Spring break *ahem* reading week came and went without any of the expected productivity. I was hoping to begin research on my Ottoman history paper and perhaps even begin working on my Persian Historiography one but both are simply out of the question. I am dashing to re-work parts of my paper I am submitting for a possible publication; its quite nerve wracking when you actually critique someone not in the form of a thesis or term paper that only a professor will read. I envy people who good prose writers, mine tends to be obtuse, labored, and repetitive. If anyone has painted with watercolors I feel my writing ends up being a painting with one too many touch-ups. I suppose an analogy to runaway plastic surgery would also work. I wonder if it's because I have not read fiction in a while. I shall put that on my to do list for the summer.
In other news, turns out there is a Association for Asian Studies Conference in Toronto in two and a half weeks time, which is exciting news. I had no clue, not surprising being in a department of Near and Middle East Civilizations (AAS does not include the Middle East as part of its geographic scope, understandably given MESA). The really exciting part is the numerous panels on Mughals! Two in particular I am very excited for:
Session 39: Indo-Persian Power: Practice and Dynamics in the Mughal Empire
Indo-Persian Kingship in Practice: A Heretical Mode of Legitimacy, Ahmed Azfar Moin
The Power of Patronage: Mughal Relations with Sanskrit Intellectuals, Audrey A. Truschke
Mughal Power Suspended: Mahabat Khan’s Capture of the Court of Jahangir, Munis D. Faruqui
Who were the Mughal ulama? Power and religious authority in seventeenth century India, Supriya Gandhi
Indo-Persian Kingship in Practice: A Heretical Mode of Legitimacy, Ahmed Azfar Moin
The Power of Patronage: Mughal Relations with Sanskrit Intellectuals, Audrey A. Truschke
Mughal Power Suspended: Mahabat Khan’s Capture of the Court of Jahangir, Munis D. Faruqui
Who were the Mughal ulama? Power and religious authority in seventeenth century India, Supriya Gandhi
Session 96: Poets, Princes, and Holy Men in 16th-17th c. Lahore: Perspectives on a Mughal Ecumene
Lahore between Imperial Playground and Sacred Space in Mughal Court Poetry, Sunil Sharma
Urban Life in the Mughals' Frontier Metropolis: Revisiting Chandar Bhan Brahman's Lahore , Rajeev K. Kinra
Drums and Diadems: Princely Investiture and Patronage in Mughal Lahore, Colin Mitchell
Mughal Lahore: A Welcoming Capital for Jains?, Basile Leclere, co-author w/leclere, Christine Chojnacki
Lahore between Imperial Playground and Sacred Space in Mughal Court Poetry, Sunil Sharma
Urban Life in the Mughals' Frontier Metropolis: Revisiting Chandar Bhan Brahman's Lahore , Rajeev K. Kinra
Drums and Diadems: Princely Investiture and Patronage in Mughal Lahore, Colin Mitchell
Mughal Lahore: A Welcoming Capital for Jains?, Basile Leclere, co-author w/leclere, Christine Chojnacki
Also presenting are Catherine Asher and Richard Eaton! I wonder if it would be odd to go up and ask him to autograph my Sufis of Bijapur. I suspect I may not be the only person to be star struck when I see esteemed scholars, and registration is definitely cheaper than a Madonna ticket.
This is going to be a great AAS!
ReplyDeleteEach of us is ensorcelled by at least one of these academic mysteriarchs. Ask Dick Eaton to breathe his barakat onto you. This will be more useful than an autograph.
Haha! very well put. Richard Eaton's linguistic mastery (over so many!) is mind baffling! I suspect Simon Digby also probably knew quite a few!
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