Winter 2021 Class Schedule
Winter 2021 Course DescriptionsCourse | Title | Instructor | Day/Time | |
---|---|---|---|---|
REL 170-20 | Introduction to Religion | Molina | MW 11:00-12:20pm in-person lecture/remote discussions | |
REL 170-20 Introduction to ReligionReligion: we think we recognize it when we see it, and yet it is always changing. How does one study a moving target? In the first weeks of the course, we look back in time to understand how the ideas about religion that are familiar to us today are rooted in history. The emergence of the concept of “religion” as an object of comparison and study grew out of early modern European sectarian violence and colonial overseas expansion. We then turn to study some thinkers from the 19th and 20th centuries who developed theories about the best ways to study religion. These scholars developed and honed the fields of sociology, anthropology, and psychology by testing their methods on case studies about religion. To know this history is to know our present, as well as to understand the methodologies that shape the university curriculum. What do we do with this legacy? Are these methods adequate to understanding religion today? In the second half of this class, we critically evaluate these methods by putting them to work to analyze religion in the world, both past and present. We will focus on how religion moves people. People are rooted in space and place by their religious practices, while simultaneously being moved by religion. As will have become clear in the first half of the course, religion is a moving target because people themselves do not stay the same. Throughout the course, we track the tension between rootedness and mobility by examining three themes: “conversion,” “borderlands,” and “death/afterlives.” *Reserved for first-years, sophomores, and religious studies majors and minors. (Winter 2021, Professor Michelle Molina)
| ||||
REL 210-20 | Introduction to Buddhism | Buckelew | remote/asynchronous | |
REL 210-20 Introduction to BuddhismThis course offers an introduction to Buddhist history, culture, philosophy, and practice. We explore the major doctrinal varieties of Buddhism, from its inception through the rise of the Mahayana and Tantric or Vajrayana traditions. At the same time, we also investigate Buddhist visual, material, and ritual cultures—which offer windows onto aspects of Buddhism as a lived religion not always visible in scriptural sources. In the process we engage themes like the meaning of suffering, the cosmology of cyclical rebirth, the social role of monasticism and its intervention in traditional family structures, the place of women and gender in Buddhism, the relationship between religious ideals and everyday life, the question of self-reliance versus divine assistance, and the power of images and icons. (Winter 2021, Professor Kevin Buckelew) | ||||
REL 221-22 | Introduction to New Testament | Chalmers | MW 9:30am-10:50am remote/synchronous | |
REL 221-22 Introduction to New Testament | ||||
REL 230-22 | Introduction to Judaism | Sufrin | TTH 9:30-10:50am remote/synchronous | |
REL 230-22 Introduction to JudaismAgainst the background of Jewish and world history, we will seek to understand the roots and evolution of Jewish rituals, literature, traditions, and beliefs in different places around the world. Our challenge will be to understand why Judaism changed in the ways that it did while also identifying the continuities that connect Jews across time and space. (Winter 2021, Dr. Claire Sufrin) | ||||
REL 316-21 / ASIAN_LG 300-21 | Religion and the Body in China (RHM, RSG) | Buckelew | TTH 11-12:20pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 316-21 / ASIAN_LG 300-21 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 2021, Professor Kevin Buckelew) | ||||
REL 318-23 / ASIAN_LG 300-23 | Religion and politics in the People's Republic of China (RLP) | Terrone | TTH 2:00-3:20pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 318-23 / ASIAN_LG 300-23 Religion and politics in the People's Republic of China (RLP) | ||||
REL 345-20 | Sainthood | Kieckhefer | MW 2-3:20pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 345-20 SainthoodThe phenomenon of sainthood opens a range of issues: a saint is an exemplar of heroic virtue, and ideas of sainthood reflect the ethical norms of a particular Christian society; a saint is the focus of veneration, and the ways people behave toward saints (going on pilgrimage to venerate their relics, showing reverence to their images, etc.) tells a great deal about official and unofficial Christian piety; a saint is a figurehead for some interest group such as a religious order or a city, and in churches that have a process of canonization this becomes a mirror of ecclesiastical politics. (Winter 2021, Professor Richard Kieckhefer) | ||||
REL 349-22 | How Thin is a Demon? Bodies and Ancient Christianity (RHM) | Chalmers | MW 12:30-1:50pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 349-22 How Thin is a Demon? Bodies and Ancient Christianity (RHM) | ||||
REL 379-23 | Science Fiction and Social Justice (RLP, RSG) | King | MWF 10:00-10:50am remote/synchronous | |
REL 379-23 Science Fiction and Social Justice (RLP, RSG)This course will examine major utopian and dystopian texts and films in relation to social justice issues in the twentieth century and beyond, while following the stories of artists, organizers, and communities that have used speculative world-building to imagine livable, sustainable futures. We will focus on how feminist, anarchist, LGBTQ, and Afrofuturist art and activism have contributed to a substantial critical discourse on the intersections of science, technology, ecology, war, race, gender, sexuality, health, and ability. | ||||
REL 468-20 / GERMAN 408-1 | Graduate Seminar: Critical Theory and Religion | Helmer | M 2:00-4:50pm remote/synchronous | |
REL 468-20 / GERMAN 408-1 Graduate Seminar: Critical Theory and ReligionThis course explores the central place the concept of “religion” hasoccupied in the development of critical theory and, in turn, the rolecritical theory has played in reframing “religion” in modernity and in thecontemporary geopolitical moment. We take up the question, “Is critiquesecular,” as we consider the contributions, potential and actual, of“religion” to social transformation. (Winter 2021, Professor Christine Helmer) | ||||
REL 471-20 / GNDR_ST 490-20 / HIS 492-20 | Graduate Seminar: Embodiment/Materiality/Affect | Molina | TH 3:00-5:50pm hybrid/synchronous, see description | |
REL 471-20 / GNDR_ST 490-20 / HIS 492-20 Graduate Seminar: Embodiment/Materiality/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 2021, Professor Michelle Molina) | ||||
REL 471-21 / POLI_SCI 490-24 | Graduate Seminar: Religion, Race and Global Politics | Hurd | F 9:00-11:50am remote/synchronous | |
REL 471-21 / POLI_SCI 490-24 Graduate Seminar: Religion, Race and Global PoliticsThis seminar is an experiment in studying the intersections of religion, race, and global politics. We discuss how particular understandings of religion and race inform scholarship, shape national and international legal and governmental practice, and contribute to the establishment and maintenance of various social hierarchies and inequalities. Cross-cutting themes include religion and the rise of the nation-state; the politics of religious establishment, law, and freedom; race and the formation of the disciplines of religious studies, international relations and the social sciences more broadly; the formation of modern vocabularies of religious and racial exclusion; and race, indigeneity, and slavery in U.S. American history. Readings are drawn from international politics, religious studies, political theory, law, anthropology, and history. With the support of a curricular linkage program, the International Classroom Partnering Grant, we will be in conversation about the politics of religion and race in transnational perspective with colleagues at Sciences Po (Paris) and The Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies (Geneva). With our global partners we will discuss course themes as well as possibilities and practices for building effective transdisciplinary international research projects and networks. (Winter 2021, Professor Elizabeth Shakman Hurd) |