Shubhangni Gupta

Shubhangni Gupta
Anthropology

Shubhangni's project studies the practice of heritage with respect to the Shekhavati haveli in Rajasthan, India. She is interested in analyzing the relationship between ideas of expertise and forms of ownership in the space of heritage practice and preservation, and how different 'experts' insert themselves as stakeholders in local community practice. Her research investigates how fluid notions of ownership interact with a multi-tiered practice of expertise — state cultural and archaeological bodies, private institutionalized preservation agencies, and local communities — generating a site of conflicting ideas on how these spaces should be preserved. The intention of this project is not only to understand how non-urban heritage networks are designed, but also how such a study can speak to which stakeholders are made visible and invisible in the practice of heritage. She builds on this research through her MPhil dissertation, which focused on the first colonial legislation on the preservation of monuments in India and how it impacted preservation practices in the country.

Her research has been supported through grants and fellowship awards by the Wenner Gren Foundation, the Stanford Archaeology Center, Stanford Vice Provost's Office for Graduate Education, Stanford Global Studies, and now, the McCoy Center for Family Ethics in Society. She was formerly co-founder and co-coordinator of the South Asia Working Group at Stanford.