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SOAS University of London Research Degrees (MPhil/PhD) in South Asian Studies
SOAS University of London

Research Degrees (MPhil/PhD) in South Asian Studies

London, United Kingdom

3 up to 6 Years

English

Full time, Part time

Request application deadline

Sep 2024

GBP 22,490 / per year *

On-Campus

* for overseas student full-time | GBP 4,860 home student full-time | overseas student part-time: GBP 11,245 per year | home student part-time: GBP 2,430 per year

Introduction

SOAS has an international reputation for excellence in the field of South Asian studies earned by the world-leading research undertaken.

The South Asia Section of the School of Languages, Cultures and Linguistics welcomes applications for the degrees of PhD on any topic related to the research interests and disciplines of the Department’s research-active staff. Prospective candidates should consult the details of the various staff members’ research areas and adapt their proposals accordingly. These presently include, but are not limited to:

  • Indian Film and Screen Studies
  • Diaspora Studies
  • Postcolonial Literature
  • Literary Studies Associated With Hindi, Urdu, Nepali, and Sanskrit
  • Classical Hinduism
  • Feminism
  • Translation
  • Current Representations of Muslims
  • The Politics of Nepal, Bhutan and Pakistan

Broader topics can be accommodated through joint supervision with colleagues in other Departments and Centres REF 2014 Submissions by members of the Department included significant and paradigm-shifting monographs, edited collections, journal articles and book chapters on literature, cinema cultural history and postcolonial studies.

The Department has two ERC grants: Francesca Orsini for the comparative study of the multilingual literary histories of North India, the Maghreb, and the Horn of Africa; while James Mallinson has one entitled “The Hatha Yoga Project: Mapping traditions of transnational physical yoga practice through philology and ethnography”. Amina Yaqin’s current research projects include a collaboration with the Centre for the Study of Pakistan and the University of East London for the ‘Muslims, Trust and Cultural Dialogue’ research project funded by the RCUK. This follows on from an earlier AHRC-funded international research network, ‘Framing Muslims’. Rachel Dwyer is CI on an AHRC-funded International Network with the University of Leeds: Soft Power, Cinema and the BRICS.

A full research training programme is provided at the Faculty level, in addition to the close attention each doctoral researcher receives from his or her supervisor. MPhil/PhD researchers admitted to the Department receive research training in the Faculty-wide first year research training seminar and are also encouraged to participate in discipline-specific training offered by the Faculty Centre for Cultural, Literary and Postcolonial Studies (CCLPS) and research skills training coordinated via the Doctoral School.

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