Posted 10:05 a.m. Friday, Sept. 29, 2017

Professor searches deep in India’s past, finds even more in the present.
Professor searches deep in India’s past, finds even more in the present
On a Fulbright scholarship in India, Gita Pai spent hours in library archives digging into the distant past. But the UW-La Crosse associate professor of history also took time to live and learn in the present moment as she found connections with people living about 8,000 miles away from home. Pai received a Fulbright award to explore 9-12th century bronze depictions of the Hindu god, Shiva Nataraja, in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu, during the 2016-17 academic year. Two others from UWL earned financial awards through the prestigious Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program to travel to locations across the world last year. The program aims to help build relationships between people from the U.S. and other countries that are needed to help solve global challenges. During her travels, Pai interviewed and consulted with people in India from philologists to historians to epigraphists to archaeologists about depictions of the Hindu god. Her most cherished encounters, she says, happened in southern India where she conducted fieldwork in medieval-period Hindu temples. There she met village priests, metal casters and local residents who invited her into their homes for coffee, introduced her to families, and spent hours discussing the local history and language. The meetings ended with new friendships and a promise to visit again. “I was touched by their warmth and generosity,” she says. “When one can be disheartened by news of troubling global happenings, I find these small examples of human kindness in obscure places a treasured reminder that there are good people in our world.” Along the way, Pai says she saw Shiva Nataraja not as a discrete or singular entity over many historical periods, but as various related, yet different things — such as a concept, character, divinity, ritual implement, museum piece, plaintiff, litigated object, commodity, and art, which produce a multiplicity of meanings. [caption id="attachment_49956" align="alignnone" width="685"]