Gil Ben-Herut
Associate Professor
Dr. Gil Ben-Herut is an Associate Professor at the University of South Florida in Tampa, Florida. He holds a PhD in Religious Studies from Emory University and BA and MA from Tel Aviv University in Israel. His research interests include premodern religious literature in the Kannada language, South Asian bhakti (devotional) traditions, translation in South Asia, and programming in Digital Humanities. In 2023, Dr. Ben-Herut was awarded the Fulbright-Nehru Academic and Professional Excellence Award and the Senior Short-Term Research Grant funded by the American Institute of Indian Studies (AIIS) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) for his project "A History of Speaking: Artifact and Authority in Kannada Devotional Songs." Ben-Herut has recently completed co-translating with R. V. S. Sundaram selections from the Ragale hagiographical collection for a book-length publication with Oxford University Press. This project is funded by the American Academy of Religions Collaborative International Research Grant. His book Shiva's Saints: The Origins of Devotion in Kannada according to Harihara's Ragalegalu (Oxford University Press, 2018) is the first study in English of the earliest Shaiva hagiographies in the Kannada-speaking region, and it argues for a reconsideration of the development of devotionalism associated today with the Virashaivas. The book received the Best First Book Award for 2019 from the Southeastern Medieval Association (SEMA) and the 2020 Best Book Award from the Southeastern Conference of the Association for Asian Studies (SEC/AAS). Dr. Ben-Herut's other publications include peer-reviewed articles, a co-translation of a twelfth-century Kannada treatise about poetics, encyclopedic entries, a co-edited volume, and book chapters. Ben-Herut received the Faculty Outstanding Research Achievement Award from the University of South Florida for the year 2020. Ben-Herut is the co-founder of the Regional Bhakti Scholars Network (RBSN), a platform for facilitating scholarly conversations about South-Asian devotional traditions, with annual events at national conferences, publications of edited volumes and special issues, and ongoing collaborations. Utilizing his extensive experience in computer programming, Dr. Ben-Herut is leading several Digital Humanities projects, including digitalRoses (Rapid Online Search Engine for Scanned materials) and BHAVA (Bhakti Virtual Archive). The latter project is supported by the American Library Association's Carnegie Whitney Grant and the Digital Scholarship Grant of the American Institute of Indian Studies (AIIS). Ben-Herut is a member of the Digital India Learning (DIL) Committee of the American Institute of Indian Studies (AIIS), and an active collaborator in digital projects about South Asian texts and languages involving Natural Language Processing and open-source/open-access environments.
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