
SAMANA BUTUL
Core Skills
- Canva
- Creative Writing
- MS Excel
- MS PowerPoint
- Scriptwriting
Academic Awards / Achievements
- HU TOPS Scholar
Experience
Leadership / Meta-curricular
- Emerge, Lead Coordinator
- Member Rights, Advocacy, and Disciplinary Cabinet
- Participant, Rustigi Conference, University of Buffalo
- President Serve Club 2022
- Student Representative, Convocation Committee
- Top Performing Student Employee (Wellness Peer), 2023
Internship / Volunteer Work
- Teaching Assistant, Habib University (January-April 2024)
- Social Media and Content Intern, Habib University (August-October 2023)
- Content and Research Intern, Bagh e Sakina (June-August 2023
- Research Assistant, Habib University (February-April 2023)
- Digital Ambassador, MARCOM (September-December 2022)
Publications / Creative Projects
- Fiction "Rishta Parade" published by The Writers' Sanctuary:
- Independent Research i STRP on Psychoanalysis of Urdu-speaking Community Co-author in Research on Khanqahi Madrassah-Sufi Reformation in 20th Century:
Final Year Project
Project Title
Divinity of Desire: Exploring the Implications of Non-violence tied up with Desire through Gandhi and Ghalib
Description
Shehr e Ashob is a poetic genre written for the declining state of Delhi during the Mughal Empire. Many poets used grief and mourning for Delhi in Shehr e Ashob. The escalating sectarian violence in current Delhi sparks the deeper question of violence in a city where once Gandhi practiced the non-violence movement. Ghalib's sense of grief and Gandhi’s activism allow us to dive deeper into the idea of Non-violence in terms of desire. The paper argues that a non-violence movement does not imply passive ways to resist or soft ways to rebel rather it is an aggressive force of desire that has active non-violent means. It is an understanding of grief, equality, and dependency that is aptly found in Ghalib’s poetry and Gandhi’s political movement.