SAST1561 - Contemporary South Asia

Status
X
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Contemporary South Asia
Term
2026A
Subject area
SAST
Section number only
401
Section ID
SAST1561401
Course number integer
1561
Meeting times
CANCELED
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Ramya Sreenivasan
Description
This course provides an overview of the history of contemporary South Asia from 1900 to 2000.  The course will explore the impact of colonialism and diverse responses to colonial rule in the region. We will then cover the emergence of nationalism(s), the Partition of the subcontinent, and the contemporary political dynamics of India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh. Special attention will be given to issues of gender, religion, and caste. Readings will incorporate both scholarly articles, as well as sections from important memoirs, lectures, novels, short stories and other primary sources. This course has no prerequisites, and assumes no prior knowledge of the topic
Course number only
1561
Cross listings
HIST1561401
Use local description
No

SAST2550 - Modern Southeast Asia

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Modern Southeast Asia
Term
2026A
Subject area
SAST
Section number only
401
Section ID
SAST2550401
Course number integer
2550
Meeting times
TR 10:15 AM-11:44 AM
Meeting location
MUSE 329
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Andrew M. Carruthers
Description
This first-year friendly course provides a broad introductory overview of modern Southeast Asia, surveying the region's extraordinary diversity and ongoing social, economic, and political transformations. Centering on the nation-states that have emerged following the second World War, we will assess elements of Southeast Asian geography, history, language and literature, cosmologies, kinship systems, music, art and architecture, agriculture, industrialization and urbanization, politics, and economic change. We will remain particularly attentive to the ways Southeast Asians negotiate and contend with ongoing challenges with modernization, development, and globalization.
Course number only
2550
Cross listings
ANTH2550401
Use local description
No

SAST0060 - Modern South Asia and the World

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
1
Title (text only)
Modern South Asia and the World
Term
2026A
Subject area
SAST
Section number only
001
Section ID
SAST0060001
Course number integer
60
Meeting times
TR 3:30 PM-4:59 PM
Meeting location
WILL 438
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Ketaki Umesh Jaywant
Description
The course approaches the history of modern South Asia as a story of global connections. While the region has long been in contact with geographies, communities, and polities across the world, colonial processes roped the Indian subcontinent into the global circulation of capital, commodities, ideas, and people at an unprecedented scale by the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. An expanding British Empire established connections of unparalleled domination, exploitation, and migration between the metropolis and the colony, as well as cross other colonies. The course explores the history of this contact by studying the political and epistemic technologies of colonial governance, the imperial trade of opium, tea, and cotton, the movement of indentured laborers and Indian soldiers, and the circulation of anticolonial ideas and political strategies across colonies. The course will complement chapters from monographs and scholarly articles with literary genres such as novels, films, and short stories to understand how global historical events shaped social relations, spaces, and the lives of ordinary South Asians.
Course number only
0060
Fulfills
Cultural Diviserity in the U.S.
History & Tradition Sector
Use local description
No

SAST7741 - Print Cultures of the Global South

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Print Cultures of the Global South
Term
2026A
Subject area
SAST
Section number only
401
Section ID
SAST7741401
Course number integer
7741
Meeting times
R 10:15 AM-1:14 PM
Meeting location
VANP 627
Level
graduate
Instructors
Sara Kazmi
Description
This course will analyse the forms, contexts, and politics surrounding anticolonial, left and dissident print cultures of the global south. Course materials will draw on the archive of political magazines, party newspapers, cultural journals, and pamphlets to study how these print forms shaped the cultures, institutions, and communities of revolutionary politics. Engaging the global south revolutionary periodical as form, the course will analyze its role as a forum for political debate, a tool for political organizing, and a crucial medium for literary and aesthetic experiments. We will examine revolutionary periodicals from contexts ranging from colonial India to Apartheid-era South Africa to Pinochet-ruled Chile to appreciate the ways in which periodicals often served as sites for articulating political theory and literary activism ‘from below’. We will focus on movements and political concepts that decisively shaped 20th-century struggles against colonialism, and those that followed in the wake of formal decolonization, including but not limited to Afro-Asianism, Marxist internationalism, black internationalism, Third Worldism, and Tricontinentalism. Classes will be conducted in the Kislak Center for Special Collections, Rare Books and Manuscripts, and a large part of the course will be dedicated to workshopping archival material from the collections.
Course number only
7741
Cross listings
AFRC7941401, COML7941401, ENGL7941401, LALS7941401
Use local description
No

SAST1430 - Introduction to Islam

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Introduction to Islam
Term
2026A
Subject area
SAST
Section number only
401
Section ID
SAST1430401
Course number integer
1430
Meeting times
MW 12:00 PM-1:29 PM
Meeting location
LERN 102
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Abdul M Bhat
Description
This course is an introduction to Islam as a religion as it exists in societies of the past as well as the present. It explores the many ways in which Muslims have interpreted and put into practice the prophetic message of Muhammad through historical and social analyses of varying theological, philosophical, legal, political, mystical and literary writings, as well as through visual art and music. The aim of the course is to develop a framework for explaining the sources and symbols through which specific experiences and understandings have been signified as Islamic, both by Muslims and by other peoples with whom they have come into contact, with particular emphasis given to issues of gender, religious violence and changes in beliefs and behaviors which have special relevance for contemporary society.
Course number only
1430
Cross listings
MELC0550401, RELS1430401
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No

