Papers by Gurinder Singh Mann
Essays, Lectures, and Translations, 2015
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Essays, Lectures, and Translations, 2015
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Essays, Lectures, and Translations, 2015
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Essays, Lectures, and Translations, 2015
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
3rd International Sikh Research Conference (ISRC).
Call for papers.
University of Warwick
UK
Da... more 3rd International Sikh Research Conference (ISRC).
Call for papers.
University of Warwick
UK
Date of Conference: 11th June, 2016.
www.sikhconference.co.uk
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The Guru’s warrior scripture by Kamalroop Singh and Gurinder Singh Mann
Written for the Oxford Un... more The Guru’s warrior scripture by Kamalroop Singh and Gurinder Singh Mann
Written for the Oxford University Press India blog.
The scripture known as the Dasam Granth Sahib or the ‘Scripture of the Tenth King,’ has traditionally been attributed to Guru Gobind Singh. It was composed in a volatile period to inspire the Sikh warriors in the battle against the Moghuls, and many of the compositions were written for the rituals related to the preparation for war (Shastra puja) and for the battlefield.
http://blog.oup.com/2016/01/gurus-warrior-scripture/
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
There has been a long history linking the Sikhs to the British since the eighteenth century. This... more There has been a long history linking the Sikhs to the British since the eighteenth century. This
history is relatively unknown and requires an initiative to bring closer introspection and investigation. As a result the Sikh Museum Initiative (SMI) will focus on locating and uncovering relics and artefacts which bind the two communities together.
www.sikhmuseum.org.uk
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199458974.do
First translations of apocryphal texts of th... more http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199458974.do
First translations of apocryphal texts of the Dasam Granth
Focuses on the Sikh manuscript tradition, the relics of Guru Gobind Singh and their relationship with Sikh scripture
Brings to light the traditional practices of Sikh Sampradayas like the Akali Nihangs. Carries rare images of the Dasam Granth.
In the Granth of Guru Gobind Singh, the authors offer new insights into the Sikh scripture Dasam Patshah Ka Granth, or the Dasam Granth, which has traditionally been attributed to Guru Gobind Singh.
While many studies have adopted a polemic approach and focused on the authorship of the text, this book takes a multi-disciplinary approach and considers the relationship of the scripture with the newly discovered manuscripts, apocryphal translations, and relics.
The manuscript tradition of the Granth shows how it was written and compiled during Guru Gobind Singh's time and how its compositions were transmitted through material items such as swords. The authors have included in this volume translations of selected compositions from the scripture.
This book, in essence, takes the reader through relevant history of the Sikh dharam and establishes the centrality of the Dasam Granth within it.
Readership: This book will be of considerable interest to scholars and students of religious studies, history of the sikhs, and social and cultural studies.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Sri Dasam Granth Sahib: questions and answers
Gurinder Singh Mann & Kamalroop Singh, Archimedes ... more Sri Dasam Granth Sahib: questions and answers
Gurinder Singh Mann & Kamalroop Singh, Archimedes Press, 2011100 pp., £8.99, ISBN 978-0-9568435-0-0
In Sri Dasam Granth Sahib: questions and answers, the authors Gurinder Singh Mann and Kamalroop Singh seek to redress recent debates about not only the importance and relevancy of the Sri Dasam Granth Sahib (SDGS) for the Sikh tradition, but they also entertain questions regarding its authenticity, authorship, as well as the historical and contemporary position of this text for Sikh thought. The perspective of the book is scholarly and grass roots, as both authors have spent time as active members of the Sikh community as well as having pursued scholarly research of the SDGS at the postgraduate level. This volume appears to be released as a needed intervention into the current controversy surrounding the SDGS as well as a brief installment along the way to a larger, more comprehensive work discussing the SDGS. With a view to describing some of the less well-understood intricacies of the SDGS, it is a welcome addition to the limited number of English language volumes discussing the SDGS.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The following translation of the Srī Bhagautī Astotra is from the forthcoming publication Dasam G... more The following translation of the Srī Bhagautī Astotra is from the forthcoming publication Dasam Granth Sahib, Essays, Lectures, and Translations, Oxford University Press, India. This forthcoming publication is by two scholars of Sikh
