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X-WR-CALNAME:The Association for the Study of Persianate Societies
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.persianatesocieties.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for The Association for the Study of Persianate Societies
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DTSTART:20200308T070000
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DTSTART:20201101T060000
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210319T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20210319T123000
DTSTAMP:20260404T125712
CREATED:20201221T211104Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210829T135343Z
UID:81075-1616151600-1616157000@www.persianatesocieties.org
SUMMARY:ASPS Virtual Event Series III: Connected Histories in Central Asia: 18th to 20th Centuries
DESCRIPTION:Introducing three new books: \nScott Levi (Department of History\, Ohio State University)\nThe Bukharan Crisis: A Connected History of 18th Century Central Asia\n(University of Pittsburgh Press\, 2020) \nJames Pickett (Department of History\, University of Pittsburgh)\nPolymaths of Islam: Power and Networks of Knowledge in Central Asia\n(Cornell University Press\, 2020) \nWaleed Ziad (Department of Religious Studies\, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)\nHidden Caliphate: Sufi Saints beyond the Oxus and Indus\n(Harvard University Press\, forthcoming – 2021) \nModerated by Jo-Ann Gross (Department of History\, The College of New Jersey\, Visiting Research Collaborator\, Sharmin and Bijan Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Iran and Persian Gulf Studies)
URL:https://www.persianatesocieties.org/event/connected-histories-in-central-asia-18th-to-20th-centuries/
CATEGORIES:Book Launch,Virtual Event Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.persianatesocieties.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/image001.jpg
LOCATION:https://www.persianatesocieties.org/event/connected-histories-in-central-asia-18th-to-20th-centuries/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20201222T070000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20201222T102500
DTSTAMP:20260404T125712
CREATED:20210427T155507Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210428T163221Z
UID:81130-1608620400-1608632700@www.persianatesocieties.org
SUMMARY:ASPS Virtual Event Series II: Two-Panel Event
DESCRIPTION:Panel 1: Arguing the Place of the Prophet’s Family in the Persianate World\nOrganized by Ayako Ninomiya (Aoyama Gakuin University) and chaired by Louise Marlow (Wellesley College) with:\nRyo Mizukami (The University of Tokyo)\, “The Ḥillī Shiʻis Reacting to Imamophilia among Sunnis: A Study of Ṣadr al-Dīn al-Ḥammūyī’s (d. 1322) Farāʼid al-Simṭayn.”\nYayoi Kawahara (The University of Tokyo)\, “Nasab-namas of Sayyids in the Ferghana Valley during the Period of the Khanate of Khoqand.”\nAyako Ninomiya (Aoyama Gakuin University)\, “Discussing Sayyids in the Indian Regional Context.”\nJulien Levesque (Centre de Sciences Humaines)\, “Conceptions of Social Hierarchy and Community Solidarity in Two South Asian “Sayyid Associations.” \nPanel Abstract:\nFrom the role appropriate to the Twelve Imams in the universal Muslim community to the standing proper for a sayyid family in a local society\, the place of the family of the Prophet Muhammad\, or his ʿAlid descendants\, have been debated and negotiated at different levels\, milieus\, and contexts throughout the history of Islam. The study of such debates and negotiations contributes not only to the furthering of our understanding of the place of the Prophet’s family in Muslim societies. It also helps us elucidate the very milieus in which such negotiations were conducted\, whether they be a local society\, an arena of inter-confessional interactions\, a community of Sufis or occult scientists\, or a court propounding a sacral kingship for its monarch. The relevance of the subject to the study of Persianate societies requires no additional explanation: one needs only to remember so many influential sayyids to whom those societies have been home.\nThe panel “Arguing the Place of the Prophet’s Family in the Persianate World” gathers four presentations that invariably capture a specific moment in the history of the Persianate world in which a discourse concerning the place of the Prophet’s family was expounded. The panel brings together cases from Ilkhanid Iran‒Iraq\, Ferghana in the 19th‒20th centuries\, early-15th century Jawnpur\, and Sindh and Uttar Pradesh today\, and includes a paper on the interconfessional conversation over the place of the Twelve Imams in the Umma\, in addition to three papers concerning the place of sayyids in their immediate social environments. Through this rich lineup of case studies\, this panel displays the scope and potentiality of the nascent field of research on the place of the Prophet’s family in the Persianate world. \nPanel 2: Medieval Persianate Culture and China: Chinese Inspirations in Persian Manuscripts\, Paintings and Texts\nOrganized by Andrew Peacock (University of St. Andrews) and chaired by Zhang Zhan (New York University) with:\nAndrew Peacock (University of St. Andrews)\, “China in Qarakhanid Persianate Culture and Literature.”