SAST1400 - Asian American Gender and Sexualities

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Asian American Gender and Sexualities
Term
2026A
Subject area
SAST
Section number only
401
Section ID
SAST1400401
Course number integer
1400
Meeting times
TR 10:15 AM-11:44 AM
Meeting location
BENN 138
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Rupa Pillai
Description
This course explores the intersection of gender, sexuality, and race in Asian America. Through interdisciplinary and cultural texts, students will consider how Asian American gender and sexualities are constructed in relation to racism while learning theories on and methods to study gender, sex, and race. We will discuss masculinities, femininities, race-conscious feminisms, LGBTQ+ identities, interracial and intraracial relationships, and kinship structures.
Course number only
1400
Cross listings
ASAM1400401, GSWS1400401
Fulfills
Cultural Diviserity in the U.S.
Use local description
No

SAST0063 - East & West: Commodities and Culture in Global History

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
East & West: Commodities and Culture in Global History
Term
2026A
Subject area
SAST
Section number only
401
Section ID
SAST0063401
Course number integer
63
Meeting times
TR 1:45 PM-3:14 PM
Meeting location
WILL 29
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Kamalini Hegde
Lisa A Mitchell
Description
Sugar and Spices. Tea and Coffee. Opium and Cocaine. Hop aboard the Indian Ocean dhows, Chinese junks, Dutch schooners, and British and American clipper ships that made possible the rise of global capitalism, new colonial relationships, and the intensified forms of cultural change. How have the desires to possess and consume particular commodities shaped cultures and the course of modern history? This class introduces students to the cultural history of the modern world through an interdisciplinary analysis of connections between East and West, South and North. Following the circulation of commodities and the development of modern capitalism, the course examines the impact of global exchange on interactions and relationships between regions, nations, cultures, and peoples and the influences on cultural practices and meanings. The role of slavery and labor migrations, colonial and imperial relations, and struggles for economic and political independence are also considered. From the role of spices in the formation of European joint stock companies circa 1600 to the contemporary cocaine trade, the course's use of both original primary sources and secondary readings written by historians and anthropologists will enable particular attention to the ways that global trade has impacted social, cultural, and political formations and practices throughout the world.
Course number only
0063
Cross listings
ANTH0063401, HIST0863401
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Humanties & Social Science Sector
Use local description
No

SAST0110 - Beginning Tabla II

Status
A
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
2
Title (text only)
Beginning Tabla II
Term
2026A
Subject area
SAST
Section number only
002
Section ID
SAST0110002
Course number integer
110
Meeting times
MW 7:00 PM-8:29 PM
Meeting location
WILL 812
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Aqeel Bhatti
Description
A continuation of Tabla I, also open to beginning students.
Course number only
0110
Use local description
No

SAST7307 - Intellectual Histories of South Asia in Global Context: Genealogies of the Present

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Intellectual Histories of South Asia in Global Context: Genealogies of the Present
Term
2026A
Subject area
SAST
Section number only
401
Section ID
SAST7307401
Course number integer
7307
Meeting times
W 12:00 PM-2:59 PM
Meeting location
WILL 826
Level
graduate
Instructors
Ketaki Umesh Jaywant
Description
This graduate seminar explores intellectual histories of contemporary South Asia. Readings will trace selected literary, cultural, political, religious, and linguistic genealogies that have shaped present-day understandings, practices, alliances and categories of thought in South Asia. Particular attention will be placed on 19th and 20th century global influences and interactions, including with England, Ireland, Germany, the Soviet Union/Russia, Turkey and the Arab World, East and Southeast Asia, the United States, and Africa. Topics will including histories of mapping and census efforts, publishing projects (including those funded by the Soviet Union and the United States), international conferences (e.g., the 1893 World's Parliament of Religions at the World's Fair in Chicago, 1955 Bandung Conference, the 2009 Durban Conference), technological influences and exchanges, and educational institutions and practices. The course will also include discussions of methods for carrying out intellectual history projects and would therefore be of use for students conducting research in other regions of the world.
Course number only
7307
Cross listings
ANTH7307401
Use local description
No

SAST0053 - Religion and Politics in South Asia

Status
X
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Religion and Politics in South Asia
Term
2026A
Subject area
SAST
Section number only
401
Section ID
SAST0053401
Course number integer
53
Meeting times
CANCELED
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Ramya Sreenivasan
Description
This course will examine the relationship between religion and politics in South Asia from circa 1000 to 2000 C.E. This course is not designed to provide a comprehensive survey of every significant political conflict about religion over the last millennium. Instead, we will focus on key issues that have generated such contests repeatedly. The emphasis will be on political patronage of religious shrines and its converse, iconoclasm; on religious conversions; on clashes that were perceived as clashes between religious communities; and on popular religious movements and their appeal at particular historical moments. We will explore the politics of religion and of religious affiliation from the eleventh to the twentieth centuries by reviewing the rich historiography. No prior knowledge of South Asia is expected.
Course number only
0053
Cross listings
HIST0050401
Fulfills
History & Tradition Sector
Use local description
No
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