THIS IS THE OFFICIAL BLOG OF THE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY, SOUTH ASIAN UNIVERSITY, NEW DELHI. IT CONTAINS INFORMATION ABOUT THE DEPARTMENT AS WELL AS NEWS ON REGULAR EVENTS HOSTED BY THE DEPARTMENT. IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN FURTHER INFORMATION, PLEASE FEEL FREE TO CONTACT US BY TELEPHONE, EMAIL OR REGULAR POST.
About The Department - Vision and Beyond
Over the last half century or so, a vast body of knowledge(s) on the region has evolved within South Asia that mostly remain within the countries of their origin due to a number of reasons. In this specific context, there is a crucial need to share some of this knowledge in contemporary times when, despite assertions of localisations and mini-narratives, the universal does retain its emphasis through a constant dialectics of the two. The debate between the local and universal or mini-narratives and meta-narratives continue to rage, and is more clearly visible in the context of South Asian context. Even so, we are acutely aware of the non-existence of regular and serious forums for South Asian scholarship in social sciences to showcase our own research and thinking. We are also quite conscious of the fact that the process of establishing sociology in the region has created its own peculiarities which has established close inter-relationships between sociology and social anthropology, history, cultural studies, archeology and other related disciplines. We consider the porousness of South Asian sociology one of its most enduring strengths. On the other hand, we are not unaware of the unfortunate regressions sociology has experienced in different South Asian contexts over the last 30 years or so marked by numerous institutional failures.
It is within the context(s) outlined above that the Department of Sociology at South Asian university, initiated in 2011 witihn the Faculty of Social Sciences contributes to teaching, training and knowledge production. It is not intended to be a mere forum for the production of cutting-edge intellectual knowledge and exchange of that knowledge traversing across national borders in South Asia and beyond. Our expectation is that this knowledge would dislocate the persistence of an imposed framework emanating from the colonisation process and postcolonial politics of knowledge. Despite the passage of over fifty years since the process of official decolonization began in the region, much of the analyses of our problems, situations, histories and dynamics emanate from Euro American academia; this is certainly the case when it comes to conceptual formulations and theoretical approaches that are being employed in exploring the region’s social and cultural complexities often without much self-reflection.
The Department of Sociology strongly believes in the need to reformulate this situation by effectively centering South Asia without naively shunning thought from these established centers of knowledge be they in Europe or North America. We believe in an active and robust engagement with these issues within South Asia. In this context, through the work of its faculty and the research of graduate students, the Department would bring forward the newer forms of knowledge that comprehends and represents the South Asian context with a more authoritative and nuanced voice. We strongly believe in the need to actively intervene in the process of knowledge formation through a constant sharing of knowledge that the region produces as well as through interaction with the world beyond the region.
The courses taught in the Department as well as the research carried out by its faculty members reflect this overall vision and our collective commitment towards innovation, move beyond untenable stereotypes, and explore a new world of knowledge within the discipline of Sociology.
Over the last half century or so, a vast body of knowledge(s) on the region has evolved within South Asia that mostly remain within the countries of their origin due to a number of reasons. In this specific context, there is a crucial need to share some of this knowledge in contemporary times when, despite assertions of localisations and mini-narratives, the universal does retain its emphasis through a constant dialectics of the two. The debate between the local and universal or mini-narratives and meta-narratives continue to rage, and is more clearly visible in the context of South Asian context. Even so, we are acutely aware of the non-existence of regular and serious forums for South Asian scholarship in social sciences to showcase our own research and thinking. We are also quite conscious of the fact that the process of establishing sociology in the region has created its own peculiarities which has established close inter-relationships between sociology and social anthropology, history, cultural studies, archeology and other related disciplines. We consider the porousness of South Asian sociology one of its most enduring strengths. On the other hand, we are not unaware of the unfortunate regressions sociology has experienced in different South Asian contexts over the last 30 years or so marked by numerous institutional failures.
