On Tue, Feb 18, 2025 at 8:54 AM Bihani Sarkar <bihanisarkar@googlemail.com> wrote:Dear Colleagues,As organizers of the 2025 British Association of South Asian Studies (BASAS) Annual Conference, Prof. Deborah Sutton and I are pleased to announce that abstracts are invited to this year's conference to be held at Lancaster University, UK, from 10 to 12 September 2025.
The conference will showcase pioneering scholarship on South Asia from the Subcontinent and across the world. This will be an interdisciplinary conference, bringing together expertise from across the arts, humanities and social sciences.
We particularly encourage contributions from scholars working on regions from the subcontinent outside India. We are also keen to promote scholarship on the pre-modern study of histories, languages and cultures of South Asia.
We are happy to accept submissions for thematic, inter-disciplinary panels (of a maximum of four papers) and individual submissions.
Abstracts should be of no more than 300 words. Panel submissions should include a brief (100 words max) overview of the panel’s theme. Abstracts must include: contributor(s) name(s) and affiliation(s), paper title(s) and contact email address(es). Submit abstracts and panel proposals via this form.
The deadline for submission of abstracts is 15 April 2025.
Please note that the 2025 BASAS Annual Conference is a members-only event. If you are not currently a BASAS member, you can join BASAS now.
A limited number of bursaries will be available and will be advertised on the conference website (here: https://www.basas.org.uk/news-events/basas-conference-2025/) in due course.
For conference-related queries, please email southasiacollective@lancaster.ac.uk
With best wishe
Bihani Sarkar MA M.Phil D.Phil (Oxon.) FRHistS, FHEA,
Senior Lecturer (Associate Professor) in Comparative Non-Western Thought,
Programme Director: Global Religions
Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion,
Lancaster University.
For a full list of publications see: Bihani Sarkar - Lancaster University
Books:
Classical Sanskrit Tragedy: the Concept of Pathos and Suffering in Medieval India (Bloomsbury Academic, 2021)Latest Journal Article (peer-reviewed): The Politics of Memory: Tradition, Decolonization and Challenging Hindutva, a Reflective Essay (Religions 2024, 15(5), 564)