South Asia and the Neighboring World in the Mughal Period:

Intellectual and Material Exchanges

 

 École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Marseille

December 10th-11th 2025

 

The conference examines the intellectual networks, material exchanges, and 
scholarly interactions between the Mughal Empire (1526-1857) in South Asia and 
its neighboring regions of the Middle East, Iran, Central and Southeast Asia. 
This conference takes a transregional perspective to the recent debates 
surrounding the cosmopolitan nature of early modern intellectual activities and 
networks. The scholarship in the last decade has heavily focused on the place 
of Persian—the high literary and administrative language of the Mughal elites 
as well as its influences on producing a distinct Indo-Persian culture in South 
Asia. While Indian Ocean studies had privileged the study of peninsular India, 
recent works have focused on Iran's cultural and political influence in the 
creation of a distinct Persianate world. The expanded definition of the 
“Persianate” has generated insights on literary and cultural practices, elite 
self-fashioning, religious pluralism, and artistic production. Others have 
urged to recognize its limits, boundaries, and the severe constraints of 
relying on Persian literary narratives for writing about pre-modern South Asia. 
For instance, the vibrant literary practices in Sanskrit and the vernaculars 
have been increasingly present in examining the region’s multilingualism. Yet, 
current approaches, as this project argues, do not take into account the 
inter-regional dynamics specific to Islamic intellectual networks.

The conference invites scholars to take a transregional perspective to 
Islamicate culture through the influences and trends in legal, religious, and 
scientific practices from both the perspective of intellectual and material 
histories. Rather than artificially decouple the Persianate from the 
Islamicate, a tendency prevalent in most scholarship on South Asia, our aim is 
to bring together scholars working in diverse genres of textual practices to 
examine forms of transmission and acculturation in Arabic, Persian, and other 
languages as mutually coexisting spheres of Islamic knowledge production.

The conference addresses the need to bring into dialogue scholastic debates, 
norms, and practices with their transmission in writing practices of the 
period. Early modern relations between these regions were circumscribed by 
larger intellectual networks that were trans-imperial in nature while also 
constrained by specific socio-political contexts. In other words, although the 
Ottomans, Mughals, and Safavids had extensive internal diversity in literate 
communities, we argue that their connections going beyond the imperial 
frontiers have to be examined to revise historiographical views that tend to be 
concentrated on national or regional zones.

We welcome submissions on themes outlined above taking into account 
wide-ranging discussions in literature, poetry, philosophy, logic, law, 
medicine and other fields without ignoring the material transmission through 
the circulation of works across long distances.

 

Please send an abstract of 300 words and a short bio of 200 words to the 
following email address by June 10th 2025: [email protected] 

 

Organizers: Asad Q. Ahmed (University of California, Berkeley), Naveen Kanalu 
(EHESS-CRH, Paris), Fabrizio Speziale (EHESS-CESAH, Marseille-Paris).

 

Venue: École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales/School for Advanced Studies 
in the Social Sciences, Centre de la Vieille Charité, 2 rue de la Charité, 
Marseille.








Fabrizio SpezialeDirecteur d’études - Professor
École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales - School for Advanced Studies in 
the Social Sciences

Centre de la Vieille Charité

2, rue de la Charité

13002 Marseille

 

Centre d'études sud-asiatiques et himalayennes

2, cours des Humanités
93322 Aubervilliers cedex
 

CeRCLEs, Centre de recherche sur les circulations, les liens et les échanges

2, rue de la Charité

13002 Marseille

 

https://ehess.academia.edu/FabrizioSpeziale

 

 






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