The volume comprises eighteen papers by scholars from North America, Western Europe, India, Japan and East Central Europe presented at the Tenth International Bhakti Conference: Early Modern Literatures in North India at Sapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania, in Miercurea Ciuc, Romania. Organised in four sections focusing on community formation, social embeddedness, ideology and forms of expression, the volume investigates from a diversity of perspectives how religion in general contributed to the formation of early modern literary culture in north India. The papers present current research on Hindu, Jain and syncretistic Hindu-Muslim devotional traditions and concepts from between the fifteenth and the eighteenth centuries, often tracing the antecedents of a certain phenomenon to earlier developments or examining their afterlives. They engage with Hindi, Sanskrit, Marathi or Gujarati texts and study their material in the light of a variety of disciplines including theology, linguistics, social history and musicology.
Imre Bangha is Lecturer in Hindi at the University of Oxford and Head of the Alexander Csoma de K?r?s Centre for Oriental Studies at Sapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania, Romania. His publications include English, Hindi and Hungarian books and articles on early Hindi with special focus on Rekhta literature as well as on the poetical works of Anandghan, Thakur, Visnudas, Tuls?das and Bajid.
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