SASSpod
Podcast tekijän mukaan Center for South Asia - Maanantaisin
95 Jaksot
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Paternalistic discrimination and gender inequality
Julkaistiin: 22.4.2024 -
Gender norms, women’s work, and digital jobs
Julkaistiin: 8.4.2024 -
Cooperatives, Caste, and Political Economy in Maharashtra
Julkaistiin: 11.3.2024 -
Noopur, Raagapella, and Bhangra: meet the student groups!
Julkaistiin: 14.2.2024 -
Care, Kinship, & Cognitive Disability in India
Julkaistiin: 29.1.2024 -
Habib University and the importance of liberal arts education
Julkaistiin: 17.1.2024 -
Home in the Field in Rajasthan
Julkaistiin: 11.12.2023 -
Environmental history and temporality in South Asia
Julkaistiin: 15.11.2023 -
Periyar: authority, caste, and women’s rights
Julkaistiin: 23.10.2023 -
Transnational Tibetan Buddhism, Performing Identity, and the 84,000 Project
Julkaistiin: 16.10.2023 -
Robert Rakove, Days of Opportunity: The United States and Afghanistan before the Soviet Invasion
Julkaistiin: 21.8.2023 -
Gowri Shankar, Protecting King Cobras
Julkaistiin: 31.7.2023 -
Rabia Saeed: The power of writing, serendipity, and luck
Julkaistiin: 17.7.2023 -
Isabel Salovaara, Tuition and coaching in Patna
Julkaistiin: 8.6.2023 -
Aidan Milliff, How people respond to violence
Julkaistiin: 30.5.2023 -
Shripad “Tulja” Tuljapurkar, Travels and the chili pepper
Julkaistiin: 15.5.2023 -
Gulika Reddy, Teaching as Advocacy
Julkaistiin: 24.4.2023 -
Feyaad Allie, Muslim Politics in India
Julkaistiin: 23.3.2023 -
Elspeth Iralu, Indigenous Mapping and Identity
Julkaistiin: 10.3.2023 -
Nasiruddin Nezaami, Stanford after Afghanistan
Julkaistiin: 17.2.2023
The South Asian Studies at Stanford (SASS) Podcast features conversations between the Center for South Asia at Stanford and guests who have a connection to Stanford as faculty, staff, students, or alumni. The podcasts feature a wide range of topics, ranging from poetry to politics, from manuscript collecting to music, from business to Bollywood. Every podcast consists of an informal and informative conversation about South Asia and its meaning in the world, in our lives, and at Stanford.
