Fall 2020 Class Schedule
Fall Course DescriptionsCourse | Title | Instructor | Day/Time | |
---|---|---|---|---|
REL 101-6-20 | First-Year Seminar: Islamophobia | Ingram | TTH 2:40-4:00pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 101-6-20 First-Year Seminar: 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. (Fall 2020, Professor Brannon Ingram) | ||||
REL 101-6-21 | First-Year Seminar: Paying Attention | Buckelew | MW 2:40-4:00pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 101-6-21 First-Year Seminar: Paying AttentionWhat does it mean to “pay attention”? What is the history of attention as a concept, and what is at stake when we talk about paying attention? What are the ethical implications of attention and distraction? How have economic conditions, social norms, religious practices, and technological change helped shape ideas about attention and distraction that inform our lives today? In the age of the "attention economy"—when digital technology is blamed for giving rise to a culture of distraction, and collaborations between neuroscientists and Buddhist meditators are credited with heralding the attentional key to happiness—this seminar provides an opportunity to reflect on attention as a key term in history and contemporary life. (Fall 2020, Professor Kevin Buckelew) | ||||
REL 200-20 | Introduction to Hinduism | McClish | remote/asynchronous | |
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. (Fall 2020, Professor Mark McClish) | ||||
REL 220-20 | Introduction to Hebrew Bible | Wimpfheimer | MW 9:40-11:00am remote/synchronous | |
REL 220-20 Introduction to Hebrew BibleThere is no understating the significance of the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament in Western Culture. The Bible is a text that has been repeatedly turned to for spiritual guidance, for explanations of mankind's origins and as the basis of both classical art and contemporary cinema. English idiom is peppered with phrases that originate in the Hebrew Bible and many a modern political clash can be understood as a conflict over what the Bible's messages and their implications. This course introduces students to the Hebrew Bible by reading sections of most of the Bible's books. But reading is itself a complicated enterprise. The Bible has been put to many different uses; even within the world of academic scholarship, the Bible is sometimes a source of history, sometimes a religious manual, sometimes a primitive legal code and sometimes a work of classical literature. This course will introduce students to the various challenges that present themselves within the study of the Hebrew Bible and the varied approaches scholars take when reading the Hebrew Bible. This course is a critical introduction to the Hebrew Bible. (Fall 2020, Professor Barry Wimpfheimer) | ||||
REL 250-20 | Introduction to Islam | Ingram | remote/asynchronous | |
REL 250-20 Introduction to IslamThis course introduces Islam, one of the major religious traditions of world history, developing a framework for understanding how Muslims in varying times and places have engaged with Islamic scripture and the prophetic message of the Prophet Muhammad through diverse sources: theological, philosophical, legal, political, mystical, literary and artistic. While we aim to grasp broad currents and narrative of Islamic history, we will especially concentrate on the origins and development of the religion in its formative period (the prophetic career of the Prophet Muhammad, the Qur'an, Islamic belief and ritual, Islamic law, and popular spirituality) and debates surrounding Islam in the contemporary world (the impact of European colonialism on the Muslim world, the rise of the modern Muslim state, and discourses on gender, politics and violence). (Fall 2020, Professor Brannon Ingram) | ||||
REL 319-22 / ASIAN_LG 390-22 | Chan/Zen Buddhism | Buckelew | MW 9:40-11:00am remote/synchronous | |
REL 319-22 / ASIAN_LG 390-22 Chan/Zen BuddhismThe Chinese Chan (Japanese Zen) Buddhist tradition is one of the most famous branches of Buddhism in the world, but also one of the most widely misunderstood. This course explores the history, literature, philosophy, visual culture, and monastic practices of Chan/Zen Buddhism in East Asia. We pay special attention to the ways Chan/Zen innovated within the Buddhist tradition to establish a uniquely East Asian school of Buddhism. Along the way we consider the changing place of meditation in Chan/Zen practice, closely read Chan/Zen sermons and koans, analyze the role of women and gender in Chan and Zen, and conclude by considering the modern reception of Zen in the West. (Fall 2020, Professor Kevin Buckelew) | ||||
REL 319-23 / ASIAN_LG 390-23 | East Asian Classics | Terrone | TTH 11:20-12:40pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 319-23 / ASIAN_LG 390-23 East Asian ClassicsThis course explores some of the most influential texts of the major East Asian religious and philosophical traditions including Confucianism, Daoism, Chan/Zen Buddhism, and Tibetan Buddhism still prominent in China, Japan, Tibet, and several other Asian societies today. The goal is to understand the significance and the place that they have in East Asian cultures. This course will probe the following questions: What are the preoccupations these texts address? How can humans achieve contentment in the world? What are the moral values these texts instill? Beyond this historical focus, this course will also reflect on ways that these literary and religious texts have been appropriated and adapted in the modern context. Each period dedicated to a specific text will be preceded by an introduction to the tradition it represents offering an historical background together with biographical and/or content outlines. (Fall 2020, Professor Antonio Terrone) | ||||
REL 339-20 / GNDR_ST 390-21 | Gender and Sexuality in Judaism (RSG) | Sufrin | TTH 9:40-11:00am remote/synchronous | |
