Course Schedule
RELI 150B1 – Religion and Popular Culture
This course introduces the study of religion and popular culture. It explores how religion is represented in popular cultural forms, and how social conceptions of "religion" and "popular culture" change over time. Students will examine how differing definitions of religion, culture, and taste intersect with historical and contemporary categories of class, gender, ethnicity, and race.
This course introduces the study of religion and popular culture. It explores how religion is represented in popular cultural forms, and how social conceptions of "religion" and "popular culture" change over time. Students will examine how differing definitions of religion, culture, and taste intersect with historical and contemporary categories of class, gender, ethnicity, and race.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Vargas, Daisy
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 51 / 55
RELI 160A1 – Gods, Goddesses, and Demons: Divinity in South Asia
This course is an introduction to multiple concepts of the divine in South Asia. We will explore the different ways that the religious traditions of South Asia understand supernatural beings and forces. In order to do this we will read portions of primary texts in translation, examine iconography, and watch rituals as they unfold. In addition to learning about the South Asia traditions, we will put those conceptions of the divine in conversation with those rooted in a European context, forcing you to learn to think critically about the ways people from different cultures view the world around them.
This course is an introduction to multiple concepts of the divine in South Asia. We will explore the different ways that the religious traditions of South Asia understand supernatural beings and forces. In order to do this we will read portions of primary texts in translation, examine iconography, and watch rituals as they unfold. In addition to learning about the South Asia traditions, we will put those conceptions of the divine in conversation with those rooted in a European context, forcing you to learn to think critically about the ways people from different cultures view the world around them.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Mamtora, Bhakti
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 11:00 AM - 11:50 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 57 / 62
RELI 160D4 – Introduction to World Religions
This course explores the diversity of religions and religious experiences across the globe. Religions to be examined include, but are not limited to, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, as well as indigenous traditions.
This course explores the diversity of religions and religious experiences across the globe. Religions to be examined include, but are not limited to, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, as well as indigenous traditions.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 12:00 PM - 12:50 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 72 / 72
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- Section: 002
- Instructor: Law, Colin
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 50 / 93
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 40 / 100
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 30 / 100
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 40 / 100
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 30 / 100
RELI 203 – Religion and Medicine in the Western Healing Traditions
An examination of the intersection between medicine and healing in western healing traditions, from ancient times to the modern era. Key scientific and humanistic questions will be addressed.
An examination of the intersection between medicine and healing in western healing traditions, from ancient times to the modern era. Key scientific and humanistic questions will be addressed.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Oberman, Hester Elsa
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 59 / 60
RELI 211 – Life After Death in World Religions and Philosophies
This course focuses on one Big Question: "How do afterlife beliefs affect the way we live?" It builds connections among the humanities [Religious Studies and Philosophy], the social sciences [Anthropology, Psychology, and Law], and the natural sciences [Medicine] to explore the ways in which religious afterlife beliefs are approached from multiple disciplinary perspectives. Students will analyze a variety of religious afterlife beliefs through case studies, problem-based assignments, and reading/writing genres from the six disciplinary perspectives in order to tackle the Big Question as it relates to their personal, academic, and/or career aspirations.
This course focuses on one Big Question: "How do afterlife beliefs affect the way we live?" It builds connections among the humanities [Religious Studies and Philosophy], the social sciences [Anthropology, Psychology, and Law], and the natural sciences [Medicine] to explore the ways in which religious afterlife beliefs are approached from multiple disciplinary perspectives. Students will analyze a variety of religious afterlife beliefs through case studies, problem-based assignments, and reading/writing genres from the six disciplinary perspectives in order to tackle the Big Question as it relates to their personal, academic, and/or career aspirations.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Jameson, Alison C
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 296 / 300
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Jameson, Alison C
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 296 / 300
RELI 222 – Introduction to Zen Buddhism
This course is designed to introduce students to the history,teachings,and practice of Zen Buddhism in China,Japan, Korea and the United States. The course will discuss Zen from a variety of perspectives but will center around the question of the meaning of history. Zen is a tradition of Buddhism that claims to have inherited and to pass on, in an unbroken historical transmission from patriarch to patriarch, the living experience of the Buddha's enlightenment. The course will discuss how Zen's conception of its history is related to its identity as a special tradition within Buddhism, as well as its basic teachings on the primacy of enlightenment, the role of practice, the nature of the mind, and the limitations of language.
This course is designed to introduce students to the history,teachings,and practice of Zen Buddhism in China,Japan, Korea and the United States. The course will discuss Zen from a variety of perspectives but will center around the question of the meaning of history. Zen is a tradition of Buddhism that claims to have inherited and to pass on, in an unbroken historical transmission from patriarch to patriarch, the living experience of the Buddha's enlightenment. The course will discuss how Zen's conception of its history is related to its identity as a special tradition within Buddhism, as well as its basic teachings on the primacy of enlightenment, the role of practice, the nature of the mind, and the limitations of language.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Jameson, Alison C
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 38 / 60
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Jameson, Alison C
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 38 / 60
RELI 227 – Religion and Film
This course explores religion and its relationship with visual storytelling culture. We will analyze, explore, and challenge various religious, pop-cultural, ideological, and moral messages as presented in various types of film, from art house cinema to blockbuster movies, and genres ranging from horror to comedy.
This course explores religion and its relationship with visual storytelling culture. We will analyze, explore, and challenge various religious, pop-cultural, ideological, and moral messages as presented in various types of film, from art house cinema to blockbuster movies, and genres ranging from horror to comedy.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Daniels, DeAnna
- Days: Tu
- Time: 03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 44 / 55
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 100 / 100
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 100 / 100
RELI 235 – Religion, Violence, and Terrorism
This course will study critical theories about the role of religion in acts of terrorism and violence. Through the examination of a range of case studies, this course will explore ways in which religion has been the motivation and justification behind violent conflict, aggression, and persecution.
This course will study critical theories about the role of religion in acts of terrorism and violence. Through the examination of a range of case studies, this course will explore ways in which religion has been the motivation and justification behind violent conflict, aggression, and persecution.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 91 / 100
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 91 / 100
RELI 240 – Imagining the Buddha: Images of Buddhism in Asia and the West
What does it mean to imagine the Buddha? This course guides students in narrating the lives of Buddhist images by tracing their creation and movement in Asia as well as in cultural encounters within Europe and the U.S. Today art critics continue to discuss "Buddhist" elements in the work of iconic artists like Georgia O'Keefe and Mark Rothko, Tibetan mandala coloring books are being used for stress relief, and "Zen" aesthetics inform a broad range of fashion and design platforms. This course provides tools for critically reexamining the categories of "East" and "West" within this cultural moment. Through creative processes such as drawing, writing, and conversation, students interact with diverse imagery such as Chinese painted caves, Himalayan esoteric portraits of enlightened reality, and Japanese temple complexes. They interpret Buddhist texts describing the construction of buddha bodies in art, ritual, and in the mind. Students also engage with the work of contemporary performance artists inspired by Buddhist ideals of discipline and impermanence. Reflecting upon these experiences, students uncover how the categories of "East' and "West" have obscured the understanding of Buddhist art, artists, and communities. They document the ways in which power dynamics of colonialism and Orientalism have been integral to making these categories. In response to their findings, students work together to generate a virtual exhibition reimagining images of Buddhism and telling their stories.
