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India: Culture, Traditions, & Globalization

Pune, India

Welcome message from ACM India Program Director Sucheta Paranjpe

India today is a country of contrasts:  a modernizing economy in which village production continues to dominate, a vibrant democracy with an entrenched bureaucracy, a nuclear power in the place where nonviolent protest was born.  

The Indian economy has been described as "schizophrenic":  its modern service sector, largely urban-based,  stands in juxtaposition to rural India, where fields are plowed with bullocks and brick kilns dot the landscape. Road traffic, proceeding at multiple speeds, incorporates these different sectors, and Mercedes and Marutis share the roads with scooters, bicycles, and even camel-drawn carts.  Even the entertainment sector exhibits these disparities, with older Bollywood productions portraying rather chaste interactions between the sexes and newer films and video games more risqué in their portrayal of men and women.

The fall ACM India program, located in Pune, is designed to provide students with an overview of these many aspects of Indian culture and society today.   The program begins in mid-August, with a three-week orientation, in which students begin an "Introduction to India" core course, study Marathi language intensively, and draw up a plan of research for their independent study projects.  The regular term begins in early September, where students continue the core course and Marathi language, choose an elective course, and begin to carry out their independent study projects.   In each of the courses, classroom learning is augmented by weekly activities outside of the classroom, and students are also encouraged to volunteer with local organizations.  The program organizes several program-sponsored overnight excursions to sites in and around Pune, while a one-week break in October provides opportunities to travel further afield in India.

In Pune, students live with Indian host families, providing a window into Indian society that students might not otherwise have, and for many it is the highlight of their experience in India.  Pune itself reflects the contrasts of India as a whole.  A city of 3.5 million, it is an important center for the automobile and software industries of India, and is also known as “the Oxford of India,” a reference to the presence of the prestigious University of Pune.  Its climate is far more pleasant than that of muggy Mumbai,  and it has attracted many foreigners over the years who have come to the ashram of Bhagwan Rajneesh. 

For more detailed information, please use the links located on the left-hand side of this page.

Quick Facts

  • Term: Fall semester
  • Language prerequisite: None
  • Language of instruction: English (plus Marathi language class)
  • Living arrangements: Host family
  • Who can apply? Students from any college or university

Application deadlines

Fall semester 2012

Final deadline: March 15, 2012

Fall semester 2013

Final deadline: March 15, 2013

If the deadline has passed and you are interested in applying, contact the ACM Office immediately. Late applications may be accepted on a space-available basis.

Related Programs

Program contacts

Heather Herriges
Program Associate

205 W. Wacker Drive, Suite 220
Chicago, IL 60606
Phone: 312.263.5000
hherriges@acm.edu

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Publications & Resources

India program brochure

India student handbook - Fall 2010

India: Culture, Traditions, & Globalization

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Katie Blanchard Although spending five months in Pune, India was one of the most challenging things I have ever done, it was also one of the most fulfilling. India is a place where intense beauty and sadness are both intertwined and inseparable to an extreme that I have yet to see anywhere else. I felt such a sense of empowerment and success when I became able to navigate the streets of Pune by myself, or when I could hold a conversation in Marathi with my host mother or a rickshaw driver. Those little things caused me to gain a much broader understanding of the world.

—Katie Blanchard, India, Fall 2008

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