Indic Religion Studies
Indic Religion Studies
India and Nepal offer living religious landscapes where philosophy, ritual, sacred geography, performance, and public devotion are embedded in everyday life.
This theme explores Indic traditions not only as texts or doctrines, but as lived systems, visible in temple institutions, pilgrimage networks, ritual cities, Jain ethics, and yoga lineages.
Students move from classroom theory into immersive field inquiry, examining how devotion shapes civic identity, how sacred spaces structure economies, and how tradition adapts within modern democratic and global contexts.
Programs are comparative, interdisciplinary, and grounded in ethical observation practices.
Students will:
-
Translate philosophical and theological concepts into field-based inquiry questions.
-
Practice ethical observation and documentation of ritual and sacred spaces.
-
Compare sacred geographies across regions and traditions.
-
Examine ritual and performance as social infrastructure and cultural economy.
-
Ask compelling questions such as:
- How does a landscape become sacred?
- How does devotion shape civic identity?
- How do traditions adapt without losing continuity?
-
Produce a structured field portfolio including ritual maps, interview reflections, and thematic syntheses.
Read More
Religious Studies
Anthropology
Sociology
Philosophy
History
Heritage Conservation
Museum Studies
Cultural Geography
Urban Studies
Art History
Cultural Studies
Asian Studies
Political Science
Education
Psychology
Performance Studies
Theology
Development Studies
Urban Studies
Gender Studies
Public Policy
Global Studies
Comparative Literature
INDIA
Bengaluru
Mysore Region
Jain Pilgrimage Corridors (Karnataka)
Varanasi
Delhi
Haridwar
Rishikesh
NEPAL
Kathmandu Valley
Lumbini