What does it mean to imagine the Buddha? This course guides students in narrating the lives of Buddhist images by tracing their creation and movement in Asia as well as in cultural encounters within Europe and the U.S. Today art critics continue to discuss "Buddhist" elements in the work of iconic artists like Georgia O'Keefe and Mark Rothko, Tibetan mandala coloring books are being used for stress relief, and "Zen" aesthetics inform a broad range of fashion and design platforms. This course provides tools for critically reexamining the categories of "East" and "West" within this cultural moment. Through creative processes such as drawing, writing, and conversation, students interact with diverse imagery such as Chinese painted caves, Himalayan esoteric portraits of enlightened reality, and Japanese temple complexes. They interpret Buddhist texts describing the construction of buddha bodies in art, ritual, and in the mind. Students also engage with the work of contemporary performance artists inspired by Buddhist ideals of discipline and impermanence. Reflecting upon these experiences, students uncover how the categories of "East' and "West" have obscured the understanding of Buddhist art, artists, and communities. They document the ways in which power dynamics of colonialism and Orientalism have been integral to making these categories. In response to their findings, students work together to generate a virtual exhibition reimagining images of Buddhism and telling their stories.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Dachille, Rae Erin
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 52 / 72
RELI 277A – History of the Middle East: 600-1453
In this course, students take a humanistic disciplinary perspective to explore the cultural products of the pre-modern Middle East and answer questions about its historical development. Using primary sources in translation and secondary scholarship, students will explore the context of the rise of Islam; the process of conversion and expansion across the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia; the crystallization of Shi'ism and changing notions of religious authority; and the impact of Turkish migrations and Mongol conquests. They will become familiar with major genres of pre-modern Middle Eastern literary, religious, and scientific writings, and use techniques of close reading to answer questions about those texts' ideological positions and contexts.
In this course, students take a humanistic disciplinary perspective to explore the cultural products of the pre-modern Middle East and answer questions about its historical development. Using primary sources in translation and secondary scholarship, students will explore the context of the rise of Islam; the process of conversion and expansion across the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia; the crystallization of Shi'ism and changing notions of religious authority; and the impact of Turkish migrations and Mongol conquests. They will become familiar with major genres of pre-modern Middle Eastern literary, religious, and scientific writings, and use techniques of close reading to answer questions about those texts' ideological positions and contexts.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Kolenda, Nicholas Xavier
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 11:00 AM - 11:50 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 55 / 62
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Lucas, Scott C
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 11:00 AM - 11:50 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 55 / 62
RELI 280 – Introduction to the Bible: New Testament
This course introduces students to the New Testament in light of the contexts in which it was written and compiled, and as a window into reconstructing the world of early Christianity. The course will also examine how various Christian communities have understood the meaning and authority of the New Testament.
This course introduces students to the New Testament in light of the contexts in which it was written and compiled, and as a window into reconstructing the world of early Christianity. The course will also examine how various Christian communities have understood the meaning and authority of the New Testament.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 178 / 300
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 178 / 300
RELI 302 – Ellis Island, 9/11, and Border Walls: Religion and Immigration in the U.S.
This course will explore the central role of religion in shaping constructions of race and ethnicity in U.S. history, especially in light of immigration debates. Since the country's founding, immigrants have expanded ethnic and religious diversity in the United States in the face of powerful anti-immigrant movements. Students will engage with in-depth studies of immigrant communities who shaped the American religious and ethnic landscape, including diverse American expressions of religions such as Roman Catholicism, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Evangelical Protestantism, and Vodou.
This course will explore the central role of religion in shaping constructions of race and ethnicity in U.S. history, especially in light of immigration debates. Since the country's founding, immigrants have expanded ethnic and religious diversity in the United States in the face of powerful anti-immigrant movements. Students will engage with in-depth studies of immigrant communities who shaped the American religious and ethnic landscape, including diverse American expressions of religions such as Roman Catholicism, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Evangelical Protestantism, and Vodou.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Vargas, Daisy
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 17 / 50
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Vargas, Daisy
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 17 / 50
RELI 304 – The Question of God
Study of the question of God from a theological, philosophical, and literary perspective.
Study of the question of God from a theological, philosophical, and literary perspective.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Nava, Alejandro E
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 48 / 50
RELI 305 – Greek and Roman Religion
Religious beliefs and cult practices in ancient Greece and Rome. All readings in English.
Religious beliefs and cult practices in ancient Greece and Rome. All readings in English.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 403 / 400
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 403 / 400
RELI 306 – Christianity in the Greco-Roman World
This course investigates the emergence of Christianity in the first four centuries of the Greco-Roman milieu. Topics may include: the interaction of early Christians with Jews, Romans, and Greeks; as well as differences and debates within the various forms of early Christianity itself.
This course investigates the emergence of Christianity in the first four centuries of the Greco-Roman milieu. Topics may include: the interaction of early Christians with Jews, Romans, and Greeks; as well as differences and debates within the various forms of early Christianity itself.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Friesen, Courtney
- Days: MoWe
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 49 / 60
RELI 316 – Sex and Salvation in Latin America
What do witches in colonial Guatemala, nuns in a Mexican convent, born-again gang members in El Salvador, Catholics seeking in-vitro fertilization in Ecuador, and lesbian practitioners of Candomblé in Brazil have in common? Their experiences tell us something about the complex intersection of sex, gender, and religion in Latin America. This course draws on anthropological methods and scholarship to consider two central questions: (1) How do religious ideologies and institutions shape sexuality and gender in Latin America? (2) How do Latin Americans contest gender norms, patriarchy, and heteronormativity through their religious practices, thus contributing to larger processes of social change? To address these questions, this class focuses on the social scientific study of diverse religious communities in Latin America from the pre-Columbian past to the present.
What do witches in colonial Guatemala, nuns in a Mexican convent, born-again gang members in El Salvador, Catholics seeking in-vitro fertilization in Ecuador, and lesbian practitioners of Candomblé in Brazil have in common? Their experiences tell us something about the complex intersection of sex, gender, and religion in Latin America. This course draws on anthropological methods and scholarship to consider two central questions: (1) How do religious ideologies and institutions shape sexuality and gender in Latin America? (2) How do Latin Americans contest gender norms, patriarchy, and heteronormativity through their religious practices, thus contributing to larger processes of social change? To address these questions, this class focuses on the social scientific study of diverse religious communities in Latin America from the pre-Columbian past to the present.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: O'Brien, Kathleen C
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 24 / 30
RELI 321 – Women in Judaism
This course examines religion and gender through the study of women in Judaism. How do scholars construct a history of women in ancient Judaism when Jewish sacred texts are written by and for men? How have modern Jewish women accommodated feminist ideals without undermining the authority of the established tradition? What impact has the feminist movement had on Jewish communal institutions in the United States and Israel? In this course, we explore these questions and others by examining the influence Jewish religious beliefs and practices have played in the formation of Jewish women's identities, image and their understanding of power and authority. Students study the role of women in the formation of Judaism and Jewish society as a culturally constructed and historically changing category through archaeology, biblical studies, rabbinics, theology, folklore, social and political movements.
This course examines religion and gender through the study of women in Judaism. How do scholars construct a history of women in ancient Judaism when Jewish sacred texts are written by and for men? How have modern Jewish women accommodated feminist ideals without undermining the authority of the established tradition? What impact has the feminist movement had on Jewish communal institutions in the United States and Israel? In this course, we explore these questions and others by examining the influence Jewish religious beliefs and practices have played in the formation of Jewish women's identities, image and their understanding of power and authority. Students study the role of women in the formation of Judaism and Jewish society as a culturally constructed and historically changing category through archaeology, biblical studies, rabbinics, theology, folklore, social and political movements.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Kaye, Deborah A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 43 / 45
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Kaye, Deborah A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 43 / 45
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- Section: 401
- Instructor: Kaye, Deborah A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 43 / 45
RELI 332 – The Holocaust: Witnesses and Representations
This course explores Holocaust memory and representation in Europe, Israel and the United States through various media and genres from diaries, memoirs and oral testimonies to Yiddish and Hebrew poetry, second generation graphic novels and film to memorial gardens and resistance monuments, archives and museums. We engage with some of the most fundamental questions of memory and Holocaust trauma from multiple perspectives and contexts. Is it possible to communicate the horrors of the concentration camp? Who has the right to speak about the Holocaust? How does "Jewish" memory of the Holocaust shape our understanding of the history of Nazism, genocide, World War II and its aftermath? In what ways, has Holocaust memory become associated with movements for historical justice and human rights, in particular, in the United States?
This course explores Holocaust memory and representation in Europe, Israel and the United States through various media and genres from diaries, memoirs and oral testimonies to Yiddish and Hebrew poetry, second generation graphic novels and film to memorial gardens and resistance monuments, archives and museums. We engage with some of the most fundamental questions of memory and Holocaust trauma from multiple perspectives and contexts. Is it possible to communicate the horrors of the concentration camp? Who has the right to speak about the Holocaust? How does "Jewish" memory of the Holocaust shape our understanding of the history of Nazism, genocide, World War II and its aftermath? In what ways, has Holocaust memory become associated with movements for historical justice and human rights, in particular, in the United States?
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 41 / 40
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 41 / 40
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- Section: 401
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 41 / 40
RELI 335 – Rap, Culture and God
This course is a study of popular culture and religion in African-American and Latin@ communities, with a focus on the place of rap music in the cultural identity of these traditions. The class will begin with a study of some major themes in cultural studies concerning identity, class, race, and gender in addition to a study of the role of religion in Black and Latin@ communities. We will consider the approaches and self-understandings of identity and culture in rap music with special attention to the voices of protest, resistance, and spirituality among rap artists.
This course is a study of popular culture and religion in African-American and Latin@ communities, with a focus on the place of rap music in the cultural identity of these traditions. The class will begin with a study of some major themes in cultural studies concerning identity, class, race, and gender in addition to a study of the role of religion in Black and Latin@ communities. We will consider the approaches and self-understandings of identity and culture in rap music with special attention to the voices of protest, resistance, and spirituality among rap artists.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Nava, Alejandro E
- Days: Tu
- Time: 12:30 PM - 01:45 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 319 / 318
RELI 336 – Spirituality, Psychology, and the Mind
This course is a survey of psychological theory and research investigating religious beliefs, experiences, and practices.
This course is a survey of psychological theory and research investigating religious beliefs, experiences, and practices.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Oberman, Hester Elsa
- Days: We
- Time: 03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 162 / 200
RELI 359 – Buddhism and Healing
Is Buddhism a tradition of healing? In what ways has Buddhism been involved in reviving, sustaining, and curing human individuals? This course explores relationships and encounters between Buddhism and the domains of religion, science, and medicine. It considers historical relationships between Buddhism and traditional medicine in Asia as well as contemporary Western discourses involving Buddhism in popular culture, psychology, and spirituality. Finally, it invites a critical approach to the current dialogue between Buddhism and science. In the process, it reveals hidden assumptions behind commodifying `mindfulness' and the quest to document the therapeutic impact of meditation upon health, happiness, and success in the modern age. Students will have the opportunity to apply the ideas they have learned through analysis of relevant initiatives at the U of A such as the Neuropsychology, Emotion, and Thought Lab and the Center for Compassion Studies as well as of broader Tucson community events like the Gem Show.
Is Buddhism a tradition of healing? In what ways has Buddhism been involved in reviving, sustaining, and curing human individuals? This course explores relationships and encounters between Buddhism and the domains of religion, science, and medicine. It considers historical relationships between Buddhism and traditional medicine in Asia as well as contemporary Western discourses involving Buddhism in popular culture, psychology, and spirituality. Finally, it invites a critical approach to the current dialogue between Buddhism and science. In the process, it reveals hidden assumptions behind commodifying `mindfulness' and the quest to document the therapeutic impact of meditation upon health, happiness, and success in the modern age. Students will have the opportunity to apply the ideas they have learned through analysis of relevant initiatives at the U of A such as the Neuropsychology, Emotion, and Thought Lab and the Center for Compassion Studies as well as of broader Tucson community events like the Gem Show.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Dachille, Rae Erin
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 57 / 60
RELI 367 – Yoga
In this course we examine the philosophy, practice, historical roots, and development of yoga. Students are asked to use and reflect on the disciplinary perspectives of the historian to examine premodern primary texts (in English translation) that provide a window into the origins of yoga, as well as the perspectives of the anthropologist and cultural critic to examine contemporary yoga practices. Students will compare and contrast perspectives of Indian yogis and contemporary international yoga influencers in order to understand how the experience of yoga differs across time and culture and how social systems of power and inequality are both subverted and reinforced by yoga and its practitioners.
