Rupert Snell

From Wikitia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Rupert Snell
Add a Photo
Born1951
EducationBA degree in Hindi
Alma materUniversity of Texas at Austin
Occupation
  • Hindi language
  • Literature

Rupert Snell (born 1951) is a British scholar of Hindi language and literature. He is best known as the author of Hindi language learning books for the Teach Yourself Languages Series.

Snell's academic career began at the SOAS University of London and continued at the University of Texas at Austin.

He was the 1997 recipient of the Dr. George Grierson Award for promoting the Hindi language abroad.[1]

Education and Teaching Career

In his youth, Rupert Snell developed an interest in Indian music, having heard Ravi Shankar's music for the first time in 1967. This led him to enroll in 1970 at the SOAS University of London for a BA degree in Hindi.[2] He traveled to India, then returned to SOAS to complete his BA, as well as a PhD in 1984 on pre-modern Braj Bhasha, with a dissertation on a sixteenth-century devotional text, the Hita Caurāsī of Hit Harivansh Goswami.

Snell taught at SOAS for three decades, and then moved to the University of Texas at Austin[3] in 2006. During his tenure at UT Austin, he also served as the Director of the Hindi Urdu Flagship program for several years until his retirement in 2017.

Publications

Works by Snell include:[4]

Teach Yourself guides

  • Complete Hindi
  • Essential Hindi Dictionary
  • Get Started in Hindi
  • Read and Write Hindi Script
  • Speak Hindi with Confidence

Other

In addition to various books for learners of modern Hindi for which he is best known to the public, Snell has published articles in journals, and edited volumes on aspects of Hindi and its culture. His scholarly interest is on modern Hindi and its earlier literature in the Braj and Awadhi dialects, with a focus on aesthetics and the literary production of meaning.

Snell's main published contributions include:

  • 1990: (With Christopher Shackle) Hindi and Urdu since 1800: A Common Reader.
  • 1991: The Hindi Classical Tradition: A Braj Bhāṣā Reader.
  • 1991: The Eighty-Four Hymns of Hita Harivaṃśa: An edition of the Caurāsī Pada.
  • 1998: Harivansh Rai Bachchan, In the Afternoon of Time: An Autobiography. (Translation.)
  • 1998: (Edited with Ian Raeside) Classics of Modern South Asian Literature
  • 2011: (Edited with Rita Kothari) Chutneyfying English: The Phenomenon of Hinglish.
  • 2021: Poems from the Satsai. Translations from Biharilal’s 17th-century classic.
  • 2023: (with Neha Tiwari) Reading the Ramcaritmanas: A Companion to the Awadhi Ramayana of Tulsidas.

References

  1. "Dr. George Grierson Award". Central Institute of Hindi. Archived from the original on Nov 11, 2022. Retrieved Oct 30, 2023.
  2. Snell, Rupert (2010). Complete Hindi (Teach Yourself). p. VIII.
  3. "Profile for Rupert Snell at UT Austin". liberalarts.utexas.edu. Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  4. "Rupert Snell". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2023-06-06.

External links

Add External links

This article "Rupert Snell" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical. Articles taken from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be accessed on Wikipedia's Draft Namespace.