concludes the economic, political, cultural and strategic motives working behind the goals of establishing neo-imperialism through the elimination of borders for neo-liberalist gains in the wake of the war on terror.

    Fundamentalism, War on Terror, Globalization, Glocalization
    (1) Atta-ul-Mustafa
    Assistant Professor, Department of Humanities & Linguistics, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan.
    (2) Muhammad Asaf Amir
    Assistant Professor, Department of English, Institute of Southern Punjab, Multan, Punjab, Pakistan.
    (3) Sardar Ahmad Farooq
    Lecturer, Department of English, Government Postgraduate College, Mansehra, KP, Pakistan.

35 Pages : 269-275

http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gssr.2019(IV-II).35      10.31703/gssr.2019(IV-II).35      Published : Jun 2019

Socio-Psychological Effects on Media Professional Standards during Military Operations in Pakistan

    While using qualitative and quantitative techniques, this study analyzes the issues and challenges faced by the journalists while working in the areas going under military operations in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) and FATA. Based on the hierarchy of influences model, a survey was conducted in Waziristan, Swat and Peshawar. A total of 185 local journalists from Swat, North Waziristan and Peshawar are selected and interviewed. The research found various psychological and visible impacts on journalists reporting from conflict areas. They face challenges like governmental and organizational pressure, safety hazards and bars on freedom of access to news sources. Low perks and privileges, facilities to perform their professional duties and demanding standards for local journalists. The war journalists were dissatisfied with their professions and many were thinking to quit their jobs. In the qualitative technique of semistructured interviews, the survey findings were supported and integrated with the large issues of media control and geo-strategic considerations.

    War on Terror, Role of Media, Psychological Pressures, Responsible Reporting, Safety of Journalists
    (1) Rooh ul Amin Khan
    PhD Scholar, Centre of Media and Communication Studies,University of Gujrat, Gujrat, Punjab, Pakistan.
    (2) Zahid Yousaf
    Associate Professor,Centre for Media and Communication Studies,University of Gujrat, Gujrat, Punjab, Pakistan.

06 Pages : 54-63

http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gssr.2021(VI-II).06      10.31703/gssr.2021(VI-II).06      Published : Jun 2021

Neo-Orientalist Gambits in South Asian Global Game in Aslam's The Blind Man's Garden

    This study focuses on the great global game of chess of Neoimperialist played in South Asia. It explores that to fetch global capitalist designs, global forces have devised a global Neo-Orientalist game of chess in three perspectives, i.e. economic, cultural and political, for three-level players, i.e. great players, little players and domestic players. The economic ventures urge the need to divide the South Asian Muslims into good and bad categories through neo-orientalist cultural and political gambits, as is revealed from Nadeem Aslam's 'The Blind Man's Garden' (2013) that critiques the hegemony of Neo-imperialist global forces working purely for their global designs in the region. It exposes economic, political, cultural and strategic motives behind two basic goals: the establishment of neo-imperialism through the elimination of borders for neo-liberalist gains by homogenizing world culture; and the eradication of global terrorism for which war has already been launched there.

    Globalization, Great Game, Terrorism, War on Terror
    (1) Atta-ul-Mustafa
    Assistant Professor, Department of Humanities & Linguistics, University of Agriculture, Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan.
    (2) Amara Javed
    Assistant Professor, Department of English, Government College Woman University Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan.
    (3) Sahar Javaid
    Lecturer, Department of English, Government College University, Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan.