[with apologies for cross-posting]

Dear Colleagues,

The American Academy of Religion is now accepting proposals for this year's 
annual meeting, which will be held in San Antonio, Texas, November 18-21. Below 
please find the CFP for the Hindu Philosophy unit. Proposals should be 
submitted through the PAPERS<https://papers.aarweb.org/> system; the deadline 
is 5pm (EST) on Wednesday, March 1. I hope some of you will consider submitting.

Best wishes,
Michael

Michael S. Allen (unit co-chair, with Parimal Patil)
Assistant Professor
Department of Religious Studies
University of Virginia



The Hindu Philosophy unit of the American Academy of Religion is pleased to 
invite proposals for the following sessions to be held at this year’s Annual 
Meeting:



1. Philosophical Roundtable. This year’s roundtable will focus on the nature of 
poetic language. Ānandavardhana famously held that in addition to the literal 
and implicative functions of language, poetry expresses meaning through a 
third, distinctive function: suggestion (dhvani, vyañjanā). Mukula Bhaṭṭa, in 
his Abhidhāvṛttamātṛkā, holds that there is no need to posit a third semantic 
function; implication (lakṣaṇā) suffices to explain the communicative power of 
poetry. Note that the goal of this format is not to have traditional 
presentations but to create a space for lively and rigorous debate. In lieu of 
traditional paper proposals, therefore, we instead invite prospective 
participants to offer a brief critical analysis of the debate. One might, for 
example, assess the strengths and weaknesses of each position, or defend 
Ānandavardhana’s position against Mukula’s arguments, or consider alternative 
explanations of poetic suggestion by later theorists such as Mahima Bhaṭṭa, or 
reflect on the debate in light of contemporary philosophy of language.



2. Traditional Papers Session. For this session we are looking for individual 
paper proposals (rather than full panel proposals). We are open to a wide range 
of topics and approaches. Possible topics include but are by no means limited 
to: Arguments for and against God’s Existence, Subjectivity and Selfhood, 
Epistemology, Novelty in Navya-Nyāya (or other schools), “Hindu Philosophy” as 
a Category, Philosophy of Materiality, Philosophy of Language, Philosophy and 
Literature, and Philosophy in Vernacular Texts.



3. Co-sponsored Sessions. We also seek papers for two possible co-sponsored 
sessions: one on comparative Hindu and Islamic philosophy (for co-sponsorship 
with Islamic Mysticism or The Study of Islam), the other on theories of 
knowledge in lesser known schools (for co-sponsorship with Indian and Chinese 
Religions Compared).

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