Research Methodology Workshop 2025
Venue: Vyloppilli Samskrithi Bhavan, Trivandrum
Dates: 19–21 May 2025
Exploring Methods, Sources, and Contemporary Trends in Historical Research
The Kerala Council for Historical Research (KCHR) is pleased to announce a three-day residential Research Methodology Workshop, to be held in Trivandrum on 19, 20, and 21 May 2025. This workshop is intended for PhD scholars working in the fields of history, the social sciences, and allied disciplines, with a specific interest in Kerala. Bringing together historiographical review, source-based inquiry, and thematic exploration, the workshop aims to foster methodological rigor and interdisciplinary approaches in the practice of contemporary historical research.
Day 1: Grounding Research in Kerala’s Past
The opening day will offer a foundational review of research trajectories in the study of Kerala’s society and history. Resource persons will discuss the evolution of scholarly engagement with the region’s complex socio-political formations, helping researchers situate their work within the broader field of Kerala studies. This reflective session aims to provide a critical assessment of both past and ongoing research trends.
Subsequent sessions will focus on a comprehensive overview of historical sources central to the construction of historical narratives. The emphasis will be on equipping researchers orienting them towards diverse sources across early, modern, and contemporary periods. This grounding in sources and methodologies is designed to help researchers develop nuanced and contextually informed research frameworks.
Day 2: Contemporary Themes in Historical Inquiry
Building on the methodological foundations of Day 1, the second day turns to key thematic concerns shaping current research in the historical and social sciences. Sessions will explore the intersections of economic change and political formation, caste and community, bondage and slavery in Kerala’s past and present. A session on gender and sexuality will engage with feminist and queer historiographies, highlighting the importance of inclusive and intersectional perspectives.
The day also emphasizes orality, performance, and memory as vital sources of historical knowledge, particularly within Kerala’s rich traditions of public culture. Additional discussions will examine Malayali overseas experiences, literary and media expressions, and the historical dimensions of environmental and climate change. Each cluster encourages interdisciplinary dialogue and urges participants to move beyond conventional archives through innovative and critical research approaches.
Day 3: Project Clinic – Presentations by Research Fellows
The final day of the workshop is envisioned as a collaborative space for intellectual exchange and constructive feedback. Research fellows from diverse backgrounds will present their ongoing research, drawing on insights from the previous sessions to reflect on their research questions, methods, and theoretical orientations. This “Project Clinic” format encourages peer-to-peer learning while allowing for direct engagement with resource persons and senior scholars present at the workshop.
The aim is to provide emerging researchers with a platform to refine their proposals and methodologies in dialogue with a supportive academic community. By bridging historiographical reflection, source-based inquiry, and contemporary critical themes, the KCHR Research Methodology Workshop offers an invaluable opportunity for researchers to sharpen their methodological tools and expand their intellectual horizons. We welcome scholars across disciplines to join us in this collective endeavour to rethink and reimagine the practice of historical research in and beyond Kerala.
Selected Participants for the Research Methodology Workshop
Sl.No |
Name |
Title |
Affiliation |
1.
|
Aparna Suresh |
Pronounced to be man and wife: Making of marriage and Family in Modern Kerala |
Dept. of History, SSSU Kalady
|
2.
|
Swetha Mary Kurien |
From Ritual to Resistance: A Study of Animal Symbolism in Kerala's Selected Folklore Practices |
Dept. of Humanities and Social Sciences, NIT Tiruchirapally |
3.
|
Jisa Ann Thomas |
Intersectionality and the Devadasi System: Exploring Power Structures and Identities in the Princely Mysore State during the Colonial Period (1870-1950) |
Christ, Deemed to be University, Bangalore
|
4.
|
Sulaiman T K |
Discourses on Community Politics among the Muslims of Kerala |
Dept of History, University of Calicut
|
5.
|
Fathima Sana. P |
Waves of Sound of Memory: Radio Soundscape in Malayali Life |
Dept of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics
|
6. |
Ajay Joy Mathew |
Debt Finance and the Dutch East India Company in Malabar |
Dept. of History, UC College, Aluva |
7.
|
Nikhil. C |
Customs Law as a sight of Contestation: Exploring the Dynamics in the context of Colonial Malabar (1800-1947) |
University of Calicut
|
8. |
Yahya . C |
Mapping Slavery in Colonial Malabar (1792-1843) |
Dept. of History, University of Hyderabad |
9.
|
Gnanamoorthy. M |
The Cattle Diversity of Southern India with special reference in Tamil Nadu |
Dept. of Maritime History and Marine Archaeology, Tamil University, Thanjavur |
10.
|
Arya. C. H |
Narratives of Slaves Castes in Colonial Kerala: An Analysis of Official and Non-Official Records (1800-1900) |
University of Hyderabad
|
11.
|
Mehina Fathima Shihab |
The Viscissitudes in the Literary Embodiment of the Malayalee Manka: A New Historicist Reading of the Painkili Sahityam Novels Published in Women’s Periodicals in Kerala from the 1960s to the 2010s |
Dept.English, DU
|
12.
|
George Varghese |
Conquering Darkness: The History of Electricity in Kerala (1906-1991) |
School of Social Sciences, MGU
|
13.
|
Vyshna K. K. |
തൊഴിൽ സമൂഹപഠനവും വിചാരമാതൃകകളും: സാർവലൗകികവും സവിശേഷവുമായ മാനങ്ങൾ |
സോഷ്യോളജി സ്കൂൾ, തുഞ്ചത്തെഴുത്തച്ഛൻ മലയാള സർവകലാശാല |