Hi Taylor,

I’m not sure this is what you’re looking for, but a quick list might include: 

Aspects of Manuscript Culture in South India, ed. Jan Houben and Saraju Rath 
(Leiden: Brill, 2012).

Indic Manuscript Cultures Through the Ages: Material, Textual, and Historical 
Investigations, ed. Vincenzo Vergiani, Daniele Cuneo, and Camillo Alessio 
Formigatti (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2017).

D. B. Diskalkar’s old but useful Material Used for Indian Epigraphical Records 
(Poona: Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, 1979). 

Sanskrit studies lags far behind the study of print culture and book history, 
but Ulrike Stark’s An Empire of Books: The Naval Kishore Press and the 
Diffusion of the Printed World in Colonial India (New Delhi: Permanent Black, 
2007) is a must-read for anyone interested in the subject in a South Asian 
context. One can easily imagine a similar study for the Nirnaya Sagara, 
Chaukhamba, Anandashrama presses or other major Sanskrit publishers. Finbarr 
Flood’s Objects of Translation is one of the high water marks for the theory of 
materiality and book culture in second millennium SA, albeit in a Persianate 
context. Alexander O’Neill at SOAS wrote a dissertation on pustakapuja in the 
Newar context and would surely have much to contribute on the materiality of 
the book in ritual contexts. There’s lots of stuff of manuscript cultures and 
practices of writing, as you note.


Best wishes,

Jonathan Peterson
Assistant Professor
Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies
Columbia University



> On Aug 12, 2024, at 8:00 AM, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> Request for help - materiality of texts and textual
>      production

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