| 1. Religious Texts: Contexts, Interpretations and Ramifications |
| • |
Ideas of the common or public good; norms about accumulating and sharing income and wealth |
| |
Gender perceptions and familial relations |
| |
Theories of kingship, justice and political authority |
| |
Relations between the divine and mortals, rulers and ruled, nature and human beings |
 |
| 2. Beliefs, Practices and Institutions |
| |
Syncretism, anti-syncretism |
| |
Role of dharmasthans, pilgrimage centres as well as the control and management of religious institutions |
| |
The rise, decline and renewals of shramanic religious traditions |
| |
Religious conversions, rituals, identities and practices |
| |
Believers and non-believers and godless religions |
| |
Popular and folk religions, local cults and practices and their links with the canonical |
| |
Case studies of the making and unmaking of religious and spiritual authority and the role of dissent |
 |
| 3. Religious Movements and Social Change |
| |
Caste, sects and religious movements |
| |
Religious reforms and the rise of nationalism |
| |
Role of religious philanthropy and their diverse forms in different religious traditions |
| |
Role of intermediaries between the divine and the individual |
| |
Re-invocation of faith through a personal god and the bhakti and sufi traditions |
 |
| 4. Communalism and Pluralism |
| |
Hate literature and hate websites |
| |
Anatomy of communal violence, retaliation and the ghettoisation of communities |
| |
Personal laws and uniform civil code |
| |
Shared space among religious communities and inter-faith initiatives |
 |
| 5. Religion and Science |
| |
Cosmological links of Indic religions with the Indic scientific traditions |
| |
Moral and ethical issues of modern science and the response of religious authorities |
| |
Convergence and conflict between science and religion in the future |
 |
| 6. Indic Religions and Globalisation |
| |
New religious movements and institutions and the renewed role of 'godmen' and spiritual leaders in expanding the space of Indic religions in the universe of world religions |
| |
The diaspora, transnationalism and the reinterpretation of Indic religious and cultural traditions |
 |
| 7. Religion, Performing Arts and Mass Media |
| |
Cultural contexts of religious discourse on folk, classical and non-classical art forms (music, dance, drama, fairs, festivals, paintings and handicrafts) |
| |
Mass manufacture of religious identity and the impact of religious TV channels, audio/video CDs, religious gatherings and popular religious literature and magazines |
| |
Indian films as interpreters of popular faiths and cultures |
 |
| 8. Special methodological concerns in the study of religions within Indic civilisation. |
| |