In this course we examine the philosophy, practice, historical roots, and development of yoga. Students are asked to use and reflect on the disciplinary perspectives of the historian to examine premodern primary texts (in English translation) that provide a window into the origins of yoga, as well as the perspectives of the anthropologist and cultural critic to examine contemporary yoga practices. Students will compare and contrast perspectives of Indian yogis and contemporary international yoga influencers in order to understand how the experience of yoga differs across time and culture and how social systems of power and inequality are both subverted and reinforced by yoga and its practitioners.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Mamtora, Bhakti
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 232 / 236
RELI 372A – Interpreting the Bible (Old Testament): Approaches to Understanding Israelite Religion and Society
The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) is one of the most influential and widely studied texts in the world. For more than two millennia, it has played a central role in shaping Western culture, religion, and ethics. However, the stories, laws, and prophetic writings contained in the Bible are products of a specific time and place--embedded in the ancient Near East, where the Israelite people lived and interacted with other cultures over the course of many centuries. This course explores the contexts in which the Bible was written and compiled, drawing on literary analysis, historical criticism, and the witness of archaeology evidence. Students analyze key topics in Israelite religion and society, including the daily life of men and women, the emergence of monotheism, the role of the priesthood, development of the prophetic tradition, the political formation of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah among others.
The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) is one of the most influential and widely studied texts in the world. For more than two millennia, it has played a central role in shaping Western culture, religion, and ethics. However, the stories, laws, and prophetic writings contained in the Bible are products of a specific time and place--embedded in the ancient Near East, where the Israelite people lived and interacted with other cultures over the course of many centuries. This course explores the contexts in which the Bible was written and compiled, drawing on literary analysis, historical criticism, and the witness of archaeology evidence. Students analyze key topics in Israelite religion and society, including the daily life of men and women, the emergence of monotheism, the role of the priesthood, development of the prophetic tradition, the political formation of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah among others.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Tor, Naomi
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 15 / 40
RELI 377 – History of Witchcraft, Magic, and the Occult
This course surveys the global history and theory of witchcraft and the occult from antiquity to the twentieth century, with a focus on events and practices in the West. We will study various notions of magic and demonology, their intersection with witchcraft trials and witch hunting, the role of religion, shifts in ideas about torture and the law, re-emergence of the occult in 19th-century, the development of Wicca and the cult of the goddess, and persistent concerns over witchcraft in countries such as Angola in the 20th and 21st centuries. We will explore what different societies considered good evidence of the supernatural and how shifting standards of proof and rationality have affected popular understandings of the occult and witchcraft through the centuries. While witchcraft is often associated today with women, we will not focus exclusively on women's experiences. Instead we will investigate the experiences of both sexes with the supernatural and how gender perceptions influenced the construction of ideas about witchcraft. Our examination of the past will be historical in method, but we will also address legal, medical, and anthropological questions in our study. Students will read and interpret original documents and other original sources, learning to understand assumptions about the world that may seem strange to us.
This course surveys the global history and theory of witchcraft and the occult from antiquity to the twentieth century, with a focus on events and practices in the West. We will study various notions of magic and demonology, their intersection with witchcraft trials and witch hunting, the role of religion, shifts in ideas about torture and the law, re-emergence of the occult in 19th-century, the development of Wicca and the cult of the goddess, and persistent concerns over witchcraft in countries such as Angola in the 20th and 21st centuries. We will explore what different societies considered good evidence of the supernatural and how shifting standards of proof and rationality have affected popular understandings of the occult and witchcraft through the centuries. While witchcraft is often associated today with women, we will not focus exclusively on women's experiences. Instead we will investigate the experiences of both sexes with the supernatural and how gender perceptions influenced the construction of ideas about witchcraft. Our examination of the past will be historical in method, but we will also address legal, medical, and anthropological questions in our study. Students will read and interpret original documents and other original sources, learning to understand assumptions about the world that may seem strange to us.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Meyer, Victoria
- Days: Tu
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 10 / 30
- +
- Section: 002
- Instructor: Meyer, Victoria
- Days: Tu
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 10 / 30
RELI 384 – Religion and Conflict in East Asia: Philosophical and Sociological Perspectives
This course examines sociological issues related to the political relationship among East Asian countries, especially during the colonial era (late 19th to the mid- 20th century) within the context of religious ideologies such as Shinto, Confucianism, Christianity, and Buddhism. Religion can be a powerful tool for controlling people, and Japan's colonial movement on Asia beginning in the end of 19th century was no exception. Japan constructed a variety of ideologies based on religious concepts in order to legitimate its imperialist project. Students will learn Japan's political strategy for accomplishing such a process and how Chinese and Korean people and institutions reacted to the challenge they faced in this complex cultural and sociological interaction. All readings are in English.
This course examines sociological issues related to the political relationship among East Asian countries, especially during the colonial era (late 19th to the mid- 20th century) within the context of religious ideologies such as Shinto, Confucianism, Christianity, and Buddhism. Religion can be a powerful tool for controlling people, and Japan's colonial movement on Asia beginning in the end of 19th century was no exception. Japan constructed a variety of ideologies based on religious concepts in order to legitimate its imperialist project. Students will learn Japan's political strategy for accomplishing such a process and how Chinese and Korean people and institutions reacted to the challenge they faced in this complex cultural and sociological interaction. All readings are in English.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Park, Sandra
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 7 / 30
RELI 387 – The History of Anti-Semitism
This course examines various definitions of anti-Semitism and traces the history of anti-Semitism (or "anti-Judaism") from the earliest arguments between Christianizing Jews and Judaizing Christians to the birth of Islam, through the period of Muslim expansion and the Crusades, to the Middle Ages, the Enlightenment, and the Holocaust. It looks at the differences among various types of Christian anti-Semitism, Muslim anti-Semitism, and Jewish anti-Semitism, and concludes with a look at contemporary forms of anti-Semitism.
This course examines various definitions of anti-Semitism and traces the history of anti-Semitism (or "anti-Judaism") from the earliest arguments between Christianizing Jews and Judaizing Christians to the birth of Islam, through the period of Muslim expansion and the Crusades, to the Middle Ages, the Enlightenment, and the Holocaust. It looks at the differences among various types of Christian anti-Semitism, Muslim anti-Semitism, and Jewish anti-Semitism, and concludes with a look at contemporary forms of anti-Semitism.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 35 / 40
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 35 / 40
- +
- Section: 401
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 35 / 40
RELI 387 – The History of Anti-Semitism
Honors Course
This course examines various definitions of anti-Semitism and traces the history of anti-Semitism (or "anti-Judaism") from the earliest arguments between Christianizing Jews and Judaizing Christians to the birth of Islam, through the period of Muslim expansion and the Crusades, to the Middle Ages, the Enlightenment, and the Holocaust. It looks at the differences among various types of Christian anti-Semitism, Muslim anti-Semitism, and Jewish anti-Semitism, and concludes with a look at contemporary forms of anti-Semitism.
