OCHS External Hindu Images

Who Provides the Courses?

Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies

A RECOGNISED INDEPENDENT CENTRE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD

These courses are taught by the Continuing Education Department of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies.

Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies

The Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies (OCHS) is a Recognised Independent Centre of the University of Oxford.

The principal aim of the Centre is the study of Hindu culture, religion, languages, literature, philosophy, history, arts, and society, in all periods and in all parts of the world. All Hindu traditions are included.

The Continuing Education Department of the OCHS has been providing courses in Hinduism throughout the UK since 2003. The online version of the course makes it accessible to students throughout the UK and globally.

Find out more about OCHS at www.ochs.org.uk or write to us at info@ochs.org.uk

 

Contacts

Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies
13-15 Magdalen St
Oxford, OX1 3AE
UK
+44(0)1865-304300
www.ochs.org.uk
info@ochs.org.uk

Course Delivery and Enrolment

Enrol now

Enrol

The current session of these courses begins on 11 October 2010.

Course cost is £95 fully inclusive.

Click here to enrol in 'Understanding Hindu Identity'

Click here to enrol in 'The Vedas and Upanishads'

Click here to enrol in 'The Mahabharata and Ramayana'

Click here to enrol in 'Bhagavad Gita'

Limited places are available so enrol now to avoid disappointment.

Enrolment queries? Email lal@ochs.org.uk

 

Course Delivery

  • All materials are delivered via the web
  • Your tutor will always be available by email
  • You are also be able to communicate online with your fellow students.

Don't worry about technical skills – if you can handle email then you're ready to go.

Course delivery includes:

  • Student forums with tutor participation
  • Recorded lectures available in video and mp3 format
  • Lecture notes available online and as pdf
  • Audio interviews with specialists in Hindu Studies at Oxford University
  • Supplementary materials taken from the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies teaching and research programme.

Assessment

Assessment for each course is optional and is on the basis of successful completion of a single essay of 2000 words.

Time Limits

Courses can be completed in as little as seven weeks. There is a final deadline for essays of twelve weeks from the beginning of the course.

 

The Team

Tutorial and Course Development

Dr Nick SuttonDr Nicholas Sutton, received his Phd from Lancaster University (1995). His thesis was on the religious teachings of the Mahabharata. Dr Sutton has been teaching Hinduism for two decades. He lectures in Religious Studies for the Open University, and in Hinduism for the University of Nottingham. He is the author of Religious Doctrines in the Mahabharata and is currently working on a translation and extended study of the Mahabharata’s Moksha-dharma-parvan.

Rembert LutjeharmsRembert Lutjeharms holds undergraduate and graduate degrees in Oriental Studies (Indology) from the University of Ghent, Belgium, 2003. His masters thesis was, "Hamsaduta of Rupa Goswami. A Study in Translation". He is currently pursuing a Doctorate in Theology at Oxford University. Rembert's main area of research is in Sanskrit poetry and poetics.

Dr Jessica FrazierDr Jessica Frazier has degrees in Sanskrit, Religious Studies, and Philosophy of Religion from Oxford and Cambridge. Dr Frazier edits the Journal of Hindu Studies and teaches Hinduism and other religious traditions at Birkbeck College, Oxford University, and other institutions around the UK. She recently published Reality, Religion, and Passion, a comparison of Western and Indian approaches to religious truth.

Administration and Development

Anuradha DooneyAnuradha Dooney, Bachelors Degree in Social Science, from University College Dublin (1985). Bhakti-shastri Degree from the Vrindavan Institute of Higher Education, india. Curriculum writer for religious education courses in the UK and Belgium. Anuradha was awarded her MSt in the Study of Religion, from Oxford University in 2003. Her thesis was an exploration of faith development in the Vaishnava tradition of Hinduism. Anuradha is currently a faculty member of the OCHS Continuing Education Department. She teaches courses in London, Birmingham, Oxford, Cambridge, and Leicester.

Technical and Support

Lal KrishnaLal Krishna is from Australia. Lal studied Linguistics at Deakin University, Melbourne, and has worked both as an editor and production manager for the publishing industry. He is skilled in database management, web development, and administration. Any queries can be sent to Lal at lal@ochs.org.uk