Indian Culture I

A.Y. 2025/2026
6
Max ECTS
40
Overall hours
SSD
L-OR/19
Language
Italian
Learning objectives
The course means first of all to
- develop a solid and consolidated knowledge, both diachronic and synchronous, and a deep understanding of different aspects of Indian culture, traditions and habits;
- develop the understanding of the main features of the different, religious and social, communities Indian society is made of and divided in, also in order to learn how to properly and effectively interact with Indian people depending on their social and cultural profile;
- develop the ability to relate and interact properly with Indian people living both in India and abroad using different linguistic registers and communicative skills depending on the social and cultural features of the community the Indian speaker belong to;
- develop different ways of relating to people based on their social identity;
- develop the understanding of the social, political and cultural relationships among the different communities living in India;
- train the students to understand and decipher the Indian point of view on a number of subjects ruling everyday social life;
- train the students to detect the problems and the difficulties Indian people living abroad do usually experience. The course also is supposed to give the students the instruments both to understand the social and cultural experiences Indian immigrants have to go through in order to integrate into the new social and cultural scenario and to detect the main problems they usually face depending on their social and economic status and on their religious identity;
- the course is also supposed to develop the students's ability to explain to someone who is not aware of any features of Indian culture, society and traditions its main aspects and contents. The students at the end of the course should be aware of the cultural and historical meaning of Indian demeanors, behaviors, and automatic physical and mental patterns. They should also be able to increase their knowledge of Indian culture autonomously, orienting themmselves in the vast array of available studies and researches on Indian culture.
Expected learning outcomes
After attending the course, students should be able to recognize the main theoretical positions emerging in the contemporary debate on the historiographical and anthropological representation of the development of Indian society. The course is also supposed to promote students' ability to critically deal with methodological problems and to use appropriate scientific terminology. Students are expected to become familiar with academic and specialist literature and the course means to promote students' autonomy in studying topics related to Indian culture.
Single course

This course can be attended as a single course.

Course syllabus and organization

Single session

Lesson period
Second semester
Course syllabus
The contents of the teaching will focus on the definition and reconstruction of the doctrinal and socio-political history of two Indian religions, which, in addition to currently counting a significant number of practitioners in India, boast a transnational and global diffusion that will also be the object of the reflection and analyses developed by the teaching programme. The two great currents of philosophical-spiritual-devotional thought considered will be Hinduism and Buddhism and, in both cases, particular attention, within their multi-millennial history, will be paid to the times and ways in which the influence exerted by British colonial domination prompted the redefinition on the one hand, of the founding prerogatives and peculiarities of the Hindu socio-religious dictate, and, on the other, of the contemporary Buddhist geography and the consequent territorial and social distribution of Buddhism in India. In addition to retracing the main stages through which the two spiritual orientations have developed since their initial configuration, an analysis of the socio-cultural dynamics triggered by the policies adopted during British colonial domination of India and how they expressed themselves in a reformulation of the two religious traditions will be proposed. As far as Hinduism is concerned, it will be outlined, considering the criticism levelled primarily by colonial officials and administrators and the accusation of a clear and irremediable cultural inferiority of the Hindu religious tradition in comparison to the Christian one, the reworking by Indian intellectuals and local elites of some of the most distinctive and peculiar features of Hindu orthopraxis will be outlined. In addition, we will follow the development of a whole series of elements from the Hindu cultural, religious, and philosophical tradition that, from traits characterizing India's socio-cultural specificity, have evolved into aspects of an indistinct, transnational, and global spiritual offering. Concerning Buddhism, after outlining its articulation in the three great vehicles of the Indian tradition, the causes of its disappearance from India and its subsequent return in the last century will be analysed, reflecting on the role assigned to it in the debate concerning the amendability or otherwise of the iniquities expressed by the caste institution. On this occasion, the figures of M.K. Gandhi and B.R. Ambedkar will be introduced.
Finally, to complete the examination of both the colonial influences in the definition of the socio-cultural structure of contemporary India and the current doctrinal and social configuration of two of the major expressions of the Indian speculative, artistic, literary and cultic tradition, the historical-political and cultural process that led India to equip itself with the current legal framework will be traced. Of the latter, through a diachronic and synchronic analysis of India's constitutional dictate, the main and major specificities will be identified.
UNIT I
The first unit will be devoted, first, to a terminological reflection regarding the appropriateness, effectiveness, and origins of the term "Hinduism." Second, it will follow the development of the oldest known religious-spiritual heritage, manifested and systematized within the boundaries of the Indian subcontinent, through the following four, major, moments: Vedic religion, Brahmanism, Hinduism, and Neo-Hinduism. The chronology of each phase, the reasons, where identifiable, for the transition from one to the other, the respective literature of reference, and the doctrinal framework of each will be reflected upon. Particularly significant moments in the elaboration of the magmatic Hindu tradition will be traced in the composition of the Mahābhārata and the Rāmāyaṇa, in the teaching imparted by the Bhagavadgītā, in the classical philosophical schools of Sāṃkhya, Yoga, and Vedānta, in Tantric revelation, and bhakti theologies. Through an examination of the so-called Bengali Renaissance, we will delve into the latest and most recent phase of the reworking of Hindu socio-religious thought, the so-called neo-Hinduism, whose major proponents will also be analyzed, including, primarily, Vivekananda and M.K. Gandhi. Finally, the transformation of some elements of the Hindu tradition into global structures of transnational contemporaneity will be analysed. The reworking of yoga from a philosophical-spiritual discipline with soteriological aims into a global, locally characterized phenomenon will be reflected upon and the new meanings attributed to such load-bearing structures of the Hindu cultural universe as those of guru and āśrama will also be observed.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