Studies, Kamalroop Singh and Gurinder Singh Mann, and includes new and exciting areas of study. The history and discussion of the vīr rasī Srī Bhagautī Astotra or heroic ‘Panegyric to the Divine-Sword’ is included within this forthcoming title. It includes the history and translations of the apocrypha from extant manuscripts of the Dasam Granth Sahib, the discussion of previously unknown manuscripts from 1695–1698 AD, a study of the rituals and maryādā of the Graṅth of Guru Gobind Singh. The tradition of the Dasam Granth Sahib
within the Sampradāvāṅ, e.g. Akālī Nihaṅg Singh Khālsā (Buḍḍhā Dal) and the changes made by the ‘Tat Khalsa’ Singh Sabha to the original praxis of the Srī Akāl Takht Sāhib and Srī Keshgaṛh Sāhib.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
A Bibliography of Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
A Bibliography of Sri Guru Granth Sahib Ji
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Books by Gurinder Singh Mann
The Rise of the Sikh Soldier, 2022
The Sikh Warrior through the ages, c1700-1900 (Helion and Company). By Gurinder Singh Mann A newl... more The Sikh Warrior through the ages, c1700-1900 (Helion and Company). By Gurinder Singh Mann A newly published book highlights the rich military tradition of the Sikhs. Readers are taken through a journey of over two hundred years through anecdotes and important events. The small community from the Panjab overcame tremendous odds to become a pivotal Military force which conquered Northern India eventually leading to a Sikh Empire. In this deeply-researched book, Mann uses rare anecdotes to provide recognition to early descriptions administrators, writers and illustrators who depicted the history of the Sikhs and the land of the Panjab. Sikh Military History is sometimes only seen through the lens of World War 1 and 2. Yet the tradition was a inbuilt system from the faith's inception. Standing up to tyranny and
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
The British and the Sikhs Discovery, Warfare and Friendship , 2020
8 pp colour section and 23 b/w images ISBN : 9781911628248 • Covers the Sikh Misls • East India C... more 8 pp colour section and 23 b/w images ISBN : 9781911628248 • Covers the Sikh Misls • East India Company • Sikh Empire • Sikh Relics and Artefacts
The Sikh Confederacy consisting of military units or Misls rose from the ashes of the crumbling Mughal Empire in the Eighteenth century. As a result, under the leadership of General Baghel Singh they conquered the Red Fort of Delhi in 1783 leading to the Sikh Empire being formed in the Punjab under Maharajah Ranjit Singh in 1801. During this time the East India Company also expanded its frontiers and territories, witnessing the rise and the progression of the Sikhs. This was coupled with the influx of Christian Missionaries who came to convert the Sikhs into the British way of thinking. The two Empires were destined to clash and the Anglo Sikh Wars of 1845-1849 witnessed some of the bloodiest battles Victoria's Britain fought, with major losses on both sides. The annexation of the Punjab led to the employment of the Sikhs into the British Indian Army. This led to the Sikhs becoming part of many British campaigns, including their major contributions in the First and Second World Wars. This book weaves the reader through anecdotes and important events highlighting the relationship between the British and the Sikhs which exists to this day. In this deeply researched book, Mann uses rare anecdotes to provide recognition to early descriptions from British administrators, writers and illustrators who depicted the history of the Sikhs and the land of the Punjab. The book is also supplemented with a number of Anglo Sikh treaties which determined relations in the Nineteenth century.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Sri Dasam Granth Sahib: questions and answers
Gurinder Singh Mann & Kamalroop Singh, Archimedes ... more Sri Dasam Granth Sahib: questions and answers
Gurinder Singh Mann & Kamalroop Singh, Archimedes Press, 2011100 pp., £8.99, ISBN 978-0-9568435-0-0
In Sri Dasam Granth Sahib: questions and answers, the authors Gurinder Singh Mann and Kamalroop Singh seek to redress recent debates about not only the importance and relevancy of the Sri Dasam Granth Sahib (SDGS) for the Sikh tradition, but they also entertain questions regarding its authenticity, authorship, as well as the historical and contemporary position of this text for Sikh thought. The perspective of the book is scholarly and grass roots, as both authors have spent time as active members of the Sikh community as well as having pursued scholarly research of the SDGS at the postgraduate level. This volume appears to be released as a needed intervention into the current controversy surrounding the SDGS as well as a brief installment along the way to a larger, more comprehensive work discussing the SDGS. With a view to describing some of the less well-understood intricacies of the SDGS, it is a welcome addition to the limited number of English language volumes discussing the SDGS.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Conference Presentations by Gurinder Singh Mann
******The Conference has been postponed to a later date"*******
7th International Sikh Researc... more ******The Conference has been postponed to a later date"*******
7th International Sikh Research Conference
Date: 9th June 2024 9am to 5pm
University of Warwick
We are back in 2024 to announce our call for papers for the 7th International Sikh Research Conference. This will be held at the prestigious University of Warwick on the 9th June 2024.