This course examines various definitions of anti-Semitism and traces the history of anti-Semitism (or "anti-Judaism") from the earliest arguments between Christianizing Jews and Judaizing Christians to the birth of Islam, through the period of Muslim expansion and the Crusades, to the Middle Ages, the Enlightenment, and the Holocaust. It looks at the differences among various types of Christian anti-Semitism, Muslim anti-Semitism, and Jewish anti-Semitism, and concludes with a look at contemporary forms of anti-Semitism.
- +
- Section: 102
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Oct 16
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 35 / 40
RELI 389 – Middle Eastern Ethnic and Religious Minorities
Overview of ethnic and religious minorities in the contemporary Middle East, study of ethnic and religious diversity and its origin and manifestations in the modern Middle East. Examination of how the concept of religious and ethnic minority has emerged as a key factor in state policies towards minorities as well as the cultural, economic, political, religious, and educational lives of its people.
Overview of ethnic and religious minorities in the contemporary Middle East, study of ethnic and religious diversity and its origin and manifestations in the modern Middle East. Examination of how the concept of religious and ethnic minority has emerged as a key factor in state policies towards minorities as well as the cultural, economic, political, religious, and educational lives of its people.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Abbas, Shabbir Agha
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 25 / 30
RELI 405B – Medieval Europe
Major institutions and trends in Europe from the breakup of the Roman World to the 14th century.
Major institutions and trends in Europe from the breakup of the Roman World to the 14th century.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Milliman, Paul R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 29 / 30
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Milliman, Paul R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 29 / 30
RELI 431 – The Divine Comedy by Dante
This course examines Dante's masterpiece, "The Divine Comedy", the poet's life and other works. The primary focus is on "The Divine Comedy" and its influence on European literature and culture. Other texts will be included.
This course examines Dante's masterpiece, "The Divine Comedy", the poet's life and other works. The primary focus is on "The Divine Comedy" and its influence on European literature and culture. Other texts will be included.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Alfie, Fabian R
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 11:00 AM - 11:50 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 22 / 25
RELI 454 – The Spanish Inquisition
The Inquisition in Spanish, European, & ethnic history: its bureaucracy and procedures; its festivities, its victims, New and Old Christians; and witches. Social, economic, and demographic context.
The Inquisition in Spanish, European, & ethnic history: its bureaucracy and procedures; its festivities, its victims, New and Old Christians; and witches. Social, economic, and demographic context.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 25 / 40
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 25 / 40
- +
- Section: 401
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 25 / 40
RELI 483 – Confucianism: The Classical Period
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Welter, Albert
- Days: Mo
- Time: 03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 14 / 16
RELI 485 – History of Japanese Religions: Ancient
A selective survey of Japanese religious history from earliest times through the 11th century. Topics covered may include prehistoric religions; the development of Shinto; Nara-period state Buddhism; tantric Buddhism in the Heian period; and spirit possession and exorcism.
A selective survey of Japanese religious history from earliest times through the 11th century. Topics covered may include prehistoric religions; the development of Shinto; Nara-period state Buddhism; tantric Buddhism in the Heian period; and spirit possession and exorcism.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Miura, Takashi
- Days: We
- Time: 03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 14 / 15
RELI 491 – Preceptorship
Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of instruction and practice in actual service in a department, program, or discipline. Requires faculty member approval, preceptor application on file with department.
Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of instruction and practice in actual service in a department, program, or discipline. Requires faculty member approval, preceptor application on file with department.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: unassigned
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 0 / 5
- +
- Section: 014
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time: 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 0 / 5
RELI 498H – Honors Thesis
Honors Course
An honors thesis is required of all the students graduating with honors. Students ordinarily sign up for this course as a two-semester sequence. The first semester the student performs research under the supervision of a faculty member; the second semester the student writes an honors thesis.
An honors thesis is required of all the students graduating with honors. Students ordinarily sign up for this course as a two-semester sequence. The first semester the student performs research under the supervision of a faculty member; the second semester the student writes an honors thesis.
- +
- Section: 010
- Instructor: Vargas, Daisy
- Days:
- Time: 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 0 / 3
- +
- Section: 012
- Instructor: Daniels, DeAnna
- Days:
- Time: 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 1 / 1
- +
- Section: 014
- Instructor: Nava, Alejandro E
- Days:
- Time: 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 0 / 5
- +
- Section: 017
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time: 12:00 AM - 12:00 AM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 0 / 3
RELI 554 – The Spanish Inquisition
The Inquisition in Spanish, European, & ethnic history: its bureaucracy and procedures; its festivities, its victims, New and Old Christians; and witches. Social, economic, and demographic context. Graduate-level requirements include graduate students studying more deeply the economic, social and demographic context of the Inquisition, through more scholarly reading, discussion and writing.
The Inquisition in Spanish, European, & ethnic history: its bureaucracy and procedures; its festivities, its victims, New and Old Christians; and witches. Social, economic, and demographic context. Graduate-level requirements include graduate students studying more deeply the economic, social and demographic context of the Inquisition, through more scholarly reading, discussion and writing.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 25 / 40
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 25 / 40
- +
- Section: 401
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Oct 17 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 25 / 40
RELI 583 – Confucianism: The Classical Period
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Welter, Albert
- Days: Mo
- Time: 03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 14 / 16
RELI 585 – History of Japanese Religions: Ancient
A selective survey of Japanese religious history from earliest times through the 11th century. Topics covered may include prehistoric religions; the development of Shinto; Nara-period state Buddhism; tantric Buddhism in the Heian period; and spirit possession and exorcism. Graduate-level requirements include oral presentations and longer, more in-depth papers.
A selective survey of Japanese religious history from earliest times through the 11th century. Topics covered may include prehistoric religions; the development of Shinto; Nara-period state Buddhism; tantric Buddhism in the Heian period; and spirit possession and exorcism. Graduate-level requirements include oral presentations and longer, more in-depth papers.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Miura, Takashi
- Days: We
- Time: 03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
- Dates: Aug 26 - Dec 11
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 14 / 15
RELI 160D4 – Introduction to World Religions
This course explores the diversity of religions and religious experiences across the globe. Religions to be examined include, but are not limited to, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, as well as indigenous traditions.
