Call For Abstracts: 
The rise of Dalit studies has provided the necessary platform for a new  set of scholarly enquiries in the social sciences and humanities. The  Dalit Studies International conference (2008) was an attempt to bring  together academics and intellectuals for a productive conversation on  new research agendas. This initiative resulted in the publication of an  edited volume Dalit Studies (2016). We plan to continue to explore caste  inequality, human dignity, democracy and similar concerns  to further  reflect on the possibilities and challenges of Dalit Studies in the  proposed  conference.
 Dalit Studies may be thought of as a new  academic practice rooted in resistance to the dominant epistemologies.  It has enabled academia to engage with the grounded knowledge creation  by the Dalit communities. Innovative approaches have been devised to  read the colonial and missionary archives and to analyse social  memories, oral narratives, and cultural practices of the Dalit  communities. Such novel research initiatives have resulted in a new set  of studies that foreground Dalit subjects as active agents of social  change and action.  As a location for the study of marginality,  Dalit  Studies has enabled a sustained critical attention to the anti-caste  social movements, religious traditions, literary and performative  cultures and the everyday lives and practices of Dalit communities.   Another important aspect of Dalit studies is that it opened up the  possibility of a global conversation on caste, race, and similar forms  of inequality.
 The last two decades have witnessed a serious  engagement with Dalit struggles, experiences and perspectives. New  histories of caste subalterns such as the new histories of Chamars in  northern India or the slave castes of southern India particularly Kerala  began to be explored. These studies have tried to develop substantial  research questions that were either absent or only marginally dealt with  in social science research in India. These studies offered new ways of  reading slavery and untouchability by re-interpreting colonial and  missionary archives. Given the limited historical records left by the  Dalit people, the colonial and missionary records have proved valuable  sources to recover the lives of the untouchables as human beings with a  sense of their body and self. In contemporary India, the Dalit literary  and cultural thought is constituted by a number of anthologies as well  as analytical studies.
The powerful Dalit narratives represented the  subjective experience of caste oppression and everyday life. For  example, the recent studies on Dalit literatures in Marathi, Kannada,  Telugu, Tamil, Malayalam, and Hindi languages  have engaged with Dalit  experience and aesthetics to demonstrate its valuable role in shaping a  distinct Dalit identity. The explorations into the print and literary  cultures have further revealed the gendered forms of caste and class  domination. Caste is studied as sites of hegemony and power than simply  reading it as an objective and homogeneous cultural system. Another set  of studies documented and analyzed the significance of Dalit  mobilizations, counter narratives of Dalit feminism, caste  discrimination in labour market, inter-social group inequalities,  subaltern religious movements and electoral success of Dalit parties. To  sum up, questions of human dignity, citizenship, gender and caste  inequalities, cultural identity, internal hierarchy of the lower castes,  welfare, social justice, minority rights, political power and  democratization are freshly posed and investigated in the field of Dalit  Studies.
 We propose to hold a three day international conference  (22-24 January 2018) that would serve as a platform for intense and  productive debates on the prospects of Dalit Studies. Given that the  objective of this conference is to promote Dalit Studies and stimulate a  constructive dialogue among scholars, we are keen to disseminate the  new research through publications.  We intend to publish the conference  proceedings.
 We invite proposals from independent scholars,  research students, and those working within and outside of formal  academic institutions on any theme which would broadly fall under the  rubric of Dalit Studies. A committee will select the abstracts and its  decision is final.
 The Conference organizers will provide economy  class airfare and local hospitality to all participants from within  India, and local hospitality to participants from abroad.
 Coordinators:  
 K. Satyanarayana, P. Sanal Mohan (Dalit Studies Collective)
  Aditya Nigam, Prathama Banerjee (CSDS)
 Deadline for paper proposals:  September 15, 2017
  Applications should include: (1) a two-page description of the research  to be presented at the conference and its place within your larger work  and goals (2) a two-page C.V.
 Deadline for full papers:  December 10, 2017
 Please email your proposals to dalitstudies2018@gmail.com
http://www.dalitcamera.com/call-papers-dalit-studies-human-dignity-equality-democracy/
