Welcome to the Department of South Asia Studies!

The study of South Asia at Penn has a tradition stretching back over a hundred years. The department has trained generations of leaders in the field and remains one of the most distinguished places to study South Asia in the United States. Today, Penn's Department of South Asia Studies represents a close-knit community of interdisciplinary scholars who foster cutting-edge expertise in the languages, literatures, histories, and cultures of South Asia. 

Department News

Ansh Jakatimath Undergrad Thesis

Holden Furber prize winner 2026

The Department of South Asia Studies is pleased to announce Ansh Jakatimath as the recipient of this year's Holden Furber Prize. The Department's Holden Furber Prize is awarded annually for the best undergraduate piece of writing on a topic related to South Asia. The prize has been awarded for Jakatimath’s paper, " The Politics of the Classical: Caste Dominance and the Erasure of "Low-Caste" Contributions in the Musical Consciousness of Modern India". Congratulations Ansh!

 

Holden Furber prize winner 2024

The prize has been awarded for Plum’s senior thesis, "A Province Divided: Land, Labor, and Water during the 1947 Partition of Punjab, India," which was written as part of the History Honors Program.

 

A New Hub for the South Asian Humanities

The new Penn Forum on Global South Asia is an interdisciplinary unit that promotes scholarly and artistic work on South Asia through a global and comparative lens. The forum focuses on large themes of global relevance such as migration networks, political movements, and cultural exchange, but also on social and material inequalities, religion and culture, climate change, diasporic identities, and forms of transnational social change that emerge from within South Asia. 

We offer one of the widest selections of languages nationwide

Penn offers one of the country's strongest South Asian language programs, with introductory through advanced courses in the major languages of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan. The department also remains a leading center for the study of Sanskrit.