Dr Panchali Ray

Associate Professor, Anthropology and Gender Studies

PhD, Jadavpur University

Panchali Ray is an Associate Professor of Anthropology and Gender Studies at Krea University.  She completed her BA in History from Calcutta University (Kolkata), MA in Social Work from Tata Institute of Social Science (Mumbai) and a PhD in Gender Studies from Jadavpur University (Kolkata), India. Before joining Krea, she was part of the faculty at the School of Women’s Studies in Jadavpur University, Kolkata.

Her book Politics of Precarity: Gendered Subjects and the Healthcare Industry in Contemporary Kolkata (OUP, 2019) focused on the stigmatisation of nurses and nursing aides and the persistence of gender and caste in the profession. Subsequently, she worked on nationalism, gender and politics and edited a volume Women Speak Nation: Gender, Culture, and Politics (Routledge, 2020), as well as a special issue Thinking Gender, Thinking Nation: Ideology, Representations, and Womens Movements (South Asian History and Culture, 2018). As an extension of her work on gender, labour, precarity and feminist politics she has published in journals such as Contemporary South Asia, South Asia Research, Economic and Political Weekly, South Asian History and Culture, Journal of International Women’s Studies, amongst other. Her forthcoming publications include the co-edited volume Teaching/Writing Resistance: Womens Studies in Contemporary Times, which emerges from her engagement with feminist knowledge production and the question of interdisciplinarity.

Ray’s current areas of interest include rivers, borders, migration, citizenship and care regimes in Bengal. Her current book project is an ethnographic study that examines how the increasing rise of right-wing nationalism in India is changing the contours of solidarity and intimacy between communities, in the chars (sandbars) of Bengal borderlands. Tracing the making of char communities (1960s onwards) and comparing it with the current political dispensation and legal regimes, Ray examines how Dalit and Muslim farmers residing on the Indian side of the border are now the negative subject of politics to be expelled from the imagination of the nation-state.

Ray offers courses on gender studies as well as thematic seminars on labour, precarity, violence and the state in South Asia.