Dr. Gita Dharampal

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Professor Dr. Gita Dharampal

Gita Dharampal

Address

Dean of Research
Gandhi Research Foundation
Jain Hills, P.O. Box 118
Jalgaon 425001
Maharashtra
Email ID:- gitadh[at]gmail[dot]com

Gita Dharampal was appointed Honorary Dean of Research at the Gandhi Research Foundation (GRF), Jalgaon, in November 2018. As a retired Professor and Head, Department of History, South Asia Institute, Heidelberg University, she acquired an interdisciplinary academic training in literature, philosophy (Manchester, England and Leipzig, East Germany, 1970-74), social anthropology (Cambridge, England, 1975-76) and Indian cultural history (1976-1980, SOAS, London and Sorbonne, Paris, PhD), with a dissertation on early modern French proto-ethnography of South India, and completed her Habilitation (= German professorial dissertation) in early modern history (Freiburg, Germany, 1992). Her publications and research focus on topics ranging from pre-modern transcultural interactions between Europe and India, the maritime cultural history of the Indian Ocean region (1400-1800), medical history, religious-ritual transformations (1500-2000), the socio-cultural and political history of the colonial period, in general, with a special emphasis on Mahatma Gandhi’s movement of political and cultural resurgence. Besides participating actively in international conferences and giving invited keynote talks, she has held visiting fellowships and professorships at various international institutions, among others, at Stanford University, USA, as well as at Indian universities (Delhi, Kolkata and Hyderabad). Her language competencies include English, German, French, Latin and basic Hindi.

At the GRF, she intends to strengthen the research wing, not only by pursuing intensive Gandhian studies, but also by continuing the historical work of her late father Shri Dharampal (1922-2016), a historian and political philosopher, whose publications have led to a radical reappraisal of conventional views of the cultural, scientific and technological state of Indian society on the eve of the British conquest.