\nManuel Giardino (University of Cambridge)\, “Conceptual Confluences between Iran and China: Medicine\, Religion and Cosmology.”\nShutong Liu (University of Oxford)\, “Linking the Arts of Persia and China: Chinese Elements in Ilkhanid Paintings.”\nIlse Sturkenboom (University of St. Andrews)\, “Origin and Meaning of ‘Chinese’ Paper in Timurid\, Turkmen and Safavid Manuscripts.” \nPanel Abstract:\nThe medieval period witnessed intense cultural exchanges between the Persianate and Chinese worlds\, and Chinese elements feature prominently in Persian manuscripts\, both in terms of their intellectual content and their artistic output. While scholars such as Thomas Allsen\, Yuka Kadoi and Ralph Kauz have drawn attention to some of these inspirations in the Mongol and Timurid periods\, their range and depth remains insufficiently explored. This panel proposes to examine the exchange between Chinese and Persianate cultures over the eleventh to seventeenth centuries by bringing together art historical\, codicological and textual studies\, allowing the types of evidence to complement each other with particular attention to their interplay in manuscripts. The panel expands the chronological range beyond the Mongol period that has attracted the bulk of attention to date by contextualizing papers that deal with Chinese influences in Ilkhanid culture with studies that range across the Qarakhanid\, Timurid and Safavid periods. Papers will consider not just how and why Chinese works were transmitted to the Persianate world\, but also how they were adapted and altered there. They will examine Chinese influences in the Qarakhanid period\, especially the representation of China in Qarakhanid texts; the Mongol period\, studying Chinese influences in Ilkhanid intellectual and artistic life\, looking at both the transmission of Chinese medical knowledge into Persian and Chinese influences on Ilkhanid painting; and the use of Chinese paper in Timurid\, Turkmen and Safavid manuscripts\, studying its materiality\, production and import. Together\, the panel will present new perspectives on the transmission and adaptation of Chinese artistic and intellectual knowledge in pre-modern Persianate culture.
URL:https://www.persianatesocieties.org/event/asps-virtual-event-series-ii-two-panel-event/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Event Series
LOCATION:https://www.persianatesocieties.org/event/asps-virtual-event-series-ii-two-panel-event/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20201116
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20201117
DTSTAMP:20260404T125712
CREATED:20201116T173416Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210829T135442Z
UID:81123-1605484800-1605571199@www.persianatesocieties.org
SUMMARY:ASPS Virtual Event Series I: Morphological Similarities between Sanskrit and Persian by Dr. Balram Shukla
DESCRIPTION:ASPS is pleased to announce the first event of its Virtual Event Series\, with a lecture by Dr. Balram Shukla\, one of the foremost young scholars of Sanskrit and Persian\, on “Morphological Similarities between Sanskrit and Persian” (bio and abstract below). The event also marks the official launch of the ASPS India Office in Hyderabad. \nAbstract:\nThe relationship of old Persian and Sanskrit literary traditions has been noted in the fields of cultural and linguistic studies. Despite the huge gap of almost 1\,000 years and drastic cultural and linguistic changes\, modern Persian still bears astonishing phonetic\, morphological and other linguistic affinities with Sanskrit\, and has preserved the inflecting nature of ancient languages to some extent\, which\, even Aryan languages like Hindi lack. In this talk I will elaborate on the extent of intrinsic similarities between modern Persian and Sanskrit\, with special reference to morphology. It is interesting to note that various verbal and nominal morphemes and the suffixes thereof remain in Persian. Our discussion will cover topics including\, but not limited to\, different aspects of verbal roots and verbal conjugation\, verbal derivatives\, different kinds of secondary nominal bases\, various sorts of compounds\, and prepositions. \nBio:\nDr. Balram Shukla is a scholar and poet of Sanskrit\, and Persian languages\, with University degrees in both fields. He has published 3 Sanskrit and 2 Persian collections of poems\, 3 scholarly books\, and more than 20 research papers. He has also translated Rumi’s 100 Ghazals – “Niḥśabda-Nūpur” and “Dawāzdeh Band” of Muhtasham Kāshānī into Hindi. Dr. Shukla has delivered lectures on Sanskrit grammar and different aspects of Indo-Iranian language and literature. He is currently working on a project sponsored by ICSSR- “Indo-Iranian Cognate Glossary\,” and is a Fellow at the Indian Institute of Advanced Study (IIAS)\, Shimla\, researching Prākṛta Languages.
URL:https://www.persianatesocieties.org/event/morphological-similarities-between-sanskrit-and-persian/
CATEGORIES:Virtual Event Series
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LOCATION:https://www.persianatesocieties.org/event/morphological-similarities-between-sanskrit-and-persian/
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