Tyler Williams

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Assistant Professor in South Asian Languages and Civilizations and the College
Foster Hall 210
773.834.6450

My research focuses on the philological and historical study of literary and religious texts in early modern north India (ca. 1300-1800 CE)—in particular those composed in the languages now known as Hindi/Hindavi/Urdu. I am particularly interested in the relationship between the form and function of material texts—i.e. manuscripts, including their production, circulation, and use in performance—and the generic, aesthetic, and performative character of the literary and religious works that they contain. My research also touches upon more general issues of literary and visual aesthetics in both the precolonial and postcolonial periods.

 

I am currently completing a monograph on the history of writing in Hindi before the establishment of print technology, exploring various ideologies of language and their relationship to actual embodied practices of inscription and reading in different literary and religious traditions between the late fourteenth and the late eighteenth centuries. I am also pursuing a research project on the role of north Indian merchant communities in establishing and popularizing bhakti religiosity and vernacular literature in the region and their contribution to the development of distinctly modern ways of thinking and being during the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries.

 

While at the University of Chicago I have had the pleasure of working with several Ph.D. and M.A. students researching topics as diverse as African communities in precolonial and contemporary South Asia, the formation of geographic knowledge and surveying expertise in colonial India, the relationship between history and theater in colonial India, and the aesthetics of theater, performance and memory in postcolonial South Asia.