About this Event
Title: ‘Wanderings: An Anthology of Anglophone Nepali Diaspora Poetry'
Date: Thursday March 12, 2026
Time: 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM (Doors will open at 3:45 PM)
Location: University of Toronto - Northrop Frye Hall, 73 Queen’s Park Cres E, Toronto, ON
Room #: 113
Book Summary:
This collection brings together poets who trace their roots to Nepal while living, writing, and dreaming in the diaspora. It evokes cultural memory and reimagined belonging in the in-between conditions of diasporic lives. Melding global literary currents with Nepali cultural threads, the poems herein explore themes of home, nostalgia, exile, and identity in a range of forms–free verse, sonnets, ghazals, lyrical meditations, and ekphrasis. They provide a testament to the power of poetry to transcend borders.
The poets featured in this collection include Pushparaj Acharya, Nabin K Chhetri, Rohan Chhetri, Mukul Dahal, Tsering Wangmo Dhompa, Anuja Ghimire, Saraswoti Lamichhane, Mukahang Limbu, Asma Sayed, Yogendra B Shakya, and Samyak Shertok.
About the Authors:
Dr. Asma Sayed is the Canada Research Chair in South Asian Literary and Cultural Studies in the Department of English at Kwantlen Polytechnic University. She specializes in postcolonial and diasporic literatures in the context of narratives of exile and displacement from South Asia and East Africa. Her interdisciplinary research is informed by feminist and critical race studies and focuses on marginalization of gendered and racialized people as represented in literature, film, and media. Her publications include six books and numerous articles in a range of periodicals, anthologies, and academic journals.
Dr. Pushparaj Acharya has published two poetry collections, Chāyākāla (Fine Print, 2006) and Dream Catcher (Vajra, 2012). In 2015, he published a collaborative art-poetry collection, Somnio: The Way We See It (TiPSY Press, 2015), which received the Cultural Diversity Grant from the Edmonton Arts Council. His Nepali translation of Jean-Claude Carrière and Peter Brook’s play The Conference of the Birds was performed in India and Nepal in 2019. He has written screenplays for films and made documentaries on art, culture, and food. Pushpa is also a literary scholar and has taught in universities in Canada and Nepal. He is a graduate from the Centre for Comparative Literature's PhD program.
Publisher: Mawenzi House Publishers Ltd.
We would appreciate it if you could RSVP for the book launch on Eventbrite.
For questions or to request accessibility accommodations, please email the Centre for Comparative Literature ([email protected]).
We look forward to welcoming you at our event!
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
75 Queen's Park Cres E, 75 Queen's Park Crescent East, Toronto, Canada
CAD 0.00