We have successfully undertaken six conferences in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2023 by bringing together academics, scholars and researchers and to encourage a spirit of collaboration within international Sikh studies academia.
We are now making the call for papers.
Please visit our website and instructions to submit a paper for another exciting ISRC: http://www.sikhconference.co.uk/c4p/
Registrations will open shortly.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
International Sikh Research Conference 2023
Sunday 17th September 2023
University of Warwick
Th... more International Sikh Research Conference 2023
Sunday 17th September 2023
University of Warwick
The International Sikh Research Conference(ISRC) takes place each year in the UK. The ISRC has been established because there has been a serious neglect of Sikh Studies in the UK. Whilst there are many Sikh scholars studying and researching Sikh Studies, the subject is not highly recognised or represented at a national level in the UK.
They have successfully undertaken five conferences in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017 and 2018 by bringing together academics, scholars and researchers and to encourage a spirit of collaboration within international Sikh studies academia.
The Registration for ISRC 2023 is now live at www.sikhconference.co.uk
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Papers by Gurinder Singh Mann
Call for papers.
University of Warwick
UK
Date of Conference: 11th June, 2016.
www.sikhconference.co.uk
Written for the Oxford University Press India blog.
The scripture known as the Dasam Granth Sahib or the ‘Scripture of the Tenth King,’ has traditionally been attributed to Guru Gobind Singh. It was composed in a volatile period to inspire the Sikh warriors in the battle against the Moghuls, and many of the compositions were written for the rituals related to the preparation for war (Shastra puja) and for the battlefield.
http://blog.oup.com/2016/01/gurus-warrior-scripture/
history is relatively unknown and requires an initiative to bring closer introspection and investigation. As a result the Sikh Museum Initiative (SMI) will focus on locating and uncovering relics and artefacts which bind the two communities together.
www.sikhmuseum.org.uk
First translations of apocryphal texts of the Dasam Granth
Focuses on the Sikh manuscript tradition, the relics of Guru Gobind Singh and their relationship with Sikh scripture
Brings to light the traditional practices of Sikh Sampradayas like the Akali Nihangs. Carries rare images of the Dasam Granth.
In the Granth of Guru Gobind Singh, the authors offer new insights into the Sikh scripture Dasam Patshah Ka Granth, or the Dasam Granth, which has traditionally been attributed to Guru Gobind Singh.
While many studies have adopted a polemic approach and focused on the authorship of the text, this book takes a multi-disciplinary approach and considers the relationship of the scripture with the newly discovered manuscripts, apocryphal translations, and relics.
The manuscript tradition of the Granth shows how it was written and compiled during Guru Gobind Singh's time and how its compositions were transmitted through material items such as swords. The authors have included in this volume translations of selected compositions from the scripture.
This book, in essence, takes the reader through relevant history of the Sikh dharam and establishes the centrality of the Dasam Granth within it.
Readership: This book will be of considerable interest to scholars and students of religious studies, history of the sikhs, and social and cultural studies.
Gurinder Singh Mann & Kamalroop Singh, Archimedes Press, 2011100 pp., £8.99, ISBN 978-0-9568435-0-0
In Sri Dasam Granth Sahib: questions and answers, the authors Gurinder Singh Mann and Kamalroop Singh seek to redress recent debates about not only the importance and relevancy of the Sri Dasam Granth Sahib (SDGS) for the Sikh tradition, but they also entertain questions regarding its authenticity, authorship, as well as the historical and contemporary position of this text for Sikh thought. The perspective of the book is scholarly and grass roots, as both authors have spent time as active members of the Sikh community as well as having pursued scholarly research of the SDGS at the postgraduate level. This volume appears to be released as a needed intervention into the current controversy surrounding the SDGS as well as a brief installment along the way to a larger, more comprehensive work discussing the SDGS. With a view to describing some of the less well-understood intricacies of the SDGS, it is a welcome addition to the limited number of English language volumes discussing the SDGS.