- G. Filoramo (a cura di), Hinduismo, Laterza, Roma-Bari, 2002 (II edizione).
- S. Piano, Sanātana Dharma. Un incontro con l'induismo, San Paolo Edizioni, Milano, 2019.

At least one of the following novels:

- W. Dalrymple, Anarchia, Adelphi, 2022. (W. Dalrymple, The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company, Bloomsbury, 2019)
- R. Mistry, Un perfetto equilibrio, Mondadori, 2023. (R. Mistry, A Fine Balance, McClelland and Stewart, 1995)
- N. Mukherjee, La vita degli altri, Neri Pozza, 2016. (N. Mukherjee, The Lives of Others, Chatto & Windus, 2014)
- A. Mukherjee, L'uomo di Calcutta, Sem, 2018. (A. Mukherjee, A Rising Man, 2016)
- J.G. Farrell, L'assedio di Krishnapur, Beat, 2018. (J.G. Farrell, The Siege of Krishnapur, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973)

UNIT II:

The second unit will be devoted to the Indian parable of Buddhism, from the introduction of the figure of the historical Buddha. His existence will be, on the one hand, traced back to the historical dynamics and socio-cultural drives that ran through, between the fifth and fourth centuries B.C., the northeastern part of the Indian subcontinent, and, on the other, to the hagiographic narratives of the life of Prince Siddhārtha Gautama and his earlier earthly existences. After analysing the foundations of Buddhist speculation, the birth and development of the Buddhist community, and the spread of the doctrine within and beyond the Indian peninsula, its development will be followed through the next two major currents of Indian Buddhism: the Mahāyāna and the Vajrayāna. In addition to introducing the doctrinal specificities of both, the evolutionary path of Buddhism in India will also be reconstructed through an examination of the iconographic apparatus, eloquent, in the diversity of the representation of the Buddha and the subjects immortalized, of the peculiarities of the three currents of Indian Buddhism. Having investigated the reasons for the sudden disappearance of Buddhism from India between the end of the first millennium of our era and the first centuries of the second millennium, concrete signs of its pan-Indian return from the mid-19th century onward will be traced. In particular, the role assigned to Buddhism in the dispute, between B.R. Ambedkar and M.K. Gandhi, concerning the amendability or otherwise of the iniquities connected with the caste institution will be analyzed.

BIBLIOGRAPHY:

- G.R. Franci, Il buddhismo, il Mulino, Bologna, 2004.
- A. Coomaraswamy, Vita di Buddha, Se, 2014.
At least one of the following novels (which is not the same as the one chosen for Unit I):
- W. Dalrymple, Anarchia, Adelphi, 2022. (W. Dalrymple, The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company, Bloomsbury, 2019)
- R. Mistry, Un perfetto equilibrio, Mondadori, 2023. (R. Mistry, A Fine Balance, McClelland and Stewart, 1995)
- N. Mukherjee, La vita degli altri, Neri Pozza, 2016. (N. Mukherjee, The Lives of Others, Chatto & Windus, 2014)
- A. Mukherjee, L'uomo di Calcutta, Sem, 2018. (A. Mukherjee, A Rising Man, 2016)
- J.G. Farrell, L'assedio di Krishnapur, Beat, 2018. (J.G. Farrell, The Siege of Krishnapur, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973)

