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india

The Remedy

The Remedy: Hinduism

In this episode, Naomi Richman interviews Matthew Martin, a DPhil student at of Oxford whose work focuses on Hindu traditions. They discuss the great variety of Hindu approaches to healing, from ayuverda to yoga and deliverance from evil spirits.
Asian Studies Centre

Feeling Untouched: Space, Emotions and Untouchability

Jesús Cháirez-Garza speaks at the South Asia Seminar
Local communities: first and last providers of protection (Forced Migration Review 53)

FMR 53 - Refugee community development in New Delhi

Recognising that process is as important as outcomes, a community development approach can be effective in supporting local communities as providers of first resort.
Asian Studies Centre

Histories of the ephemeral: writing on music in the late Mughal world

Dr Katherine Butler Schofield speaks at the South Asia Seminar on March 8th, 2016
Asian Studies Centre

On the Colonisation of India: Public Meetings, Debates and Disputes (Calcutta 1829)

Professor Chaudhuri speaks at the South Asia Seminar on a public meeting held in Calcutta, on December 15th, 1829.
Asian Studies Centre

Tagore and the theology of the global

Professor Pradip Dutta speaks on Tagore at the South Asia Seminar
Anthropology

Profane relations: the irony of offensive jokes in India

Andrew Sanchez (Kent) discusses why a multi-ethnic workforce in eastern India exchanges jokes about each other's religion and cultures as a form of irony (19 February 2016)
Asian Studies Centre

Women and Conflict in India

Dr Sanghamitra Choudhury speaks at the launch of her book on Women and Conflict in India
Asian Studies Centre

Rediscovering the Primitive: Adivasi Histories in and after Subaltern Studies

Uday Chandra speaks at the South Asia Seminar
Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters

Defamiliarizing India: Cosmopolitanism as a condition of aesthetic and political Survival

Laetitia Zecchini discusses the cosmopolitanism of several post-independence Indian poets and artists.
Cosmopolis and Beyond: Literary Cosmopolitanism after the Republic of Letters

Cosmopolitanism and Empire

Elleke Boehmer considers the cosmopolitan outlooks, experiences and values of Indian travellers to the west in the late 19th century.
Asian Studies Centre

The Oxford India Lecture: An Undocumented Wonder - the Making of the Great Indian Election

Dr S Y Quraishi gives the Oxford India lecture 2016.
Asian Studies Centre

Mechanism of oppression, Dalits and legal developments in India

Dr Dag Erik Berg speaks at the South Asian seminar.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

Indian Arrivals, 1870-1915: Networks of British Empire

Elleke Boehmer discusses her new book with Megan Robb, Faisal Devji and Santanu Das
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism

Are the BRICS building a New World Media Order

Daya Thussu, professor of internal communication, and co-editor of 'Mapping BRICS Media' University of Westminster, gives a talk for the Reuters Seminar series.
TORCH | The Oxford Research Centre in the Humanities

The Silk Roads: A New History of the World

Peter Frankopan discusses his new book with Averil Cameron, Robert Moore and Elleke Boehmer
Alumni Voices

Historian and trip scholar for Spectacular Ceylon, Dr Maria Misra (Christ Church, 1982)

Dr Maria Misra shares her experiences as both a student and academic at Oxford University, as well as her love of South Asia, in this podcast.
RightsUp - Global perspectives on human rights law

'I am not here to delight you': Indira Jaising and gender justice in India

Episode three of the RightsUp podcast series.
Faith and displacement (Forced Migration Review 48)

FMR 48 - Frozen displacement: Kashmiri Pandits in India

In the 1990s nearly 250,000 people were displaced by violence in India. More than 20 years later the question for them is whether the responses to their displacement so far can form the basis for long-term solutions for their protracted displacement.
ICT for Development Seminar Series
Captioned

Combatting Corruption with Mobile Phones

India’s right to information movement demonstrated the potential to combat corruption through social audits – an exercise to share and verify public records with people.

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