This course explores the diversity of religions and religious experiences across the globe. Religions to be examined include, but are not limited to, Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, as well as indigenous traditions.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Law, Colin
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 18 / 56
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 45 / 100
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 11 / 50
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 45 / 100
RELI 160D6 – Gender and Religion
This course introduces students to the study of gender and religion. Students will consider foundational questions about the categories of religion and gender- what is religion and how do we study it? What is the relationship between gender and religion? How does gender shape religious roles and experiences, and how has gender in turn been shaped by religious expectations? We will examine some of the most central contemporary political conflicts from the perspective of gender studies and religious studies.
This course introduces students to the study of gender and religion. Students will consider foundational questions about the categories of religion and gender- what is religion and how do we study it? What is the relationship between gender and religion? How does gender shape religious roles and experiences, and how has gender in turn been shaped by religious expectations? We will examine some of the most central contemporary political conflicts from the perspective of gender studies and religious studies.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Law, Colin
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 01:00 PM - 01:50 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 10 / 55
RELI 200 – Introduction to the Study of Religion
The objective of this course is to introduce you to the study of the phenomenon called 'religion'. What makes people religious? How is religion defined? What are the different approaches to understanding religion in all of its diversity? Through a reading of texts from diverse backgrounds and approaches, this course will illuminate the complex and multi-dimensional elements of religion, and how the study of religion can open up new ways of seeing the world.
The objective of this course is to introduce you to the study of the phenomenon called 'religion'. What makes people religious? How is religion defined? What are the different approaches to understanding religion in all of its diversity? Through a reading of texts from diverse backgrounds and approaches, this course will illuminate the complex and multi-dimensional elements of religion, and how the study of religion can open up new ways of seeing the world.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Vargas, Daisy
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 8 / 25
RELI 211 – Life After Death in World Religions and Philosophies
This course focuses on one Big Question: "How do afterlife beliefs affect the way we live?" It builds connections among the humanities [Religious Studies and Philosophy], the social sciences [Anthropology, Psychology, and Law], and the natural sciences [Medicine] to explore the ways in which religious afterlife beliefs are approached from multiple disciplinary perspectives. Students will analyze a variety of religious afterlife beliefs through case studies, problem-based assignments, and reading/writing genres from the six disciplinary perspectives in order to tackle the Big Question as it relates to their personal, academic, and/or career aspirations.
This course focuses on one Big Question: "How do afterlife beliefs affect the way we live?" It builds connections among the humanities [Religious Studies and Philosophy], the social sciences [Anthropology, Psychology, and Law], and the natural sciences [Medicine] to explore the ways in which religious afterlife beliefs are approached from multiple disciplinary perspectives. Students will analyze a variety of religious afterlife beliefs through case studies, problem-based assignments, and reading/writing genres from the six disciplinary perspectives in order to tackle the Big Question as it relates to their personal, academic, and/or career aspirations.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Jameson, Alison C
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 109 / 150
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Jameson, Alison C
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 109 / 150
RELI 220 – Nature, Gods, and Zen: Religion in Japanese Society
This course analyzes the history of religions in Japan and the ways in which "Japanese religion" is portrayed in the contemporary world. In particular, the course examines how issues of race, ethnicity, and equity manifest in Western representations of Japanese religion, which is often essentialized, exoticized, and interpreted through a series of cultural stereotypes as the perpetual "Other" in relation to the West. In order to approach this central theme, the course adopts the disciplinary perspectives of Religious Studies, History, and Asian Studies, all of which will be synthesized through a number of writing exercises to allow for a robust analysis of Japanese religious history and practices in the original context of Japan as well as their portrayals in the West, as evident in such outlets as newspaper articles, travel guides, blogs, and YouTube clips, among others. By taking this course, students will be able to integrate multiple disciplinary perspectives to write analytically on the historical significance of Japanese religion as well as questions of race, ethnicity, and equity in representations of Japanese religion in various contexts.
This course analyzes the history of religions in Japan and the ways in which "Japanese religion" is portrayed in the contemporary world. In particular, the course examines how issues of race, ethnicity, and equity manifest in Western representations of Japanese religion, which is often essentialized, exoticized, and interpreted through a series of cultural stereotypes as the perpetual "Other" in relation to the West. In order to approach this central theme, the course adopts the disciplinary perspectives of Religious Studies, History, and Asian Studies, all of which will be synthesized through a number of writing exercises to allow for a robust analysis of Japanese religious history and practices in the original context of Japan as well as their portrayals in the West, as evident in such outlets as newspaper articles, travel guides, blogs, and YouTube clips, among others. By taking this course, students will be able to integrate multiple disciplinary perspectives to write analytically on the historical significance of Japanese religion as well as questions of race, ethnicity, and equity in representations of Japanese religion in various contexts.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Miura, Takashi
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 75 / 75
RELI 220A – Literature of the Bible
Old Testament: legendary and historical narratives, prophetic literature, and poetry.
Old Testament: legendary and historical narratives, prophetic literature, and poetry.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Medovoi, Leerom
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 5 / 19
RELI 222 – Introduction to Zen Buddhism
This course is designed to introduce students to the history,teachings,and practice of Zen Buddhism in China,Japan, Korea and the United States. The course will discuss Zen from a variety of perspectives but will center around the question of the meaning of history. Zen is a tradition of Buddhism that claims to have inherited and to pass on, in an unbroken historical transmission from patriarch to patriarch, the living experience of the Buddha's enlightenment. The course will discuss how Zen's conception of its history is related to its identity as a special tradition within Buddhism, as well as its basic teachings on the primacy of enlightenment, the role of practice, the nature of the mind, and the limitations of language.
This course is designed to introduce students to the history,teachings,and practice of Zen Buddhism in China,Japan, Korea and the United States. The course will discuss Zen from a variety of perspectives but will center around the question of the meaning of history. Zen is a tradition of Buddhism that claims to have inherited and to pass on, in an unbroken historical transmission from patriarch to patriarch, the living experience of the Buddha's enlightenment. The course will discuss how Zen's conception of its history is related to its identity as a special tradition within Buddhism, as well as its basic teachings on the primacy of enlightenment, the role of practice, the nature of the mind, and the limitations of language.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Jameson, Alison C
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 15 / 70
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Jameson, Alison C
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 15 / 70
RELI 227 – Religion and Film
This course explores religion and its relationship with visual storytelling culture. We will analyze, explore, and challenge various religious, pop-cultural, ideological, and moral messages as presented in various types of film, from art house cinema to blockbuster movies, and genres ranging from horror to comedy.
This course explores religion and its relationship with visual storytelling culture. We will analyze, explore, and challenge various religious, pop-cultural, ideological, and moral messages as presented in various types of film, from art house cinema to blockbuster movies, and genres ranging from horror to comedy.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Daniels, DeAnna
- Days: Tu
- Time: 03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 23 / 55
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 46 / 100
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 46 / 100
RELI 235 – Religion, Violence, and Terrorism
This course will study critical theories about the role of religion in acts of terrorism and violence. Through the examination of a range of case studies, this course will explore ways in which religion has been the motivation and justification behind violent conflict, aggression, and persecution.
