Yale College
Publications Office
246 Church Street
New Haven, CT
06510   USA

South Asian Studies

Hindi courses
Tamil courses
South Asian Studies courses
Sanskrit courses
South Asian Studies Council home page

Director of undergraduate studies: Harry Blair, 115 Prospect St., 432-3399, harry.blair@yale.edu

FACULTY ASSOCIATED WITH THE PROGRAM OF SOUTH ASIAN STUDIES

Professors

Akhil Amar (Law School), Tim Barringer (History of Art), Michael Dove (Forestry & Environmental Studies, Anthropology), Sara Suleri Goodyear (English), Phyllis Granoff (Religious Studies), Stanley Insler (Linguistics), Gustav Ranis (Emeritus) (Economics), Kalyanakrishnan Sivaramakrishnan (Anthropology), T. N. Srinivasan (Economics), Shyam Sunder (School of Management)

Associate Professors

Bernard Bate (Anthropology), Nihal de Lanerolle (School of Medicine), Mridu Rai (History), Sarah Weiss (Music)

Assistant Professors

Shameem Black (English), Ashwini Deo (Linguistics), Mayur Desai (Public Health), Ravi Durvasula (School of Medicine), Zareena Grewal (Ethnicity, Race, & Migration), Karuna Mantena (Political Science), Kishwar Rizvi (History of Art), Tamara Sears (History of Art)

Senior Lecturers

Geetanjali Singh Chanda (Women's, Gender, & Sexuality Studies), Koichi Shinohara (Religious Studies)

Lecturers

Nandini Bhattacharya (History of Medicine), Harry Blair (Political Science), Carol Carpenter (Forestry & Environmental Studies, Anthropology), Ashish Chadha, Hugh Flick, Jr. (Religious Studies), Priya Kanungo, Vani Kulkarni, Marina Martin, Alessandro Monsutti, Shreeyash Palshikar, Tariq Thachil

Senior Lector

Seema Khurana

Lectors

David Brick, Swapna Sharma, Blake Wentworth

The program in South Asian Studies combines the requirements of a discipline-based first major with significant course work in South Asian studies. South Asian Studies can be taken only as a second major. The major is intended to provide students with a broad understanding of the history, culture, and languages of South Asia as well as the region's current social, political, and economic conditions. Work in a discipline-based major coupled with a focus on South Asia prepares students for graduate study, employment in nongovernmental organizations, or business and professional careers in which an understanding of South Asia is essential.

The South Asian Studies major permits students to choose courses from a wide range of disciplines. Programs should provide a balance between courses in the humanities and those in the social sciences. The proposed course of study must be approved each term by the director of undergraduate studies. Students should also identify a faculty adviser from the South Asian Studies faculty in their area of specialization as early as possible.

Permission to complete two majors must be secured from the Committee on Honors and Academic Standing. Application forms are available from the residential college deans and must be submitted prior to the student's final term.

Requirements of the major. In addition to fulfilling the requirements of the primary major, a student choosing South Asian Studies as a second major must complete seven term courses in South Asian Studies numbered 200 or above. At least two of the seven courses must address premodern South Asia, and at least two should be seminars. Students may petition the director of undergraduate studies to include one relevant course from another department or program; approval may require additional course work on South Asian topics. Students must also complete the senior requirement and meet the major's language requirement. For the Class of 2012 and subsequent classes, a maximum of one course taken Credit/D/Fail may be counted toward the requirements of the major.

Language requirement. The language requirement encourages both depth and breadth of language study. Courses are regularly offered in Hindi, Tamil, and Sanskrit. One South Asian language must be studied at the advanced level (courses designated L5); a second South Asian language must be completed through the beginning level (courses designated L2). Courses to fulfill this requirement must be taken while the student is at Yale. Students who matriculate with proficiency in Hindi or Tamil may take a different modern language (Bengali, Urdu, Telugu, or Kannada) through the Directed Independent Language Study program. Students are encouraged to pursue intensive language study through courses or work abroad.

Senior requirement. The senior requirement may be fulfilled by completion of a seminar that culminates in a senior essay. Alternatively, the requirement may be fulfilled by completion of a one-credit, two-term senior research project in SAST 491a, 492b. The senior essay should be a substantial paper with a maximum length of 8,000 words for one term and 10,500 words for two terms. The use of primary materials in the languages of the region is encouraged in senior essay projects.

 

REQUIREMENTS OF THE MAJOR

Prerequisites:  None

Number of courses:  7 term courses (not incl senior req or lang req)

Specific courses required:  None

Distribution of courses:  7 term courses in South Asian Studies numbered 200 or above, 2 in premodern; at least 2 sems

Substitution permitted:  One relevant course in another dept, with DUS permission

Language requirement:  Advanced study in 1 South Asian lang; study through beginning level in another South Asian lang

Senior requirement:  Senior essay in sem, or research project in SAST 491a, 492b