Studies, Kamalroop Singh and Gurinder Singh Mann, and includes new and exciting areas of study. The history and discussion of the vīr rasī Srī Bhagautī Astotra or heroic ‘Panegyric to the Divine-Sword’ is included within this forthcoming title. It includes the history and translations of the apocrypha from extant manuscripts of the Dasam Granth Sahib, the discussion of previously unknown manuscripts from 1695–1698 AD, a study of the rituals and maryādā of the Graṅth of Guru Gobind Singh. The tradition of the Dasam Granth Sahib
within the Sampradāvāṅ, e.g. Akālī Nihaṅg Singh Khālsā (Buḍḍhā Dal) and the changes made by the ‘Tat Khalsa’ Singh Sabha to the original praxis of the Srī Akāl Takht Sāhib and Srī Keshgaṛh Sāhib.
Books by Gurinder Singh Mann
The Sikh Confederacy consisting of military units or Misls rose from the ashes of the crumbling Mughal Empire in the Eighteenth century. As a result, under the leadership of General Baghel Singh they conquered the Red Fort of Delhi in 1783 leading to the Sikh Empire being formed in the Punjab under Maharajah Ranjit Singh in 1801. During this time the East India Company also expanded its frontiers and territories, witnessing the rise and the progression of the Sikhs. This was coupled with the influx of Christian Missionaries who came to convert the Sikhs into the British way of thinking. The two Empires were destined to clash and the Anglo Sikh Wars of 1845-1849 witnessed some of the bloodiest battles Victoria's Britain fought, with major losses on both sides. The annexation of the Punjab led to the employment of the Sikhs into the British Indian Army. This led to the Sikhs becoming part of many British campaigns, including their major contributions in the First and Second World Wars. This book weaves the reader through anecdotes and important events highlighting the relationship between the British and the Sikhs which exists to this day. In this deeply researched book, Mann uses rare anecdotes to provide recognition to early descriptions from British administrators, writers and illustrators who depicted the history of the Sikhs and the land of the Punjab. The book is also supplemented with a number of Anglo Sikh treaties which determined relations in the Nineteenth century.
Gurinder Singh Mann & Kamalroop Singh, Archimedes Press, 2011100 pp., £8.99, ISBN 978-0-9568435-0-0
In Sri Dasam Granth Sahib: questions and answers, the authors Gurinder Singh Mann and Kamalroop Singh seek to redress recent debates about not only the importance and relevancy of the Sri Dasam Granth Sahib (SDGS) for the Sikh tradition, but they also entertain questions regarding its authenticity, authorship, as well as the historical and contemporary position of this text for Sikh thought. The perspective of the book is scholarly and grass roots, as both authors have spent time as active members of the Sikh community as well as having pursued scholarly research of the SDGS at the postgraduate level. This volume appears to be released as a needed intervention into the current controversy surrounding the SDGS as well as a brief installment along the way to a larger, more comprehensive work discussing the SDGS. With a view to describing some of the less well-understood intricacies of the SDGS, it is a welcome addition to the limited number of English language volumes discussing the SDGS.
Conference Presentations by Gurinder Singh Mann
7th International Sikh Research Conference
Date: 9th June 2024 9am to 5pm
University of Warwick
We are back in 2024 to announce our call for papers for the 7th International Sikh Research Conference. This will be held at the prestigious University of Warwick on the 9th June 2024.
We have successfully undertaken six conferences in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2023 by bringing together academics, scholars and researchers and to encourage a spirit of collaboration within international Sikh studies academia.
We are now making the call for papers.
Please visit our website and instructions to submit a paper for another exciting ISRC: http://www.sikhconference.co.uk/c4p/
Registrations will open shortly.
Sunday 17th September 2023
University of Warwick
The International Sikh Research Conference(ISRC) takes place each year in the UK. The ISRC has been established because there has been a serious neglect of Sikh Studies in the UK. Whilst there are many Sikh scholars studying and researching Sikh Studies, the subject is not highly recognised or represented at a national level in the UK.
