Winter 2023 Class Schedule
Winter 2023 Course PostersCourse | Title | Instructor | Day/Time | |
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REL 101-6-21 | First Year Seminar: The American Border: Politics, Policy, Theology | Hurd | MW 11-12:20pm | |
REL 101-6-21 First Year Seminar: The American Border: Politics, Policy, Theology(Winter 2023, Professor Elizabeth Shakman Hurd) | ||||
REL 170-20 | Introduction to Religion | Molina | TTH 2-3:20pm | |
REL 170-20 Introduction to Religion(Winter 2023, Professor Michelle Molina) | ||||
REL 200-20 | Introduction to Hinduism | McClish | TTH 11-12:20pm | |
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. | ||||
REL 240-20 | Introduction to Christianity | Helmer | MW 9:30-10:50am | |
REL 240-20 Introduction to ChristianityThis course approaches the Christian religion through the lens of its central act of communal worship, the Mass, specifically as contemporary bass-baritone Davóne Tines has curated and performed it. The practice of Christianity is where we situate our reflections: the liturgical intoning of words that have been chanted for centuries: kyrie eleison (Lord, have mercy), agnus dei (lamb of God), credo (Creed), sanctus (Holy, holy, holy), and benedictus (benediction). Where these words come from, how they are put together, and why they are arranged in a particular order are questions we explore in order to work out their meaning. Topics addressed will be how Christians interpret the Bible, how they make claims about God in relation to self and world, and how ideas about Christianity have changed (while remaining recognizable as a tradition) in different cultural settings. Readings are chosen from the inheritances—past and present—of western Christianity. | ||||
REL 250-20 / MENA 290-5-20 | Introduction to Islam | Ingram | TTH 9:30-10:50am | |
REL 250-20 / MENA 290-5-20 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). | ||||
REL 264-20 / HIS 200-22 | American Religious History from 1865 to the Great Depression | Orsi | MW 12:30-1:50pm | |
REL 264-20 / HIS 200-22 American Religious History from 1865 to the Great DepressionThis course examines major developments, movements, controversies, and figures in American religious history from the end of the Civil War, as the nation struggled to make sense of the carnage of war and to apportion responsibility, to the 1930s, when economic crisis strained social bonds and intimate relations and challenged Americans to rethink the nature of public responsibility. Topics include urban religion; religion and changing technologies; African American religion; religion and politics; and the religious practices of immigrants and migrants. | ||||
REL 305-1-20 | NEW COURSE: Introduction to Textual Languages: Sanskrit 1 | McClish | TTH 2-3:20pm | |
REL 305-1-20 NEW COURSE: Introduction to Textual Languages: Sanskrit 1This course is the first of a two quarter sequence that provides instruction in the Sanskrit language for beginners. No prior knowledge is required. It begins a comprehensive introduction to the Sanskrit language, while engaging students from the beginning in the practice of translation. | ||||
REL 318-21 / ASIAN_LC 300-21 | Religion and Politics in the People's Republic of China (RLP) | Terrone | TTH 11-12:20pm | |
REL 318-21 / ASIAN_LC 300-21 Religion and Politics in the People's Republic of China (RLP)This course will examine the role of religion in post-1980’s China with an emphasis on the political implications of the practice of religion in the People’s Republic of China. Students will read various forms of literature and policy documents to assess the extent to which Marxist theory is central to the interpretation of “religion” in Communist China. Primary sources will include Chinese constitutional articles, white papers, and editorials in English translation. Secondary sources will cover a wide range of interpretations and perspectives on the position of religious institutions and religious practices in the PRC. The first part of this course will investigate the expression of religiosity under Communism in China; the rehabilitation of Confucian values; the constitutional protection of religion and religious belief in China; the relationship between ethnicity and religious policies; the Sinicization of religion; and the administration of the five officially accepted religious traditions in the People’s Republic of China (Catholicism, Protestantism, Buddhism, Daoism, and Islam). The second part of the course will focus on the recent cases related to the Muslim Uyghurs of Xinjiang and the Tibetan Buddhists of Western China. The class will explore some of the most controversial issues related to these two ethnic minorities including terrorism, religious violence, nationalism, assimilation, foreign influence, and soft power. The course format will consist of both lectures and discussions, during which students will be encouraged to exercise critical thinking and lead in-class presentations. Students will analyze various types of documents, critically evaluate content and concepts, and endeavor to synthesize the information and communicate it effectively and thoroughly.Counts towards Religion, Law, and Politics (RLP) major concentration. | ||||