This course will study critical theories about the role of religion in acts of terrorism and violence. Through the examination of a range of case studies, this course will explore ways in which religion has been the motivation and justification behind violent conflict, aggression, and persecution.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 63 / 100
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Smith Hansen, Konden R
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 63 / 100
RELI 277A – History of the Middle East: 600-1453
In this course, students take a humanistic disciplinary perspective to explore the cultural products of the pre-modern Middle East and answer questions about its historical development. Using primary sources in translation and secondary scholarship, students will explore the context of the rise of Islam; the process of conversion and expansion across the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia; the crystallization of Shi'ism and changing notions of religious authority; and the impact of Turkish migrations and Mongol conquests. They will become familiar with major genres of pre-modern Middle Eastern literary, religious, and scientific writings, and use techniques of close reading to answer questions about those texts' ideological positions and contexts.
In this course, students take a humanistic disciplinary perspective to explore the cultural products of the pre-modern Middle East and answer questions about its historical development. Using primary sources in translation and secondary scholarship, students will explore the context of the rise of Islam; the process of conversion and expansion across the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia; the crystallization of Shi'ism and changing notions of religious authority; and the impact of Turkish migrations and Mongol conquests. They will become familiar with major genres of pre-modern Middle Eastern literary, religious, and scientific writings, and use techniques of close reading to answer questions about those texts' ideological positions and contexts.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Kolenda, Nicholas Xavier
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 02:00 PM - 02:50 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 16 / 50
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Lucas, Scott C
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 02:00 PM - 02:50 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 16 / 50
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Badareen, Nayel A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 13 / 45
RELI 277A – History of the Middle East: 600-1453
Honors Course
In this course, students take a humanistic disciplinary perspective to explore the cultural products of the pre-modern Middle East and answer questions about its historical development. Using primary sources in translation and secondary scholarship, students will explore the context of the rise of Islam; the process of conversion and expansion across the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia; the crystallization of Shi'ism and changing notions of religious authority; and the impact of Turkish migrations and Mongol conquests. They will become familiar with major genres of pre-modern Middle Eastern literary, religious, and scientific writings, and use techniques of close reading to answer questions about those texts' ideological positions and contexts.
In this course, students take a humanistic disciplinary perspective to explore the cultural products of the pre-modern Middle East and answer questions about its historical development. Using primary sources in translation and secondary scholarship, students will explore the context of the rise of Islam; the process of conversion and expansion across the Middle East, North Africa, and Central Asia; the crystallization of Shi'ism and changing notions of religious authority; and the impact of Turkish migrations and Mongol conquests. They will become familiar with major genres of pre-modern Middle Eastern literary, religious, and scientific writings, and use techniques of close reading to answer questions about those texts' ideological positions and contexts.
- +
- Section: 002
- Instructor: Kolenda, Nicholas Xavier
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 02:00 PM - 02:50 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 16 / 50
- +
- Section: 002
- Instructor: Lucas, Scott C
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 02:00 PM - 02:50 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 16 / 50
RELI 280 – Introduction to the Bible: New Testament
This course introduces students to the New Testament in light of the contexts in which it was written and compiled, and as a window into reconstructing the world of early Christianity. The course will also examine how various Christian communities have understood the meaning and authority of the New Testament.
This course introduces students to the New Testament in light of the contexts in which it was written and compiled, and as a window into reconstructing the world of early Christianity. The course will also examine how various Christian communities have understood the meaning and authority of the New Testament.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days: MoWeFr
- Time: 11:00 AM - 11:50 AM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 34 / 70
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 79 / 300
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 79 / 300
RELI 302 – Ellis Island, 9/11, and Border Walls: Religion and Immigration in the U.S.
This course will explore the central role of religion in shaping constructions of race and ethnicity in U.S. history, especially in light of immigration debates. Since the country's founding, immigrants have expanded ethnic and religious diversity in the United States in the face of powerful anti-immigrant movements. Students will engage with in-depth studies of immigrant communities who shaped the American religious and ethnic landscape, including diverse American expressions of religions such as Roman Catholicism, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Evangelical Protestantism, and Vodou.
This course will explore the central role of religion in shaping constructions of race and ethnicity in U.S. history, especially in light of immigration debates. Since the country's founding, immigrants have expanded ethnic and religious diversity in the United States in the face of powerful anti-immigrant movements. Students will engage with in-depth studies of immigrant communities who shaped the American religious and ethnic landscape, including diverse American expressions of religions such as Roman Catholicism, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, Evangelical Protestantism, and Vodou.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Vargas, Daisy
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 3 / 50
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Vargas, Daisy
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 3 / 50
RELI 304 – The Question of God
Study of the question of God from a theological, philosophical, and literary perspective.
Study of the question of God from a theological, philosophical, and literary perspective.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Nava, Alejandro E
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 27 / 35
- +
- Section: 301
- Instructor: Nava, Alejandro E
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 27 / 35
RELI 305 – Greek and Roman Religion
Religious beliefs and cult practices in ancient Greece and Rome. All readings in English.
Religious beliefs and cult practices in ancient Greece and Rome. All readings in English.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 326 / 500
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 326 / 500
RELI 313 – Health and Medicine in Classical Antiquity
The course examines the mythology and practice of medicine in Greek and Roman times from Asclepius to Hippocrates and Galen, medical instruments and procedures, the religious manifestation of healing in Greek and Roman sanctuaries, the votive dedications by patients and cured, midwifery and child care, public hygiene and diseases. The topics cover a large spectrum of the medical practice and public health in the ancient societies of Classical antiquity, as well as how ancient worldviews, including religion and religious practice, shaped health and medicine in Greek and Roman civilization.
The course examines the mythology and practice of medicine in Greek and Roman times from Asclepius to Hippocrates and Galen, medical instruments and procedures, the religious manifestation of healing in Greek and Roman sanctuaries, the votive dedications by patients and cured, midwifery and child care, public hygiene and diseases. The topics cover a large spectrum of the medical practice and public health in the ancient societies of Classical antiquity, as well as how ancient worldviews, including religion and religious practice, shaped health and medicine in Greek and Roman civilization.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Hasaki, Eleni
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 36 / 50
RELI 313 – Health and Medicine in Classical Antiquity
Honors Course
The course examines the mythology and practice of medicine in Greek and Roman times from Asclepius to Hippocrates and Galen, medical instruments and procedures, the religious manifestation of healing in Greek and Roman sanctuaries, the votive dedications by patients and cured, midwifery and child care, public hygiene and diseases. The topics cover a large spectrum of the medical practice and public health in the ancient societies of Classical antiquity, as well as how ancient worldviews, including religion and religious practice, shaped health and medicine in Greek and Roman civilization.
