Guest guest Posted April 27, 2004 Report Share Posted April 27, 2004 The following event announcement is being forwarded to your mailing list or listserv from the Events Calendar section of SARAI. Please contact event organizer for further information. David Magier --------------------------- Maxine K Weisgrau <mkw3 REMEMBERING KOMAL KOTHARI: A conference on intellectual contributions to scholarship on Rajasthan and Folklore Thursday, May 20 2004 Southern Asian Reading Room, 601 Butler Library, Columbia University, New York City (timing TBD) Please join students, family, and friends of Padmasri Komal Kothari at a gathering to honor his contributions to scholarship on folklore in India. The purpose of this announcement is two-fold: . please save the date and RSVP . let us know if you're interested in presenting (15-20) minute papers on your work and Komalda's contributions to it. We will update you all as the program evolves, and a schedule of speakers is announced. We hope to see you there. Regards...Carol Henderson, David Magier, Maxine Weisgrau ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Maxine Weisgrau, PhD Associate Term Professor Anthropology/Women's Studies Barnard College/Columbia University 411b Milbank Hall New York, NY 10027 212-854-2236 = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = Komal Kothari passes away With profound grief we inform all the members that the founder of institute of folklore "Rupayan" and a renowned scholar passed away on 20th April 2004 at Jodhpur at 11.35 pm. He was seventy-five. Born in 1929 in a village in Rajasthan, Komal Kothari distinguished himself as a folklorist not only in the country but all over the world. For more than 50 years he researched and documented the performing arts of the region making notable contributions to studies in many areas of folklore in particular to study of musical instruments, regional oral traditions and puppetry. A pioneer in many areas of folklore, he founded the =91Rupayan Sansthan=92 in early sixties. Kothari served as a consultant guide to several institutions and research scholars from all over the world. He was Indian representative at many international fora for study of ethnomusicology. He was published widely and has instrumental in the production of a definitive series of gramophone records, cassettes, compact discs and a number of documentaries on Rajasthani folklore. He received several national and international awards including Padamshri and Padam Bhushan, the highest civilian award bestowed by the President of India. Kothari had been in different health for several years and he was hospitalised for the last 3 months. He passed away peacefully in midst of his family members. Kothari headed a big joint family and is survived by his wife Smt. Indira, two sons- Prashant and Kuldeep, and three daughters Uttra, Chitra and Mitra. His funeral was largely attended and was given state honour. In his last days, Kothari was deeply involved in his dream project of setting up a unique ethnographic museum for which the state government has donated a large peace of land at Arana Jharna, Mocalawas - a picturesque outer Jodhpur city. The museum of his dream aims at to have objects of daily use rather than those of historic or exotic significance. The museum will relate the story of the creative ingenuity of the common folk by tracing the history of tangible cultural objects and role they played in their daily life. Kuldeep Kothari: E-mail: rajfolk_jp1 Address: Rupayan Sansthan, Paota B/2 road, Jodhpur- 342010, Rajasthan Tel.: 291-2546359, 2551524 Fax: 91-291-2454354 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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