Winter 2020 Class Schedule
Winter 2020 Course DescriptionsCourse | Title | Instructor | Day/Time | |
---|---|---|---|---|
REL 101-6-21 | Islamophobia | Ingram | TTH 11:00-12:20pm | |
REL 101-6-21 IslamophobiaThis course concerns the history, politics, culture and economy of how Islam and Muslims have been represented in the north Atlantic world (the ‘West’). It begins with a brief overview of Western representations of Muslims during the medieval era, then examines how colonialism shaped the modern history and politics of contemporary Islamophobia. The bulk of the course will focus in depth on aspects of Islamophobia in the United States, aiming to empower students to understand and navigate the contemporary context. We will also critically discuss the utility of the term 'Islamophobia'. The course gives particular attention to ways that Muslims have sought to challenge, complicate and subvert how they are represented. The course, finally, also serves as an introduction to the academic study of religion. We will explore several themes in Religious Studies throughout the course, particularly religion and race, religion and politics, religion and law, and religion and media. | ||||
REL 200-20 | Introduction to Hinduism | McClish | TTH 11:00-12:20pm | |
REL 200-20 Introduction to HinduismOne of the largest and most ancient of all religions, 'Hinduism' is actually a family of related traditions. Over the last 4000 years or more, the Hindu traditions of South Asia have developed an astonishing diversity of rituals, beliefs, and spiritual practices and a pantheon of hundreds of gods and goddesses, from the elephant-headed Ganesa to the fierce goddess Kali. This course will examine the breadth of the Hindu traditions as they developed over time, highlighting the shared features that make them a family, such as ritual sacrifice, world renunciation, law, spiritual discipline, devotion, worship, and theology. (Winter 2020, Professor Mark McClish) | ||||
REL 221-20 | Introduction to New Testament | Dingeldein | MW 12:30-1:50pm | |
REL 221-20 Introduction to New TestamentToday, the New Testament is widely known and accepted as Christians' authoritative and sacred collection of texts. But roughly two thousand years ago, there were no Christians, and there was no New Testament. Rather, there existed in the eastern part of the Roman Empire a small group of people who had begun worshiping a Jewish healer and teacher as divine. It is this historical moment to which we turn in this course. We will study the people, events, and texts of the first and second centuries that shaped a small Jewish movement into the religion now known as Christianity, using as our main evidence the letters and stories of the New Testament. (Winter 2020, Professor Laura Dingeldein) | ||||
REL 230-20 | Introduction to Judaism | Wimpfheimer | MWF 9:00-9:50am | |
REL 230-20 Introduction to JudaismThis course attempts to answer the questions "What is Judaism?" and "Who is a Jew?" by surveying the broad arc of Jewish history, reviewing the practices and beliefs that have defined and continue to define Judaism as a religion, sampling the vast treasure of Jewish literatures, and analyzing the unique social conditions that have made the cultural experience of Jewishness so significant. The class will employ a historical structure to trace the evolutions of Jewish literature, religion, and culture through the ages. (Winter 2020, Professor Barry Wimpfheimer) | ||||
REL 265-20 / HIS 200-24 | American Religious History from WWII to Present (RLP) | Perry | MW 11-12:20pm | |
REL 265-20 / HIS 200-24 American Religious History from WWII to Present (RLP)Religion and the making of contem-porary America, including Cold War religion, the “Black Gods” of the Great Migration, the rise of the Christian Right, and modern American Catholicism and Judaism. Counts towards Religion, Law and Politics (RLP) major concentration. (Winter 2020, Larry Perry) | ||||
REL 301-20 / ASIAN_LG 360-21 | Hindu Epics: Mahābhārata | McClish | M 2-4:50pm | |
REL 301-20 / ASIAN_LG 360-21 Hindu Epics: MahābhārataThe Mahābhārata is an epic of ancient India that tells the story of a cataclysmic war between two sets of cousins, a war that eventually came to involve all the peoples of earth and gods in heaven. Interwoven among the main narrative are myriad shorter tales and religious teachings, so that the Mahābhārata represents a kind of encyclopedia of classical Hinduism. For over two thousand years, the Mahābhārata has continued to entertain and edify audiences as one of the best-known and most-beloved of Hindu sacred texts. As a class we will read an abridged version of the text in translation. Graduate students may elect to read portions in the original Sanskrit. Our engagement with the text will focus on immersing ourselves in its story-world and thinking about narrative as a form of scripture: what are the basic aspects of the human condition? how are we to make our way in the world? from where do we derive our sense of purpose? how are stories especially good at accommodating complex perspectives of the cosmos and the human condition? what role do entertainment and enjoyment play in edification from scripture? how does ancient Hinduism appear through the lens of the text? (Winter 2020, Professor Mark McClish) | ||||