REL 318-23 / ASIAN_LC 390-22 | Fate, Fortune, and Karma in East Asia | Buckelew | MW 11-12:20pm | |
REL 318-23 / ASIAN_LC 390-22 Fate, Fortune, and Karma in East AsiaAre our actions free or fated? What larger forces shape the choices we make? To what do we owe our successes, and what is to blame for our mistakes? In East Asian religions, such questions have been answered with reference to a variety of different concepts of fate, fortune, and karma. These concepts shape not only how people have viewed the world, but also how they have made their way through life. This class focuses on religious approaches to questions of destiny in premodern East Asia. We begin by studying Indian Buddhist ideas of karma and early Chinese notions of fate and fortune preceding Buddhism's arrival in China, then turn to the ways people in China and Japan negotiated these various concepts over the many centuries following the arrival of Buddhism. In the end, we discover important throughlines amid the diversity of religious responses to the problem of destiny in East Asian history. | ||||
REL 319-20 / ASIAN_LC 390-23 | Chan/Zen Buddhism | Buckelew | MW 3:30-4:50pm | |
REL 319-20 / ASIAN_LC 390-23 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. | ||||
REL 319-21 / ASIAN_LC 390-20 | Buddhism and Violence (RLP) | Terrone | TTH 3:30-4:50pm | |
REL 319-21 / ASIAN_LC 390-20 Buddhism and Violence (RLP)(Winter 2023, Professor Antonio Terrone) Some of the provocative questions that this course asks include: Why and how is religion involved in politics? Is Buddhism a pacifist religion? How does religion rationalize violence? How can some Buddhist leaders embrace terror as a political tool? Are the recent practices of self-immolation in Tibet acts of violence? Can non-violence be violent? Counts toward Religion, Law, and Politics (RLP) religious studies major concentration. | ||||
REL 349-20 | Medicine, Miracles, and Magic: Healthcare in the Middle Ages (RHM) | Stewart | MW 3:30-4:50pm | |
REL 349-20 Medicine, Miracles, and Magic: Healthcare in the Middle Ages (RHM)Today, religion and science are often regarded as separate spheres of knowledge and practice, but was this always the case? In this class, we will explore the overlapping uses of medicine, miracles, and magic in premodern healthcare. We will ask what kinds of people were able to practice medicine (priests? physicians? nuns? magicians?), why a person’s barber was also their surgeon, how the dead supported the health of the living, and why rituals like confession could treat stomach aches and other ailments. We will learn what a vial of urine could tell a medieval physician about a patient’s habits, consider how an individual’s astrological sign influenced their treatment plan, and discuss what an excess of garlic in a person’s diet might tell us about the moral state of their spirit. By the end of this course, students will be able to identify and analyze the complex, nuanced systems that medieval people used to theorize the body and its relationship to the soul, and will be able to articulate how physical, spiritual, and even supernatural medicines were often combined to treat both. As we study the nuances of premodern medicine, we will also work to rethink the relationship between religion and science in our own world, and consider whether and where our modern healthcare practices align with the past as much as they depart from it. Counts toward Religion, Health, and Medicine (RHM) major concentration. | ||||
REL 374-20 / AF_AM_ST 380-21 | Soul Beauty: Religion and Black Expressive Cultures | Millner | TTH 11-12:20pm | |
REL 374-20 / AF_AM_ST 380-21 Soul Beauty: Religion and Black Expressive CulturesW. E. B. Du Bois in his text "The Souls of Black Folks" states, "The innate love of harmony and beauty that set the ruder souls of his people a-dancing, a-singing, and a-laughing raised but confusion and doubt in the soul of the black artist; for the beauty revealed to him was the soul-beauty of a race which his larger audience despised, and he could not articulate the message of another people." This course examines how religion becomes the source language and practices for Black artists to express what it means to be Black in the Americas. Primary text for course is "Spirit in the Dark: A Religious History of Racial Aesthetics," by Josef Sorett. Additional materials include Katherine Dunham, Barbara McTeer, Toni Morrison, Beyoncé, and Kendrick Lamar among others. Course evaluation based on Canvas discussion posts, group facilitation, a short art review, and a final webpage project. | ||||