It is within the context(s) outlined above that the Department of Sociology at South Asian university, initiated in 2011 witihn the Faculty of Social Sciences contributes to teaching, training and knowledge production. It is not intended to be a mere forum for the production of cutting-edge intellectual knowledge and exchange of that knowledge traversing across national borders in South Asia and beyond. Our expectation is that this knowledge would dislocate the persistence of an imposed framework emanating from the colonisation process and postcolonial politics of knowledge. Despite the passage of over fifty years since the process of official decolonization began in the region, much of the analyses of our problems, situations, histories and dynamics emanate from Euro American academia; this is certainly the case when it comes to conceptual formulations and theoretical approaches that are being employed in exploring the region’s social and cultural complexities often without much self-reflection.
The Department of Sociology strongly believes in the need to reformulate this situation by effectively centering South Asia without naively shunning thought from these established centers of knowledge be they in Europe or North America. We believe in an active and robust engagement with these issues within South Asia. In this context, through the work of its faculty and the research of graduate students, the Department would bring forward the newer forms of knowledge that comprehends and represents the South Asian context with a more authoritative and nuanced voice. We strongly believe in the need to actively intervene in the process of knowledge formation through a constant sharing of knowledge that the region produces as well as through interaction with the world beyond the region.
The courses taught in the Department as well as the research carried out by its faculty members reflect this overall vision and our collective commitment towards innovation, move beyond untenable stereotypes, and explore a new world of knowledge within the discipline of Sociology.
Thursday, February 28, 2013
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
Department of Sociology Launches its own Journal
The Department
of Sociology, South Asian University has launched its own journal called Society
and Culture in South Asia to be published by Sage India under the editorial
responsibility of the Department of Sociology.
The journal
will be published twice a year. Its discussions will primarily be located within
the discipline of sociology, but be open to other related disciplines to
maintain an interdisciplinary thrust within the ambit of sociology of
knowledge. The basic format would be discursive, and the journal will publish
full-length research papers, review-essays and debates in the temperament of
qualitative sociology. It will strictly avoid mere quantitative or empirical
abstractions without contextualization in both social theory and
ethnography.
More
specifically, the disciplinary dimensions to which the journal responds covers
sociology and social anthropology in the main, and sociology of education,
sociology of medicine, arts and aesthetics, cultural studies, sociology of mass
media, sociology of law, urban studies inter alia. However, it will be open to
contributions from other disciplines in the wider domains of social sciences
and humanities in so far as they conform to the disciplinary dimensions
identified above.
For more information on the journal as well as call for
papers for 2013 and 2014 please visit the following pages in this blog: Call
for Papers, 2013 and 2014: Society and Culture in South Asia and Society
and Culture in South Asia: Style and Instruction Guide
For those who need pdf versions of the ‘Call for Papers’ and
the ‘Style and Instruction Sheet’, please write to: sociology@soc.sau.ac.in
Saturday, February 9, 2013
Sociology Seminar Series –20th February to 17th April 2013
Department
of Sociology
Faculty
of Social Sciences
South
Asian University
Venue: FSI Hall,
Akbar Bhawan, South Asian University, New Delhi 110021
Time: 02.00 pm - 05.00 pm
Time: 02.00 pm - 05.00 pm
February
20 February
Panel Discussion
Mass Media in South Asia: Flagging Questions, Mooting Answers
Panel Discussion
Mass Media in South Asia: Flagging Questions, Mooting Answers
While South
Asia has been variably configured through mediated images emerging from various
streams of mass media, there has been little attempt at understanding the
nature and scope of mass media in the region. Is mass media in the region
thoroughly modern?; is there a sharp break from the traditional moorings of
communication?; is the regional mass media obscured by attributes of media
imperialism?; is South Asian social reality entirely mediated?; is media
determinism unquestionable?. This panel unpacks the characteristics of mass
media of the region and grapples with questions of research significance such
as the above.
