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Srinivas Aravamudan


Srinivas Aravamudan (1962 – April 13, 2016) was an Indian-born British academic. He was a professor of English, Literature, and Romance Studies at Duke University, where he also served as dean of the humanities. He was widely recognized for his work on eighteenth-century British and French literature and postcolonial literature and theory. His publications included books and articles on novels, slavery, abolition, secularism, cosmopolitanism, globalization, climate change, and the anthropocene.

Aravamudan was born in 1962 in Madras and attended Loyola College, University of Madras. He holds master's degrees from Purdue University and Cornell University and earned his Ph.D. at Cornell. He taught at the University of Utah and the University of Washington before joining Duke's faculty in 2000. He was awarded an honorary degree by Middlebury College in April 2016.

In 2000, Aravamudan received the Modern Language Association's prestigious prize for an outstanding first book for the publication of Tropicopolitans: Colonialism and Agency, 1688-1804 (Duke University Press, 1999). The work was particularly acclaimed for its inventive readings of eighteenth-century works of literature in light of postcolonial theories and concerns. Aravamudan’s second book, Guru English: South Asian Religion in a Cosmopolitan Language (Princeton University Press, 2005; Penguin India, 2007), was similarly recognized for its expansive treatment of topics ranging from Romantic orientalism to Deepak Chopra, as well as for its tracing of the complex circuits via which knowledge about South Asian religion was produced. In his third book, Enlightenment Orientalism: Resisting the Rise of the Novel (Chicago University Press, 2012), Aravamudan considered manifestations of orientalism during the eighteenth century. Aravamudan further challenged literary critics to move beyond the Anglocentrism of typical histories of the novel by uncovering a significant body of British and French orientalist texts and their borrowings from Persian, Turkish, Arabic, Pali, and Sanskrit sources. For Enlightenment Orientalism, Aravamudan received a CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title Award, the Barbara Perkins and George Perkins Prize for the most significant contribution to the study of narrative from the International Society for the Study of Narrative, and the Oscar Kenshur Prize for the best book in eighteenth-century studies from Indiana University’s Center for Eighteenth-Century Studies.


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