Humanities Colleges in Delhi: An Honest Talk

By Ashish Jha

Updated on:

best humanities colleges

Let’s be honest first. When someone says they want to study humanities, the first reaction they get is usually silence. Then comes the question: “Arts? Uske baad kya karega?” That question has scared students for years. And yet, every year, thousands of students quietly choose humanities and do well in life.

Delhi is one place where humanities is still taken seriously. Not because it looks good on paper, but because the environment forces you to think, speak, argue, write, and understand people. And that changes you.

Why Students Still Come to Delhi for Arts

Delhi colleges don’t just teach from textbooks. Students sit in canteens discussing politics, history, films, gender issues, law, and society. They attend street plays, debates, protests, book readings, and lectures that don’t even carry attendance.

This matters.

Because humanities is not about marks alone. It’s about learning how to think clearly and speak without fear.

That’s why students from small towns, villages, and even metro cities try hard to get into Delhi colleges.

About the “Top Colleges” Everyone Talks About

People keep asking for rankings, but the truth is, once you enter Delhi University, the difference between colleges is not as big as coaching centres make it sound.

Lady Shri Ram College, Miranda House, Hindu College, Ramjas, Kirori Mal, Hansraj, Jesus and Mary, Indraprastha College for Women — all of them have produced good teachers, journalists, lawyers, civil servants, writers, and researchers.

Some colleges have stricter discipline.
Some have louder student politics.
Some focus more on academics, others on exposure.

But none of them are useless.

What matters more is what the student does inside the college, not the name printed on the degree.

Lady Shri Ram College – Excellence in women's education

Fees: One Big Relief for Middle-Class Families

This is something nobody praises enough.

Most humanities colleges in Delhi charge fees that are still affordable for ordinary families. Many students complete an entire degree for what private universities charge in one semester.

For families who cannot afford expensive campuses, this is not a small thing. It changes lives.

Admission Reality (No Sugarcoating)

Yes, CUET matters.
Yes, cut-offs are real.
Yes, competition is tough.

But humanities admissions are not a lottery. Students who prepare calmly, choose subjects wisely, and don’t panic usually find a seat somewhere. And once classes begin, nobody asks your score again.

Delhi University mulling creating cluster colleges for rollout of four-year UG programmes

“Arts Ke Baad Kya?”

This is the wrong question.

The right question is: “Student kya seekh raha hai?”

Humanities students go into:

  • Teaching and academics
  • Journalism and media
  • Law and judiciary
  • Civil services
  • Social sector and NGOs
  • Research and policy work
  • Content, publishing, writing
  • Even corporate roles later, with the right skills

The degree does not decide the future. The mindset does.

Final Thought

Humanities is not for people who want easy success. It is for people who are curious, confused, opinionated, questioning, and willing to learn slowly. Delhi doesn’t promise instant jobs. It offers exposure, confidence, and a voice. For many students, that becomes the real turning point.

 

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