Dear colleagues and friends,
We are delighted to announce our symposium Printing Religion in South Asia that will take place on
October 18, 2023, at the 51st
Annual Conference on South Asia, University of WisconsinMadison. We cordially invite you all to attend our symposium. Please
find our final program and flyers as attachments, and share our announcement with your home institutions and colleagues.
Our symposium features eight early- to mid-career scholars specializing in South Asian religious and material cultures.
Panelists:
Annanya Bohidar |
Hindu Śāstra, Sexual Science or Pornography? A Study of Printed Sex Books in the Tamil Public Sphere (19001940s)
Rushnae Kabir |
Witnessing Love in the Milād Ritual: Devotion, Orality, and Emotion in the Milādnāma
Alexandra Kaloyanides |
The Power of the Book in Nineteenth-Century Burma
Sharmeen Mehri |
New Ways of Reading: Printing the Khordeh Avesta in Colonial India
Shobna Nijhawan |
At the Margins of the Hindi Periodical: Marketing Religious Publications
Pranav Prakash |
Unorthodox Printing: A Brief History of Maithili Chapbooks in Colonial South Asia
Megan Eaton Robb |
The Imperial Constellation of Newspapers
Rick Weiss |
Early Tamil Hindu Print Culture: Revolutionary or Meerely Reproductive?
Discussants:
John Cort |
Panel 1: The Impact of Print
Jamal Jones |
Panel 2: The Craft of Print
Daniel Morgan |
Panel 3: The Community of Print
Yasmin Saikia |
Panel 4: The Power of Print
This symposium is part of our
Book Cultures of South Asia
collaboration that we founded in 2019 at the annual meeting of the Andrew W. Mellon Society of Fellows in Critical Bibliography, Rare Book School, University of Virginia.
We have since been building a network of scholars whose research makes valuable contributions to subdisciplines like the history of the book, critical bibliography
and the study of material cultures from the vantage point of South Asian history and religions. As we continue to promote the study of material, textual and visual cultures in the field of South Asian Studies, we hope to benefit from your thoughtful engagement,
support and encouragement.
Sincerely,
Megan Eaton Robb and Pranav Prakash