They have successfully undertaken five conferences in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017 and 2018 by bringing together academics, scholars and researchers and to encourage a spirit of collaboration within international Sikh studies academia.
The Registration for ISRC 2023 is now live at www.sikhconference.co.uk
Call for papers.
University of Warwick
UK
Date of Conference: 11th June, 2016.
www.sikhconference.co.uk
Written for the Oxford University Press India blog.
The scripture known as the Dasam Granth Sahib or the ‘Scripture of the Tenth King,’ has traditionally been attributed to Guru Gobind Singh. It was composed in a volatile period to inspire the Sikh warriors in the battle against the Moghuls, and many of the compositions were written for the rituals related to the preparation for war (Shastra puja) and for the battlefield.
http://blog.oup.com/2016/01/gurus-warrior-scripture/
history is relatively unknown and requires an initiative to bring closer introspection and investigation. As a result the Sikh Museum Initiative (SMI) will focus on locating and uncovering relics and artefacts which bind the two communities together.
www.sikhmuseum.org.uk
First translations of apocryphal texts of the Dasam Granth
Focuses on the Sikh manuscript tradition, the relics of Guru Gobind Singh and their relationship with Sikh scripture
Brings to light the traditional practices of Sikh Sampradayas like the Akali Nihangs. Carries rare images of the Dasam Granth.
In the Granth of Guru Gobind Singh, the authors offer new insights into the Sikh scripture Dasam Patshah Ka Granth, or the Dasam Granth, which has traditionally been attributed to Guru Gobind Singh.
While many studies have adopted a polemic approach and focused on the authorship of the text, this book takes a multi-disciplinary approach and considers the relationship of the scripture with the newly discovered manuscripts, apocryphal translations, and relics.
The manuscript tradition of the Granth shows how it was written and compiled during Guru Gobind Singh's time and how its compositions were transmitted through material items such as swords. The authors have included in this volume translations of selected compositions from the scripture.
This book, in essence, takes the reader through relevant history of the Sikh dharam and establishes the centrality of the Dasam Granth within it.
Readership: This book will be of considerable interest to scholars and students of religious studies, history of the sikhs, and social and cultural studies.
Gurinder Singh Mann & Kamalroop Singh, Archimedes Press, 2011100 pp., £8.99, ISBN 978-0-9568435-0-0
In Sri Dasam Granth Sahib: questions and answers, the authors Gurinder Singh Mann and Kamalroop Singh seek to redress recent debates about not only the importance and relevancy of the Sri Dasam Granth Sahib (SDGS) for the Sikh tradition, but they also entertain questions regarding its authenticity, authorship, as well as the historical and contemporary position of this text for Sikh thought. The perspective of the book is scholarly and grass roots, as both authors have spent time as active members of the Sikh community as well as having pursued scholarly research of the SDGS at the postgraduate level. This volume appears to be released as a needed intervention into the current controversy surrounding the SDGS as well as a brief installment along the way to a larger, more comprehensive work discussing the SDGS. With a view to describing some of the less well-understood intricacies of the SDGS, it is a welcome addition to the limited number of English language volumes discussing the SDGS.
Studies, Kamalroop Singh and Gurinder Singh Mann, and includes new and exciting areas of study. The history and discussion of the vīr rasī Srī Bhagautī Astotra or heroic ‘Panegyric to the Divine-Sword’ is included within this forthcoming title. It includes the history and translations of the apocrypha from extant manuscripts of the Dasam Granth Sahib, the discussion of previously unknown manuscripts from 1695–1698 AD, a study of the rituals and maryādā of the Graṅth of Guru Gobind Singh. The tradition of the Dasam Granth Sahib
within the Sampradāvāṅ, e.g. Akālī Nihaṅg Singh Khālsā (Buḍḍhā Dal) and the changes made by the ‘Tat Khalsa’ Singh Sabha to the original praxis of the Srī Akāl Takht Sāhib and Srī Keshgaṛh Sāhib.