Panelists:
Nikhil Sinha, Department
of Communication, University of Texas, Austin; currently Vice Chancellor, Shiv
Nadar University, Delhi
Steve McDowell
(Communication Studies Program, Florida State University, Florida)
Biswajit Das (Center
for Culture, Media and Governance, Jamia Millia Islamia, Delhi)
Chair: Sasanka Perera, Faculty of Social Sciences,
SAU
Discussants: Babli
Moitra Saraf, Indraprastha College, DU & Chudamani Basnet, Department of
Sociology, SAU
Rapporteur:
Madhulika V Narsimhan
March
06 March
Reading
Bourdieu Today: Understanding and Questions
Sheena Jain,
Professor, Department of Sociology, Jamia Millia Islamia
Chair:
Chudamani Basnet, Department of Sociology, SAU
Discussant: Mallika
Shakya, Department of Sociology, SAU
Rapporteur: Saroj Kumar Nepal
13 March
Politics
and Sexuality in South Asia
Nivedita Menon,
SIS, JNU
Chair: Prof. Rajan
Harshe, Department of International Relations, SAU
Discussants: Chudamani
Basnet & Diya Mehra, Department of Sociology, SAU
Rapporteur: Parveen
Hussain
20 March
Global
Events and Local Narratives: 9/11 and Folk Artists of Bengal
Roma Chatterji,
Department of Sociology, University of Delhi
Chair: Ankur
Datta, Department of Sociology, SAU
Discussant: Dev
N Pathak, Department of Sociology, SAU
Rapporteur:
Atina Naseer Malik
25 March
Letters
on Love: A Narrative of Colombo University Students’ Love and Life
Mihirini
Sirisena, National University of Ireland
Chair: Farid
Ahamad, Department of Sociology, SAU
Discussant: Dev
N Pathak, Department of Sociology, SAU
Rapporteur: Madhulika
V Narsimhan
April
3 April
Panel Discussion
Feminist
Explorations of Knowledge:
Present and Future of Engendered Anthropology
Present and Future of Engendered Anthropology
Through the
historical trajectories vis-Ã -vis waves of women’s movement, the feminist
enquiries have made it possible to recon with host of issues, categories and
political possibility of change. Meanwhile, there has been emergence of
regional varieties of feminism adding novel dimensions to the anthropological
attempts at knowledge construction. This panel debates the conventional and
recent orientations in feminist approaches in anthropological studies.
Panelists:
Ravinder Kaur,
Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi
Rajni Palriwala,
Department of Sociology, University of Delhi
Gitika Bapana,
Research Scholar, University of Delhi
Chair: Mary E
John, Center for Women’s Development Study, Delhi
Discussant: Mallika
Shakya & Dev N Pathak, Department of Sociology, SAU
Rapporteur:
Manoj Kumar Dhakal
8
April
Darwinian Evolution and the Fate of Humanity
Rajiv Saxena, Department of Biotechnology, SAU
Darwinian Evolution and the Fate of Humanity
Rajiv Saxena, Department of Biotechnology, SAU
Chair and Discussant: Dhruv Raina, Professor of Philosophy of Science, JNU
Rapporteur: Somya
Saloni
15
April
Conversation
between Science and Social Science
Shiv
Visvanathan, Jindal Global University
Chair: Mallika
Shakya, Department of Sociology, SAU
Discussant: Diya Mehra, Department of Sociology, SAU
Rapporteur: Parveen
Hussain
17
April
Democracy in South Asia: Issues and Directions
Peter Ronald
D’Souza, Indian Institute of Advance Studies, Simla
Chair: Farid
Ahamad, Department of Sociology, SAU
Discussant: Ravi
Kumar, Department of Sociology, SAU
Rapporteur:
Atina Naseer Malik
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Monday, February 4, 2013
Empire and its Aftermath, 1930—1989: Rethinking British History By Susan Pennybaker
Department
of Sociology
Faculty of Social Sciences
South Asian University
Presents
Sociology Seminar
Series 2013
Empire and its Aftermath, 1930—1989:
Rethinking British History
Rethinking British History
By
Susan Pennybaker
University of North Carolina
6 February, 2.15 PM
FSI Hall, Ground Floor, Akbar
Bhawan, Chankyapuri. New Delhi 11002
ALL ARE
CORDIALLY INVITED
(Please have your mobile phone switched off during lecture and discussion)
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