It is perhaps not reasonable to enter into this question here, but:
insofar as any scholar has his or her own skill set and range of interests, it is obviously true that "Even if the department enthusiastically pursued his replacement, it would struggle to find a scholar today with Insler’s skills." But only if that is understood to mean an exact or very close match for Insler's skills. For there are more than a few Sanskritists with excellent broad knowledge of Indo-European, general linguistics, Vedic etc. and more than one of these scholars, I am quite sure, would be delighted to apply for a chair at Yale. So it is a pity that Marko Geslani chose to express the matter in this way. (None of this should be understood to be any criticism of Prof Granoff, by the way; I was also more than a little surprised to see that her almost superhuman knowledge of Indic languages was ignored...)

JAS

On Thu, May 31, 2018 at 1:09 PM, Eli Franco via INDOLOGY <indology@list.indology.info> wrote:

That article was a bit one-sided. Here is a response from one of Granoff's students:

LETTER 04.19
The Yale Daily News     Apr 18, 2018

On “Yale’s last Sanskrit expert to leave”

“Yale’s last Sanskrit expert to leave” is plain wrong. In order to be right it minimizes the work of Phyllis Granoff, a religious studies professor, to the point of erasure. Far beyond “proficient,” Granoff’s linguistic mastery is legendary among Sanskritists worldwide. At Yale she revived premodern South Asia and continues to train a vital cohort of scholars.

The article seems too busy lamenting the loss of Yale’s historic “reputation” in Sanskrit to ask: Why has Salisbury’s chair sat vacant since Stanley Insler’s retirement some seven years ago? A question for Linguistics, not Religious Studies. Inaugurated for Sanskrit and Arabic, this chair won fame through William Dwight Whitney, when rededicated to Sanskrit and Comparative Philology in 1869. Accordingly, for nearly five decades, Insler taught Sanskrit within the comparative study of languages — from proto-Indo-European to Old Norse. Currently, Linguistics has turned from this philological-historical project to a presentist, computational model, reflecting broader shifts in that field. Even if the department enthusiastically pursued his replacement, it would struggle to find a scholar today with Insler’s skills.

If we want Sanskrit to continue at Yale, we had better spend more time getting our arguments straight rather than courting disparagement from non-Yale faculty members whose mansplaining comments are best not given published validation.

Sanskrit succeeds as a site of comparative interest. In Granoff’s hands, it’s but one of many languages for art, ritual, narrative and philosophy. To that extent to call her — or Insler —a “mere” Sanskrititst would be a disservice. That is exactly why Sanskrit has thrived at Yale in their care.

Marko Geslani, GRD ’1




Zitat von alakendu das via INDOLOGY <indology@list.indology.info>:

Thank you very much for highlighting such an encouraging piece of event.It's heartening indeed to know the esteem with which Sanskrit is held in the West.
Alakendu Das.

Sent from RediffmailNG on Android




From: Christophe Vielle via INDOLOGY &lt;indology@list.indology.info&gt;
Sent: Wed, 30 May 2018 22:23:05 GMT+0530
To: Indology &lt;indology@list.indology.info&gt;
Subject: [INDOLOGY] On Sanskrit in the USA

  https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2018/04/17/yales-last-sanskrit-expert-to-leave/

–––––––––––––––––––
Christophe Vielle
Louvain-la-Neuve





_______________________________________________

INDOLOGY mailing list

INDOLOGY@list.indology.info

indology-owner@list.indology.info (messages to the list's managing committee)

http://listinfo.indology.info (where you can change your list options or unsubscribe)


--
Prof. Dr. Eli Franco
Institut für Indologie und Zentralasienwissenschaften
Schillerstr. 6
04109 Leipzig

Ph. +49 341 9737 121, 9737 120 (dept. office)
Fax +49 341 9737 148




_______________________________________________
INDOLOGY mailing list
INDOLOGY@list.indology.info
indology-owner@list.indology.info (messages to the list's managing committee)
http://listinfo.indology.info (where you can change your list options or unsubscribe)



--
J. Silk
Leiden University
Leiden University Institute for Area Studies, LIAS
Matthias de Vrieshof 3, Room 0.05b
2311 BZ Leiden
The Netherlands

copies of my publications may be found at