Dear list members,

As members of the Organizing committee, we are pleased to circulate this call 
for papers for the 23rd Annual South Asia Graduate Student Conference, to be 
held at the University of Chicago on March 5th-6th 2026. For all information, 
please visit the Conference's website https://voices.uchicago.edu/sagsc/ or 
reach out to us at the address [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.
The organizing committee of the South Asia Graduate Student Conference 
(SAGSC-XXIII) at the University of Chicago is pleased to announce its 
twenty-third annual conference: “Resonant Boundaries: (Inter)disciplinarity in 
and about South Asia.” This year’s conference will take place on March 5th-6th, 
2026. We cordially invite papers from independent scholars and graduate 
students at any stage of study and in any discipline from universities across 
the world.
This conference seeks to explore the working interfaces and complex 
intertwinings of different textual canons, systems of knowledge, 
epistemological approaches and practices, mechanisms of community creation and 
affiliation, and trajectories of knowledge dissemination in scholarly research 
pertaining to South Asia. Conference papers may consider how textual genres and 
canons contribute to larger narratives across self-established formal or 
disciplinary scopes; inter- and intra-communal knowledge exchange; and how we 
situate these interfaces within broader histories of intellectual transmission, 
canon formation, and communicative exchange. In the titular spirit of “resonant 
boundaries,” papers might surface how interdisciplinary examinations help us to 
reconceive narratives and attest to hidden histories, draw new connections 
across doxographically conceived boundaries, and reconceptualize the categories 
of our disciplinary studies. How do our understandings of our received 
traditions change as we probe these borders? And which theoretical issues and 
avenues of inquiry can reconfigurations engender? We welcome consideration of 
not only the formulation, but also the acquisition and dissemination of 
disciplinary knowledge and borders. How do cultural and scholarly practices 
engender theoretical models, historical and sociological processes, and 
physical, demographic, and sacred geographies proliferating from South Asia? We 
welcome scholars who engage with both premodern and modern South Asia, whose 
research extends to surrounding regions, and its place in contemporary global 
academies. Please join the conversation to strive toward a shared inquiry into 
the shifting boundaries between genres, disciplines and inherited canons, and 
all the topics and communities this might meet, to give rise to forms of 
knowledge and knowing.
Paper topics may include, but are not limited to, the following:

  *   South Asia in global philosophical dialogues: patterns of exchange and 
adaptation of topics, themes and methods;
  *   Beyond the darśanas: ethical, anthropological, sociological and political 
philosophies across doxographic boundaries;
  *   Ethics in traditions of renunciation: normative and agential 
interpretations in the construction of identity and tradition(s) in word and 
practice;
  *   Intersecting arts and sciences: textualities, literarities, and practices 
of astronomy, mathematics, philosophy, economics and public policy across South 
Asia;
  *   Literacy and orality to theorize form and practice in performative arts 
(including, but not limited to, literature, prosody, music, theatrical and 
dance forms);
  *   Mutual imbrications of literature and philosophy: translation and 
(meta)commentary as mediation between the philosophical and the literary mode 
of thought;
  *   Intertextuality: diatopic transitions of scripts, texts, and editorial 
practices; modes of translation and (re)interpretation among Sanskrit, 
vernaculars, Persian, Tibetan, Chinese, and other languages; histories of 
textual reception, appropriation, censorship, and re-interpretation across 
authors, traditions and communities;
  *   Diachronic patterns of genre and canon formation: classical, modern, and 
hybrid forms of literary production;
  *   South Asian Studies inside-out: interdisciplinary approaches to the study 
of South Asia; toward disciplinary histories of South Asian Studies; whither 
South Asian studies? Themes and patterns for new avenues of inquiry.

We invite submissions from graduate students and unaffiliated scholars from a 
wide range of departments, including Anthropology, Archaeology, Area Studies, 
Art History, Comparative Literature, Film Studies, Gender and Sexuality 
Studies, History, Law, Linguistics, Philosophy, Political Science, Religious 
Studies, and South Asian Studies. Abstracts for individual papers of no more 
than 500 words should be sent to [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> by 11:59pm US CST, December 10th, 2025. Panel 
proposals will not be considered. Applicants will be notified of a decision in 
December 2025. Food and lodging will be provided by the University of Chicago. 
We will assist with travel reimbursement, but we encourage students to firstly 
and also seek support from their home institutions first so that we can 
distribute our funds to those most in need. If you have any questions, please 
write to us at [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.

Best regards,
The Organizing Committe

Alessandro Ganassi, Divinity School
Caitlyn Marentette, Divinity School
Tancredi Padova, South Asian Languages and Civilizations
Alicehank Winham, Divinity School


Tancredi Padova
PhD Student
Division of the Humanities
University of Chicago
✉︎  [email protected]

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