SASSpod
Podcast autorstwa Center for South Asia - Poniedziałki
95 Odcinki
-  Finance, debt, and artistic entrepreneurshipOpublikowany: 27.10.2025
-  Technological transformations and job losses in the textile mills of MumbaiOpublikowany: 13.10.2025
-  Dance, consent, and nostalgia as methodOpublikowany: 3.09.2025
-  Identity, Empire, and the RevolutionOpublikowany: 19.05.2025
-  Part 2 - Wisdom, kindness, and designing your lifeOpublikowany: 5.05.2025
-  Part 1 - Wisdom, kindness, and designing your lifeOpublikowany: 10.04.2025
-  Dance and Healthy AgingOpublikowany: 24.03.2025
-  Gender Apartheid in AfghanistanOpublikowany: 24.02.2025
-  Shandana Waheed on Rawalpindi, the politics of heritage, and hostile historiesOpublikowany: 3.02.2025
-  Mental Health in the South Asian community and beyondOpublikowany: 20.01.2025
-  Journalism in the Time of Authoritarianism and Big TechOpublikowany: 16.12.2024
-  The anti-blasphemy movement in PakistanOpublikowany: 2.12.2024
-  Kalpana Desai and SACHIOpublikowany: 28.10.2024
-  History and Context of Student Protests in Bangladesh – with Stanford Students Zarif and ArwaOpublikowany: 15.10.2024
-  SALA part 2: the 2024 festival, Sept 28-29Opublikowany: 29.08.2024
-  Indo Pak Dosti Forum: Luv and AimenOpublikowany: 14.08.2024
-  South Asian Literature and Arts Festival with Ambika SahayOpublikowany: 22.07.2024
-  Women’s education in AfghanistanOpublikowany: 10.06.2024
-  Ambika Vishwanath of Kubernein InitiativeOpublikowany: 29.05.2024
-  On being Hindu, a multi-faith chaplain, and taking care of oneself and othersOpublikowany: 13.05.2024
The South Asian Studies at Stanford (SASS) Podcast features conversations between the Center for South Asia at Stanford and guests who have a connection to Stanford as faculty, staff, students, or alumni. The podcasts feature a wide range of topics, ranging from poetry to politics, from manuscript collecting to music, from business to Bollywood. Every podcast consists of an informal and informative conversation about South Asia and its meaning in the world, in our lives, and at Stanford.