REL 379-22 / HIST 395-30 / HUM 325-5 / LATIN_AM 391-22 | Refugees/Migration/ Exile: A workshop in digital visual story-telling (RLP, RSG) | Molina | W 2-4:30pm | |
REL 379-22 / HIST 395-30 / HUM 325-5 / LATIN_AM 391-22 Refugees/Migration/ Exile: A workshop in digital visual story-telling (RLP, RSG)(Winter 2023, Professor Michelle Molina) In this course, students will be asked to begin with a case study among the many refugee and migration crises that have dominated the news cycle in recent years. In developing individual research projects, we will foreground different methodological approaches: 1) To move beyond journalism, we will conduct primary and secondary historical research to understand the complex historical roots of the particular case study). 2) We will analyze and practice forms of ethnographic writing to help students better situate and describe the lived experience of migration and exile, both past and present. 3) We will also pay attention to various forms of media, whether print culture, sound, or visual media, to interrogate but also experiment with contemporary modes of narrating and conveying human experience in the digital age. Students are required to petition for permission to enroll in the class. Your brief statement should include: Your name, your major(s), one short paragraph on the reason why you have an interest in honing your research skills in the direction of the digital humanities, and second short paragraph on a topic about migration and exile that motivates your desire to do further research on the topic. Attach a recent news item (article or video) about the topic that drives your interests. This will help me organize our first sessions in Winter Quarter. Our work in class will be collaborative, thus a key prerequisite is that you are mature and self-motivated. You do not need to have prior research experience, but you need to demonstrate a desire to dig into your topic and hone your ability to write deeply informed, rigorous, and nuanced arguments and to think about creative ways to bring that rigorous detail to visual story-telling. *Counts towards Religion, Law and Politics (RLP) and Religion, Sexuality and Gender (RSG) major concentrations. | ||||
REL 379-23 / GNDR_ST 361-22 | Science Fiction and Social Justice (RLP, RSG) | King | MW 2-3:20pm | |
REL 379-23 / GNDR_ST 361-22 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. 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. | ||||
REL 379-24 | Religion and Magic (RHM) | Kieckhefer | MW 2-3:20pm | |
REL 379-24 Religion and Magic (RHM)Contrary to what many assume, magic and religion are not binary opposites. Rather, magic often draws upon the belief systems, the rituals, even the structures of authority provided by religion. Frequently it meets disapproval from others in the religious tradition, but not always. If magic in many of its forms is integrally linked to religion, however, we still have to examine how the two are connected, how a particular form of magic relates to a specific religious tradition, how it challenges what people believe, how it can both subvert and be coopted by authority, and how it serves people's perceived needs differently from other religious practices. Counts toward Religion, Health, and Medicine (RHM) major concentration. | ||||
REL 460-20 | Graduate Seminar: Topics in Christianity: Medieval Women Writers | Newman | M 2-5PM | |
REL 460-20 Graduate Seminar: Topics in Christianity: Medieval Women WritersRequirements: regular attendance and participation; one oral presentation (10 min.) based on a short paper; term paper of 12-15 pp., with a bibliography of at least 10 items. | ||||
REL 468-20 / GERMAN 408-1 | Graduate Seminar: Critical Theory and Religion | Orsi / Helmer | TU 3:30-6:00pm | |
REL 468-20 / GERMAN 408-1 Graduate Seminar: Critical Theory and Religion(Winter 2023, Professor Robert Orsi and Professor Christine Helmer) | ||||
REL 481-1-20 | Graduate Seminar: Classical Theories of Religion | Ingram | W 3-5:30pm | |
REL 481-1-20 Graduate Seminar: Classical Theories of Religion(Winter 2023, Brannon Ingram)
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REL 482-21 / GENDER_ST 490-23 | Graduate Level: Feminist Theory and the Study of Religion | Jacoby | M 2-4:30pm | |
REL 482-21 / GENDER_ST 490-23 Graduate Level: Feminist Theory and the Study of Religion(Winter 2023, Prof. Sarah Jacoby) |