Release date: July 7, 2003
Contact: Elaine Justice, Associate Director, University Media Relations,
at 404-727-0643 or ejustic@emory.edu

Patton Receives Fulbright for Study in India


Laurie L. Patton, associate professor and chairwoman of the Department of Religion at Emory University, has been awarded a Fulbright Grant for study abroad in India during the 2003-2004 academic year.

Simultaneously, she also has been awarded an international and area studies fellowship from the American Council on Learned Societies (ACLS). This particular grant is funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities as well as the Social Science Research Council.

These grants will enable Patton to complete her project titled "Grandmother Language: Women, Religion and Sanskrit in Maharashtra and Beyond." Patton plans to return to the Maharashtra region in India where the study of Sanskrit is becoming increasingly open to women. Her research will include women's personal narratives and examine their lives, religious commitments and practices, and their understandings of their roles as teachers and scholars.

Patton will publish a book on her findings, which is expected to provide a unique perspective on the history of Sanskrit and gender studies, a topic that has only now begun to be treated in a systematic way.

"Very few studies have been conducted on the relationship between women and classical languages in any field," says Patton. "This study has world-wide implications as an example of women's abilities to become caretakers and transmitters of a classical tradition which has previously been the prerogative of men."

A specialist in early Indian religions and a woman Sanskritist herself, Patton recently completed two length projects, "Myth as Argument: The Brhaddevata as Canonical Commentary" (DeGruyter) and "Bringing the Gods to Mind" (forthcoming from University of California Press).

For several years during the last two decades, Patton has made her Indian homes in Varanasi and Pune. Her interests in the interpretation of early Indian ritual and narrative, comparative mythology, and literary theory in the study of religion have resulted in more than two dozen articles and several edited volumes, including "Authority, Anxiety, and Canon: Essays in Vedic Interpretation" (1994), "Myth and Method" (with Wendy Doniger, 1996), and "Jewels of Authority: Women and Text in the Hindu Tradition" (2002). She is completing another edited volume, "The Indo-Aryan Controversy: Evidence and Evocation" (with Edwin Bryant), on the debates about early Aryan origins, and has been co-editor (with Paul J. Griffiths) of the SUNY series, "Toward a Comparative Philosophy of Religions."

Her other authored works include "Fire's Goal: Poems from a Hindu Year" (2002) and a translation of "Bhagavad Gita," forthcoming from Penguin Press Classics Series in 2003.

As of September 2003, Patton will be professor of religion, and has been awarded a Winship Distinguished Research Professorship in the Humanities.

A member of the faculty since 1996, Patton earned her B.A. from Harvard University and her M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. She has served as department chairwoman for the last three years. She is a resident of Atlanta (30307).

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