Dear Colleagues,

The University of Virginia has a B.A. in Language and Literature (Sanskrit), 
with heavy Sanskrit requirements but also with a structure that is similar to 
other US American B.A. degrees.  See:

https://mesalc.as.virginia.edu/language-literature-major

Note also, the fact that the Oxford B.A. requires a paper in classical Indian 
literature, history, and culture, also a general paper in the preliminary 
exams, narrows the difference at least somewhat between the British and 
American B.A. in Sanskrit.

Sincerely,
John


________________________________
From: INDOLOGY <[email protected]> on behalf of Donald R 
Davis via INDOLOGY <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, June 24, 2021 10:57 PM
To: Dominik Wujastyk <[email protected]>
Cc: Indology <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY] Where can you do a BA in Sanskrit?

Dear Dominik,

You’re right. Our major, like all UT majors and I suspect all US BA degrees, 
will involve a lot of other requirements in some kind of core or general 
education category. Even a language major like Sanskrit will require other 
coursework for historical and cultural context and knowledge. So, in all 
language majors, roughly 2/3 of the coursework will be in the language itself 
(the first two years are hidden as part of core requirements in ours), plus 
about 1/3 of related courses in South Asian religion, history, philosophy, etc.

I completed a “concentration” in Sanskrit and Indian Studies from Harvard, but 
I believe that major is now gone. Even that required several non-Sanskrit 
courses. It’s been the pattern in the US for a long time, I think. For what 
it’s worth, I endorse the general humanities degree with high Sanskrit, etc. 
content at the undergraduate level.

Best, Don

On Jun 24, 2021, at 9:44 PM, Dominik Wujastyk via INDOLOGY 
<[email protected]> wrote:


What about

l’histoire de la société, des philosophies et des religions indiennes, ou 
encore l’histoire de la con­nais­sance de l’Inde.

Those would not be courses involving reading Sanskrit as such, would they?  
They would be in French, about India?

Similarly at UT Austin, it looks like students have to take lots of courses 
called,

Asian Studies related to South Asia

Again, that wouldn't be actual reading of Sanskrit texts, would it?  And there 
appear to be a lot of courses under "Core" that are not Sanskrit. (US History; 
Social and Behavioural Science, etc.).  Presumably students take a few of 
these?  So it's a general humanities degree with a high Sanskrit content.  
Would that be right, or am I misunderstanding?

I was thinking about a degree that focussed on Sanskrit language and 
literature, not a course where Sanskrit was a component (even a large 
component).  I'm thinking of the Oxford BA, or the BA at SOAS, when it existed, 
in the days when it was taught by Mr J. E. B. Gray with his legendary 
cyclostyled, typewritten, four-year course.  Or the courses taught at German 
universities in the days of the old MA system.

Best,
Dominik


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