REL 339-20 / GNDR_ST 390-21 Gender and Sexuality in Judaism (RSG)From its most traditional to its most liberal forms, contemporary Judaism has been deeply influenced by feminism and its call to pay attention to the way gender and sexuality shape and are shaped by religious experiences and ideas. In this course, we will use gender and sexuality as lenses for analyzing the sacred texts, rituals, and theology of Judaism. Along the way, we will also consider how attention to gender and sexuality sheds light on the lives of Jewish men and women of the past and present. The course is divided into three sections, each organized around a central category of Jewish thought: Torah, Israel, and God. The first section, Torah, considers two stories from the biblical book of Genesis: first the creation of the world and then the sisters Leah and Rachel, both married to the patriarch Jacob. How does each story define what it is to be a man or a woman? Where is there room for more subversive readings that might question masculinity or femininity? The second section, Israel, turns our focus to the rituals of Niddah, women's monthly immersion in the mikveh, ritual bath, following menstruation, and brit milah, circumcision. We will consider the origins of these rituals, how they construct notions of gender and personhood, and contemporary views of the practices. How have these rituals been adapted for use by individuals who are transgender? The third section, God, examines examples of feminist and queer Jewish theology and, in particular, the use of marriage as a metaphor for the relationship between God and the Jewish people in biblical, rabbinic, and contemporary contexts. (Fall 2020, Professor Claire Sufrin) | ||||
REL 349-21 | Christianity and the Fall of Rome | Chalmers | MW 11:20-12:40pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 349-21 Christianity and the Fall of Rome | ||||
REL 369-20 / ENV_POL 390-24 | Media, Earth, & Making a Difference | Taylor | F 2:40-5:10pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 369-20 / ENV_POL 390-24 Media, Earth, & Making a DifferenceThe central question of this course is: What Makes a Difference? Analyzing a variety of works of media addressing environmental themes, including works drawn from advertising and marketing, we will consider different types of environmental messaging and attempts to mobilize public moral engagement. (Fall 2020, Professor Sarah Taylor). | ||||
REL 395-20 | Theories of Religion | Taylor | TH 2:40-5:10pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 395-20 Theories of ReligionWhat is "theory"? What does it mean to have a theory about something? How are theories helpful? What do theories do? What is "religion"? How do things get excluded or included in this category? What counts as "religious" and why? Who gets to decide? This course is an introduction to foundational theories of religion and to the history of the construction of the category of "religion" over time. Throughout the term, you will be working on formulating your own theory of religion, which you will articulate and defend in your final seminar paper. In this course, you will gain (as ritual theorist Catherine Bell says) "the skills and tools to make sure that very complicated situations and ideas can be put into words, thereby making it possible to have discussions about issues that can only be discussed if there is language for reflexivity, nuance, counter-evidence, and doubt." In the process, you will be asked to make theory translatable to your peers by actively engaging theoretical concepts in creative ways. (Fall 2020, Professor Sarah Taylor) | ||||
REL 473-20 | Graduate Seminar: Tibetan Buddhist Tantra | Jacoby | W 11:30-2:00pm hybrid/remote&in-person | |
REL 473-20 Graduate Seminar: Tibetan Buddhist TantraNot a how-to course, this class will explore the significance of tantra in Tibetan history, doxography, and scholarship. The course will pay particular attention to placing tantra within its broader religious and social context(s) in Tibet, as well as to a range of issues pertaining to the ethics and politics of translating tantric texts into non-Tibetan cultural and linguistic spaces, such as varying understandings of secrecy, initiation, the guru-disciple relationship, the roles and representations of women, the body as a site of spiritual realization, consort practices, and interpretations of antinomian rhetoric. (Fall 2020, Professor Sarah Jacoby) | ||||
REL 481-1-20 | Graduate Seminar: Theories of Religion | McClish | T 2:40-5:10pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 481-1-20 Graduate Seminar: Theories of ReligionThis course explores key works on religion from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries with a view to understanding the historical foundations of the academic study of religion. We will read works from "canonical" theorists of religion, such as Marx, Durkheim, Weber, and Otto, as well as from contemporaries whose work on religion engaged subjects such as race, indigeneity, and gender. Taking a historical-critical perspective, we will explore the significance of these thinkers in their own time as well as the afterlife of their theories, methods, and frameworks. (Fall 2020, Professor Mark McClish) | ||||
ART_HIST 340-1 | Baroque Art: Italy and Spain, 1600 to 1750 | Escobar | TTH 11:20-12:40pm remote/synchronous | |
ART_HIST 340-1 Baroque Art: Italy and Spain, 1600 to 1750This course surveys painting and sculpture, plus some architecture and urbanism, of the Baroque era (ca. 1580 to 1750) in Italy and Spain. Examining works of art in their social and cultural contexts, the course touches upon major themes of the historical period including the impact of religious reform on the visual arts; the notion of classicism as an aesthetic ideal; the intersection of art and science; and cultural exchange between Italian and Spanish places. Artistic centers such as Rome, Naples, Madrid, and Seville feature prominently, but the course will also consider artistic developments in cities such as Bologna, Milan, Valencia, Mexico City, and Cuzco. Along the way, we will study works by a range of artists including Gianlorenzo Bernini, Caravaggio, Annibale Carracci, Artemisia Gentileschi, Peter Paul Rubens, Jusepe Ribera, Luisa Roldán, Diego Velázquez, and Cristóbal de Villalpando. The course will be taught remotely and synchronously. Pending developments, one class meeting will take place at the Art Institute of Chicago. |