I've accumulated a short list of "to do" projects over the summer, which I need to somehow fit in around my Uyghur language programme; these include:
1) MESA conference presentation;
2) CESS conference presentation;
3) Revise and submit paper for publication.
Of these, the first two are green-lighted; the third is more of a shot in the dark, but since I'm working on my advisor's recommendation - and since I like to think that he wouldn't deliberately send me on a fool's errand - it shouldn't be a complete waste of time and, in any case, it might well end up in my dissertation.
For MESA, I'll be presenting a paper on a Naqshbandi shaykh in Herat in the second-half of the fifteenth century, and for CESS I'll be discussing the influnce of Nava'i's work on early nineteenth century poets in Central Asia. The paper I'll be attempting to get published is a discussion of Nawa'i's memoir of Jami, Khamsat al-mutahayyirin.
A busy summer in store, then.
3 comments:
Hello,
I recently came across your blog and am perturbed (selfishly) that you have not provided any updates on your research on Ali Shir Nawai'. Keep up the wonderful work.
I'm a first year phd student (would be Mughalist) so I look forward to hearing more from you and everyone's favourite Timurid patron and litterateur.
Thank you for your kind comments! I will endeavor to be more productive here in the future
I'm sure you have checked out this book but I was flipping through it the other day and it had Ali Shir Nava'i in various Timurid miniatures and it showed how members of the Timurid court was integrated into the illustrations of Persian allegorical/epic literature.
Michael A. Barry, Figurative art in medieval Islam and the riddle of Bihzâd of Herât (1465-1535) (Paris: Flammarion, 2004)
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