The Sikh Confederacy consisting of military units or Misls rose from the ashes of the crumbling Mughal Empire in the Eighteenth century. As a result, under the leadership of General Baghel Singh they conquered the Red Fort of Delhi in 1783 leading to the Sikh Empire being formed in the Punjab under Maharajah Ranjit Singh in 1801. During this time the East India Company also expanded its frontiers and territories, witnessing the rise and the progression of the Sikhs. This was coupled with the influx of Christian Missionaries who came to convert the Sikhs into the British way of thinking. The two Empires were destined to clash and the Anglo Sikh Wars of 1845-1849 witnessed some of the bloodiest battles Victoria's Britain fought, with major losses on both sides. The annexation of the Punjab led to the employment of the Sikhs into the British Indian Army. This led to the Sikhs becoming part of many British campaigns, including their major contributions in the First and Second World Wars. This book weaves the reader through anecdotes and important events highlighting the relationship between the British and the Sikhs which exists to this day. In this deeply researched book, Mann uses rare anecdotes to provide recognition to early descriptions from British administrators, writers and illustrators who depicted the history of the Sikhs and the land of the Punjab. The book is also supplemented with a number of Anglo Sikh treaties which determined relations in the Nineteenth century.
Gurinder Singh Mann & Kamalroop Singh, Archimedes Press, 2011100 pp., £8.99, ISBN 978-0-9568435-0-0
In Sri Dasam Granth Sahib: questions and answers, the authors Gurinder Singh Mann and Kamalroop Singh seek to redress recent debates about not only the importance and relevancy of the Sri Dasam Granth Sahib (SDGS) for the Sikh tradition, but they also entertain questions regarding its authenticity, authorship, as well as the historical and contemporary position of this text for Sikh thought. The perspective of the book is scholarly and grass roots, as both authors have spent time as active members of the Sikh community as well as having pursued scholarly research of the SDGS at the postgraduate level. This volume appears to be released as a needed intervention into the current controversy surrounding the SDGS as well as a brief installment along the way to a larger, more comprehensive work discussing the SDGS. With a view to describing some of the less well-understood intricacies of the SDGS, it is a welcome addition to the limited number of English language volumes discussing the SDGS.
7th International Sikh Research Conference
Date: 9th June 2024 9am to 5pm
University of Warwick
We are back in 2024 to announce our call for papers for the 7th International Sikh Research Conference. This will be held at the prestigious University of Warwick on the 9th June 2024.
We have successfully undertaken six conferences in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2023 by bringing together academics, scholars and researchers and to encourage a spirit of collaboration within international Sikh studies academia.
We are now making the call for papers.
Please visit our website and instructions to submit a paper for another exciting ISRC: http://www.sikhconference.co.uk/c4p/
Registrations will open shortly.
Sunday 17th September 2023
University of Warwick
The International Sikh Research Conference(ISRC) takes place each year in the UK. The ISRC has been established because there has been a serious neglect of Sikh Studies in the UK. Whilst there are many Sikh scholars studying and researching Sikh Studies, the subject is not highly recognised or represented at a national level in the UK.
They have successfully undertaken five conferences in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017 and 2018 by bringing together academics, scholars and researchers and to encourage a spirit of collaboration within international Sikh studies academia.
The Registration for ISRC 2023 is now live at www.sikhconference.co.uk
In 2023 we are announcing our call for papers for the 6th International Sikh Research Conference (postponed from 2020). This will be held at the prestigious University of Warwick on the 17th September 2023.
We have successfully undertaken five conferences in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017, 2018 by bringing together academics, scholars and researchers and to encourage a spirit of collaboration within international Sikh studies academia.
We are now making the call for papers.
Please visit our website and instructions to submit a paper for another exciting ISRC: http://www.sikhconference.co.uk/c4p/
Registrations will open shortly.
Researchers will present innovative research into important subjects such as *Kirtan *Feminism* Sikh religious texts* Sikh history* Sikh philosophy *Colonialism and other important topics.
Visit www.sikhconference.co.uk
The annual International Sikh Research Conference (ISRC) is running for the fourth time at the University of Warwick on Saturday 17th June 2017. The conference will bring together renowned and upcoming Scholars from the UK and around the world.
As you will see we have a wonderful lineup of speaker with subjects covering: Sikh Scriptures, Sikh heritage in London, Sikh Empire under Maharajah Ranjit Singh,'Sikh radicalisation' and many other subjects.
Book your place now.
Register at http://www.sikhconference.co.uk/registerandpay/
Written by Manraj Grewal Sharma