REL 316-20 / ASIAN_LG 300-20 | Religion and the Body in China (RHM, RSG) | Buckelew | TTH 2:00-3:20pm | |
REL 316-20 / ASIAN_LG 300-20 Religion and the Body in China (RHM, RSG)This seminar explores the place of the body in Chinese religion, from the ancient period to the present day. In the course of this exploration, we seek to challenge our presuppositions about a seemingly simple question: what is “the body,” and how do we know? We open by considering themes of dying and the afterlife, food and drink, health and medicine, gender and family. We then turn to Daoist traditions of visual culture that envision the human body as intimately connected with the cosmos and picture the body’s interior as a miniature landscape populated by a pantheon of gods. We read ghost stories and analyze the complex history of footbinding. Finally, we conclude with two case studies of religion and the body in contemporary China, one situated on the southwestern periphery, the other in the capital city of Beijing. Throughout the quarter, we investigate how the body has mediated relationships between Buddhist, Daoist, and popular religious traditions. By the course’s end, students will gain key resources for understanding historical and contemporary Chinese culture, and new perspectives on what it means to be religious and embodied. *Counts towards Religion, Health and Medicine (RHM) and Religion, Sexuality and Gender (RSG) major concentrations. (Winter 2020, Professor Kevin Buckelew) | ||||
REL 339-21 / AMER_ST 310-3 | American Judaism | Sufrin | TTH 9:30-10:50am | |
REL 339-21 / AMER_ST 310-3 American JudaismAs a nation of immigrants committed by the Bill of Rights to freedom of religion, the United States of America offered Jews both a unique setting in which to live and work and a unique setting in which to worship and understand their God and observe the customs of their religion. In this course, we will examine the evolution of American Judaism from the colonial period through to the present day. Using a variety of perspectives, we will trace shifts in the situation of Jews in America and corresponding changes in the way(s) Jews have practiced and understood their religious traditions. Emphasis will be placed on critical understanding of theology and cultural materials such as short stories,films and music as well as other primary documents. (Winter 2020, Professor Claire Sufrin) | ||||
REL 369-24 / AF_AM_ST 380-0-22 | Black Religious Thought (RLP) | Perry | MW 3:30-4:50pm | |
REL 369-24 / AF_AM_ST 380-0-22 Black Religious Thought (RLP)The aim of the African American Religious Thought course is to offer students a chance to delve deeply into the ways in which black intellectuals from Frederick Douglass to Delores Williams have thought about religion and race in America. Here, students get a grasp of both the primary and secondary sources of African American Intellectual-Religious history, engaging monographs on the subject and major figures in historical moments. Students will leave with an understanding of how African American Intellectuals engaged religious and political matters during chattel slavery, the reconstruction, the Great Depression, the Civil Rights Movement, Black Power Era, and the Black Lives Matter Movement. ( Winter 2020, Professor Larry Perry) | ||||
REL 471-20 / HIST 405-30 / GNDR_ST 490-22 | Graduate Seminar: Embodiment/Materility/Affect | Molina | F 11:00-1:30pm | |
REL 471-20 / HIST 405-30 / GNDR_ST 490-22 Graduate Seminar: Embodiment/Materility/AffectThis seminar explores theoretical approaches to the problems of embodiment/materiality/affect. One aim of the course is to examine various methodological approaches to embodiment, materiality and affect, making use of sociology and philosophy (Pierre Bourdieu, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Spinoza, Massumi). The second and closely related aim is to situate bodies in time and place, that is, in history. Here we look to the particular circumstances that shaped the manner in which historical actors experienced their bodies in the Christian west (Peter Brown, Caroline Bynum, Mary Carruthers, Michel de Certeau, Michel Foucault). Ultimately, we will be examining theoretical tools while we put them to work. The goal: how to use these thinkers to write more dynamic, creative, interesting scholarship? (Winter 2020, Professor Michelle Molina) | ||||
REL 481-2-20 | Graduate Seminar: Theories of Religion | Ingram | W 10-1:00pm | |
REL 481-2-20 Graduate Seminar: Theories of ReligionHistories of ‘Religion’: Focusing on recent monographs in the field, this course aims to provide a genealogy of the category of religion itself as it was constituted within Euro-American intellectual and social history. It gives particular attention to ways that the category migrated within, and was mediated by, colonial and imperial networks (with a particular focus on Asia). It ends with an overview of recent debates about secularity as a discourse that attempts to draw boundaries between ‘religion’ and not-religion (‘culture’, ‘politics’, ‘superstition’, and so on), and of ways that the category of religion was/remains imbricated in notions of race. (Winter 2020, Professor Brannon Ingram) |