Fall 2021 Class Schedule
Fall 2021 Course PostersCourse | Title | Instructor | Day/Time | |
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REL 101-6-20 | First-Year Seminar: When did people first become Christian? | Chalmers | MW 2:00-3:20pm | |
REL 101-6-20 First-Year Seminar: When did people first become Christian?We take the existence of Christianity for granted, but it hasn’t always been there. And, for that matter, many people who we might describe as Christian didn’t call themselves “Christian” at all. In this seminar, we explore one of the most pivotal moments in world history: the generation of a religious identity that would grow into the world’s largest religion. When did people first start calling themselves Christian, and what alternative history of Christianity does that help us to write? (Fall 2021, Professor Matthew Chalmers) | ||||
REL 172-20 | Introduction to Religion, Media, and Culture | Taylor | TTh 2:00-3:20pm | |
REL 172-20 Introduction to Religion, Media, and CultureDive into one of today’s most exciting and rapidly growing areas of scholarship – the intriguing entanglements of religion and media in society and culture. This course draws from an array of sources, such as television, film, and radio, digital gaming worlds, billboards, advertisements and media campaigns, popular music, streaming video, social media, and even tattoos, body art, and graffiti. Study media while getting to make your own media for course projects! (Fall 2021, Professor Sarah Taylor) | ||||
REL 220-20 | Introduction to Hebrew Bible | Wimpfheimer | TTh 9:30-10:50am | |
REL 220-20 Introduction to Hebrew Bible | ||||
REL 230-20 | Introduction to Judaism | Sufrin | MW 9:30-10:50am | |
REL 230-20 Introduction to Judaism | ||||
REL 318-20 / ASIAN_LG 290-20 | East Asian Religious Classics | Terrone | MW 2:00-3:20pm | |
REL 318-20 / ASIAN_LG 290-20 East Asian Religious Classics | ||||
REL 318-21 / ASIAN_LG 390-20 | Buddhist Literature in Translation | Terrone | TTH 3:30-4:50pm | |
REL 318-21 / ASIAN_LG 390-20 Buddhist Literature in Translation | ||||
REL 349-20 | Blasphemy | Chalmers | MW 11:00-12:20pm | |
REL 349-20 Blasphemy | ||||
REL 360-20 / AF_AM 315-20 | The Black and Diasporic Experience - A Religious Interpretation: | Greene-Hayes | TTh 11:00-12:20pm | |
REL 360-20 / AF_AM 315-20 The Black and Diasporic Experience - A Religious Interpretation:What is the relationship between Black Diaspora and Religion? The categories of religion and race emerge within the encounter between Europeans and Africans in New World conquest and enslavement. This suggests geography, conflict, and the entanglement and or emergence of cultures offer a story of religion in spatial, relational and temporal ways. This course will trace religion as a mapping of space, a motion of time and a making sense of encounter of Black movement. Black Diaspora, a religious interpretation will therefore examine key words, or themes, such as: SOUL, SPIRIT, AFRICA, ABOLITION, BLACK, MUSIC and more in a multi-sensory exploration of sound, sight, texts, tastes, ritual, resistance and more. This course will use readings, music, visual art and videos. | ||||
REL 375-20 | Foundations of Christian Thought | Kieckhefer | MWF 1-1:50pm | |
REL 375-20 Foundations of Christian ThoughtThis course will examine the central issues in premodern Christian thought. We will begin with two works that show Christian thinkers struggling with theological issues that arise largely from their own experience: St. Augustine's Confessions and Julian of Norwich's Showings. Then we will examine interpretations of God and Christ as set forth by Eastern and Western theologians. (Fall 2021, Professor Richard Keickhefer)
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REL 379-20 | Science Fiction and Social Justice (RLP, RSG) | King | MW 12:30-1:50pm | |
REL 379-20 Science Fiction and Social Justice (RLP, RSG)This course will further examine how artists and activists have understood religion as both impediment and partner to social justice work, while alternatively embracing, subverting, and defying religious authority. We will attend to how religious myths and imagery are sampled and remixed by science fiction authors to plot an alternative course for history. *Counts towards Religion, Law and Politics (RLP) and Religion, Sexuality and Gender (RSG) major concentrations. (Fall 2021, Ashley King) | ||||
REL 386-21 / HIST 292-20 | Witches, Heretics, and Demons: The Inquisition in the New World | RamÃrez | TTH 3:30-4:50pm | |
REL 386-21 / HIST 292-20 Witches, Heretics, and Demons: The Inquisition in the New World | ||||
REL 471-21 | Graduate Seminar: The Study of Religion as Vocation | Orsi | M 6:00-9:00pm | |
REL 471-21 Graduate Seminar: The Study of Religion as VocationThe Study of Religion as Vocation This seminar addresses the question of what it means to be a scholar of religion(s)—as opposed, or in addition, to being a scholar of Catholicism, for instance, or Islam, or Judaism, or US religions, or queer religion, etc.—in the contemporary academic and social context. What habits of mind and heart ought/might the scholar of religion cultivate? How are these habits best nourished? Beginning with an old and out-of-date, but learned and thorough, history of the discipline, Sharpe’s Comparative Religion: A History (selections), we will read excerpts from texts that proved essential in the making of the contemporary study of religion. The point is not to develop a genealogy, let alone a history (although what this would be like might be one of our topics), but a kind of exigent dialogue across generations. The whole seminar will be haunted by planetary climate crisis, and we will end with a reading of Ghosh’s The Great Derangement in order to consider how we might not only avoid derangement, but enlarge our vocation in response to it. In advance of our first meeting, students are asked to read Max Weber, “The Scholar’s Work.” (Fall 2021, Professor Robert Orsi)
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REL 473-20 | Graduate Seminar: Buddhism in South Asia | McClish | T 2:00-4:50pm | |
REL 473-20 Graduate Seminar: Buddhism in South AsiaA survey of Buddhism in South Asia from the time of the Buddha to the 12th century CE. This course will explore the cultural and social history of the Buddhist traditions as well Buddhist doctrine and practice from the time of the Buddha until the decline of Buddhism in India. We will also look at the transmission of Buddhism to Sri Lanka, Central Asia, and Southeast Asia. (Fall 2021, Professor Mark McClish) | ||||
ENVR_POL 390-25 | Land, Identity and the Sacred: American Indian Religious and Sacred Sites | Suzukovich III | TTH 3:30-4:50pm | |
ENVR_POL 390-25 Land, Identity and the Sacred: American Indian Religious and Sacred SitesThis class focuses on a cross section of religion, law, cultural preservation, land management, and ethno-ecology. We will focus on Native American sacred sites and cultural landscapes and their relationships to land, ceremony, history, and tribal/ethnic identity. Central to the class will be a focus on the sacred aspects of tribal identity and the role that landscape plays in the creation and maintenance of these identities. The class will cover laws pertaining to religious freedoms and how they are applied to Native and non-Native contexts throughout U.S. history, along with the histories and philosophies that have, and still influences these polices. The class will cover both Federal and Tribal management of sacred sites, ceremonial sites, and religious/spiritual traditions. Important to this discuss, will be the role of oral history in the preservation of culture and relationships to landscapes and how it has/is being utilized the U.S. legal system pertaining to Native American Tribes. The role of treaties and the conflicts that arise between Tribal/U.S. government to government relations and responsibilities will also be covered. (Fall 2021, Dr. Eli Suzukovich III) |