Christian Novetzke

Adjunct Professor

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Biography

Christian Novetzke is a professor in the South Asia Program, the Comparative Religion Program, and the International Studies Program at the University of Washington's Jackson School of International Studies. He teaches and writes about religion, history, and culture in South Asia, as well as theoretical issues in the study of religion in general and its intersection with historiography. He works with Marathi and Hindi materials, including textual, ethnographic, and visual/filmic sources. He specializes in the study of Maharashtra from the second millennium CE to the present, ranging from the medieval period, through the colonial and modern periods, to the postcolonial era. Professor Novetzke's first book, Religion and Public Memory (Columbia University Press 2008) won the American Academy of Religion's award "The Best First Book in the History of Religions" in 2009. The book has been published in India under the title History, Bhakti, and Public Memory by Permanent Black.

His second book, co-authored with Andrew Rotman and William Elison, is on the Bollywood classic Amar Akbar Anthony and will be published by Harvard University Press in 2014.

Read more about Christian Novetzke's work and research here

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