UNIT III: In the third unit, the legal tradition of ancient India and its evolution will be touched upon. In particular, the method of dispute resolution followed by the courts established during colonial rule, which referred to dharma treaties and Islamic law, will be discussed. The imposition of the Common Law and the related cultural milieu will be illustrated. Following a historical excursus, the legal system of post-independence India will be analyzed. The genesis of the Indian Constitution and the federal system of the Union will be discussed. Fundamental rights will be outlined, with particular attention to freedom in matters of religion and the right not to be discriminated against on account of professed beliefs. The focus will be on personal statutes concerning family law and inheritance law, institutions for which different regulations are envisaged based on religion or rather on the community the person belongs to; the application of these regulations within the Italian legal system will also be mentioned. Other aspects of contemporary Indian law, such as commercial law, intellectual property protection, and labour law, will be briefly illustrated, also concerning issues related to possible discrimination based on religion and with some hint of comparison with the Italian system. Practical cases will also be dealt with through in-class simulations.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
- Lorenza Acquarone, Tra Dharma Common Law e WTO. Un'introduzione al sistema giuridico dell'India, Unicopli, 2016.
- Lorenza Acquarone, Voci audaci. La stand-up comedy in India sfida tabù e censura, Le Lucerne, 2023.
Prerequisites for admission
The Master's students are supposed to know thoroughly Indian history. The knowledge of the main features of Indian religions, Islam and Indian society is also assumed. Students admitted to the degree who realize they do not have the required preparation are kindly advised to study carefully the contents of the following books:
- H. Kulke-D. Rothermund, A History of India, Routledge, 2016.
- S. Wolpert, A New History of India, Eighth Edition, Oxford University Press, 2008.
Teaching methods
Lectures complemented by PowerPoint presentations will be made available to students weekly on the Ariel page of the course. Given the nature of the topics addressed, audio-visual material will also be used in order to promote a better and more precise understanding of the ritual component, the places of worship, and the representation conveyed by the Indian mass media of the two spiritual orientations taken into consideration. The active participation of the students will be encouraged both by involving them in debates on the topics addressed and by means of simulations that refer to activities characteristic of the profession of linguistic and cultural mediator.
Teaching Resources
Students should prepare the bibliography of two units and choose two of the following groups of texts:
UNIT 1:
- G. Filoramo (a cura di), Hinduismo, Laterza, Roma-Bari, 2002 (II edizione).
- S. Piano, Sanātana Dharma. Un incontro con l'induismo, San Paolo Edizioni, Milano, 2019.

At least one of the following novels:

- W. Dalrymple, Anarchia, Adelphi, 2022. (W. Dalrymple, The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company, Bloomsbury, 2019)
- R. Mistry, Un perfetto equilibrio, Mondadori, 2023. (R. Mistry, A Fine Balance, McClelland and Stewart, 1995)
- N. Mukherjee, La vita degli altri, Neri Pozza, 2016. (N. Mukherjee, The Lives of Others, Chatto & Windus, 2014)
- A. Mukherjee, L'uomo di Calcutta, Sem, 2018. (A. Mukherjee, A Rising Man, 2016)
- J.G. Farrell, L'assedio di Krishnapur, Beat, 2018. (J.G. Farrell, The Siege of Krishnapur, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973)

UNIT 2:
- G.R. Franci, Il buddhismo, il Mulino, Bologna, 2004.
- A. Coomaraswamy, Vita di Buddha, Se, 2014.
At least one of the following novels (which is not the same as the one chosen for Unit I):
- W. Dalrymple, Anarchia, Adelphi, 2022. (W. Dalrymple, The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company, Bloomsbury, 2019)
- R. Mistry, Un perfetto equilibrio, Mondadori, 2023. (R. Mistry, A Fine Balance, McClelland and Stewart, 1995)
- N. Mukherjee, La vita degli altri, Neri Pozza, 2016. (N. Mukherjee, The Lives of Others, Chatto & Windus, 2014)
- A. Mukherjee, L'uomo di Calcutta, Sem, 2018. (A. Mukherjee, A Rising Man, 2016)
- J.G. Farrell, L'assedio di Krishnapur, Beat, 2018. (J.G. Farrell, The Siege of Krishnapur, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973)

UNIT 3:
- Lorenza Acquarone, Tra Dharma Common Law e WTO. Un'introduzione al sistema giuridico dell'India, Unicopli, 2016.
- Lorenza Acquarone, Voci audaci. La stand-up comedy in India sfida tabù e censura, Le Lucerne, 2023.
Assessment methods and Criteria
The examination is an oral test that may alternatively consist of a discussion on the contents of the course syllabus or the presentation, whether or not accompanied by a PowerPoint presentation, of an in-depth study on one of the topics of the course syllabus or a topic previously agreed upon with one of the course professors. If the presentation is chosen, a written version must be sent to Professor Maria Angelillo one week before the day of the exam. The text of the presentation will not be taken into consideration for evaluation purposes if it does not have the following formal characteristics: 1) quotations, direct or indirect, always accompanied by the bibliographical reference of the source; 2) a brief final bibliography drawn up by choosing and uniformly applying one of the bibliography models accepted in scientific publications, 3) length not less than 10,000 characters. The examination is intended to verify both the full assimilation of the topics covered and the mastery of the terminology adopted by the various disciplines (philosophical, historical, artistic, architectural, choreographic, anthropological, etc.) involved in the examination offered by the teaching program, and the ability to rework the content learned and submit it to personal and critical reflection.
The assessment, therefore, takes into account the soundness of the theoretical preparation, the expository ability, and the maturation of critical thinking that can make comparisons between the different theoretical positions taken in the reading of socio-cultural phenomena. For those who opt to write a paper and present its contents, the ability to compile an adequate bibliography, identify accredited and reliable sources, and write a formally correct and well-argued text is also assessed.
There are no in-progress tests during the year, but active participation in lectures and cultural initiatives promoted within and outside the University (conferences, seminars, book presentations, exhibitions, etc.) by the professors of the degree course is duly taken into account and positively assessed.
The final assessment is expressed in thirtieths.
L-OR/19 - MODERN LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES OF THE INDIAN SUBCONTINENT - University credits: 6
Lessons: 40 hours