Dear colleagues,
Please note that the deadline for the submission of proposals for the Sanskrit Symposium has been extended, to Friday 25 March 2022. Please note the call for papers below, for more details about the symposium and how to submit a proposal.
Best wishes,
Rembert
The 38th Annual Sanskrit Traditions Symposium
Friday 27th May 2022
Hosted online by the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies
The 37th annual The Sanskrit Traditions Symposium will take place online on Friday 27th May, 2022, hosted by the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. We invite proposals for papers on any aspect of South Asia’s rich Sanskrit religious and intellectual culture.
Proposals of 300-500 words should be submitted by Friday 25th March 2022. They should be sent to the organising committee: stimw@ochs.org.uk.
Papers and Format - Papers are presented by leading scholars in the field as well as by research students. Papers are pre-circulated so that participants can read them before the seminar to ensure the best possible use of discussion time. Papers
are therefore not read out at the seminar itself but instead briefly
introduced by the chair who will then raise questions to the
paper-giver, before opening the discussion. Papers
should be no longer than 20 A4 pages, including notes and references.
To facilitate discussion for those short of reading time, paper-givers
should provide a one-page abstract of the key argument of the paper,
along with their paper. Please include your email address for further
feedback.
The Sanskrit Traditions Symposium is a forum for the discussion of the Sanskrit traditions of
South Asia, and the texts and cultures that have arisen out of them.
This event, formerly known as Sanskrit Tradition in the Modern World (STIMW),
was renamed, in consultation with past and current organisers, The
Sanskrit Traditions Symposium, to better reflect the direction that the
event has taken in well over a decade. The Sanskrit Traditions Symposium
continues the format and spirit of STIMW, which fosters focussed conversation on pre-circulated papers.