Menu

Danuta Stasik

The present publication is one of the outcomes of research cooperation spanning two decades in the field of Indian literature and art between the South Asian Studies centres of five academic institutions: University of Milan, Charles University in Prague, Jagiellonian University in Cracow, University of Warsaw and University of Cagliari. The International Seminar ‘Journeys and Travellers, Routes and Destinations in Indian Literature and Art’, took place on the University of Warsaw premises from 21-23 September 2017. Due to the bulk and broad thematic range of the submitted texts the publication has been divided into two volumes. The first volume contains 13 papers based mostly on Sanskrit and Pali sources, while the second volume includes 12 papers based mostly on sources in vernacular Indian languages. In each volume, the papers have been arranged in roughly chronological order, according to the dating of their sources (although, here and there, the languages of the sources and the specific subjects of the papers have also been taken into consideration). The readers are thus invited to enjoy a journey through time, appropriately for the general topic of the publication.
W niniejszym podręczniku zawarto zasób podstawowych wiadomości z gramatyki współczesnego standardowego języka hindi wraz z praktycznym materiałem ilustracyjnym w postaci tekstów, dialogów i różnorodnych ćwiczeń.
The volume is the effect of the International Seminar ‘The State and Society at Peace and War in Indian Literature and Art’, , was held on the University of Warsaw premises between 13-15 September 2012 and attended by 21 active participants, including not only representatives of the cooperating institutions, but also researchers affiliated at the Free University of Berlin, Moscow State University, University of Bologna, University of Cambridge, University of Lausanne, University of Marburg, University of Zagreb, Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań, University of Wrocław, as well as the University of Calicut (India). The volume contains thirteen contributions, mainly by the seminar’s participants, all of which explore different aspects of the state and society of the Indian subcontinent in times of war and peace throughout its history, as reflected in its literature and culture. The volume begins with eight papers based on Sanskrit sources, which have been arranged in roughly chronological order. There follow three contributions based on South Indian (Tamil and Malayalam) sources, also in chronological order. The volume closes with two contributions based on Bengali sources. In such a diverse volume, which comprises contributions based on sources in different Indian languages and from different periods in Indian history, the absolute uniformity of its edit would be not only difficult to achieve, but, indeed, quite unwarranted. Thus, although certain conventions as to references in footnotes, bibliographies, etc., have been kept throughout, the authors have been given as much freedom as possible in other matters.