[INDOLOGY] Question about the Indian grammatical tradition's impact on Western philology and linguistics

Tejas Aralere tsaralere at gmail.com
Wed Oct 13 17:19:02 UTC 2021


Dear Brendan,

I would just add one text to this wonderful list:  “Philology: the
forgotten origins of the modern humanities” by James Turner (2015,
Princeton Press). It’s a nice comprehensive overview of the political and
academic context of philology and Sanskrit.

Valeas,
Tejas

On Tue, Oct 12, 2021 at 4:55 PM Brendan S. Gillon, Prof. via INDOLOGY <
indology at list.indology.info> wrote:

> Dear colleagues and friends,
>
> I have an undergraduate student interested in getting a better
> understanding on the impact of the Indian grammatical tradition on 19th
> century philology and early 20th century linguistics. I would be
> grateful to receive some suggestions of books and article he, and I for
> that matter, might read.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Brendan
>
> --
>
> Brendan S. Gillon                       email: brendan.gillon at mcgill.ca
> Department of Linguistics
> McGill University                       tel.:  001 514 398 4868
> 1085, Avenue Docteur-Penfield
> Montreal, Quebec                        fax.:  001 514 398 7088
> H3A 1A7  CANADA
>
> webpage: http://webpages.mcgill.ca/staff/group3/bgillo/web/
>
>
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