The course examines the mythology and practice of medicine in Greek and Roman times from Asclepius to Hippocrates and Galen, medical instruments and procedures, the religious manifestation of healing in Greek and Roman sanctuaries, the votive dedications by patients and cured, midwifery and child care, public hygiene and diseases. The topics cover a large spectrum of the medical practice and public health in the ancient societies of Classical antiquity, as well as how ancient worldviews, including religion and religious practice, shaped health and medicine in Greek and Roman civilization.
- +
- Section: 002
- Instructor: Hasaki, Eleni
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 36 / 50
RELI 319 – Shamans, Martyrs, and Heretics: Religion and the Korean Peninsula
Korean culture, despite its important position in East Asian history, tends to be neglected in academia because it is located between China and Japan in both geographical and intellectual perspectives. This course not only introduces general historical information about Korean culture, but also considers its influence on Japanese religious and philosophical traditions, and even on Chinese culture. Such analyses will proceed from the following main topics: Shamanism, Buddhism, Daoism, Confucian philosophy, religious discourse during war time, "new" religions in both North and South Korea in the modern era, and Korean religions beyond Korea.
Korean culture, despite its important position in East Asian history, tends to be neglected in academia because it is located between China and Japan in both geographical and intellectual perspectives. This course not only introduces general historical information about Korean culture, but also considers its influence on Japanese religious and philosophical traditions, and even on Chinese culture. Such analyses will proceed from the following main topics: Shamanism, Buddhism, Daoism, Confucian philosophy, religious discourse during war time, "new" religions in both North and South Korea in the modern era, and Korean religions beyond Korea.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Park, Sandra
- Days: We
- Time: 10:00 AM - 10:50 AM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 3 / 30
RELI 321 – Women in Judaism
This course examines religion and gender through the study of women in Judaism. How do scholars construct a history of women in ancient Judaism when Jewish sacred texts are written by and for men? How have modern Jewish women accommodated feminist ideals without undermining the authority of the established tradition? What impact has the feminist movement had on Jewish communal institutions in the United States and Israel? In this course, we explore these questions and others by examining the influence Jewish religious beliefs and practices have played in the formation of Jewish women's identities, image and their understanding of power and authority. Students study the role of women in the formation of Judaism and Jewish society as a culturally constructed and historically changing category through archaeology, biblical studies, rabbinics, theology, folklore, social and political movements.
This course examines religion and gender through the study of women in Judaism. How do scholars construct a history of women in ancient Judaism when Jewish sacred texts are written by and for men? How have modern Jewish women accommodated feminist ideals without undermining the authority of the established tradition? What impact has the feminist movement had on Jewish communal institutions in the United States and Israel? In this course, we explore these questions and others by examining the influence Jewish religious beliefs and practices have played in the formation of Jewish women's identities, image and their understanding of power and authority. Students study the role of women in the formation of Judaism and Jewish society as a culturally constructed and historically changing category through archaeology, biblical studies, rabbinics, theology, folklore, social and political movements.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Kaye, Deborah A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 37 / 40
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Kaye, Deborah A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 37 / 40
RELI 326 – God, Humanity & Science
This course is an examination of the role of religion and science in the construction of human worldviews and beliefs, in historical and contemporary contexts.
This course is an examination of the role of religion and science in the construction of human worldviews and beliefs, in historical and contemporary contexts.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Oberman, Hester Elsa
- Days: Mo
- Time: 03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 40 / 40
RELI 331 – Taoist Traditions of China
Intellectual foundations of Taoism in its two classical sources, the Lao Tzu and the Chuang Tzu, and a sampling of the varieties of religious practice which developed later.
Intellectual foundations of Taoism in its two classical sources, the Lao Tzu and the Chuang Tzu, and a sampling of the varieties of religious practice which developed later.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Glaze, Shyling
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 23 / 60
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Glaze, Shyling
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 23 / 60
RELI 332 – The Holocaust: Witnesses and Representations
This course explores Holocaust memory and representation in Europe, Israel and the United States through various media and genres from diaries, memoirs and oral testimonies to Yiddish and Hebrew poetry, second generation graphic novels and film to memorial gardens and resistance monuments, archives and museums. We engage with some of the most fundamental questions of memory and Holocaust trauma from multiple perspectives and contexts. Is it possible to communicate the horrors of the concentration camp? Who has the right to speak about the Holocaust? How does "Jewish" memory of the Holocaust shape our understanding of the history of Nazism, genocide, World War II and its aftermath? In what ways, has Holocaust memory become associated with movements for historical justice and human rights, in particular, in the United States?
This course explores Holocaust memory and representation in Europe, Israel and the United States through various media and genres from diaries, memoirs and oral testimonies to Yiddish and Hebrew poetry, second generation graphic novels and film to memorial gardens and resistance monuments, archives and museums. We engage with some of the most fundamental questions of memory and Holocaust trauma from multiple perspectives and contexts. Is it possible to communicate the horrors of the concentration camp? Who has the right to speak about the Holocaust? How does "Jewish" memory of the Holocaust shape our understanding of the history of Nazism, genocide, World War II and its aftermath? In what ways, has Holocaust memory become associated with movements for historical justice and human rights, in particular, in the United States?
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Ribak, Gil
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 34 / 40
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Ribak, Gil
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 34 / 40
RELI 334 – Islamic Thought
This course provides an overview of Islamic intellectual history from the origins of Islam to the present day. The course is divided into three units: 1) Classical Islam and religious sciences; 2) Classical Islamic thought more broadly; 3) Modern Islamic thought. Students will be introduced to Islamic scriptures as well as original writings in translation by preeminent figures of the Islamic tradition and will learn how Muslim thinkers engaged issues concerning scriptural authority, theology, mysticism, human happiness and flourishing, politics, colonialism and gender. The course approaches these writings with particular attention to analysis of the concepts central to Islamic thought and their interconnections, and to the forms of expression through which these concepts are presented to envisioned audiences. Throughout the course, emphasis will be placed on the implications of the ideas we study for values pertaining to justice, social hierarchy and inequality, freedom and domination. Ideas regarding the nature of human existence and its place within the universe always have relation to social life and order. Examining this relation in Islamic thought will involve probing our own notions on these matters and their implications in our own social life.
This course provides an overview of Islamic intellectual history from the origins of Islam to the present day. The course is divided into three units: 1) Classical Islam and religious sciences; 2) Classical Islamic thought more broadly; 3) Modern Islamic thought. Students will be introduced to Islamic scriptures as well as original writings in translation by preeminent figures of the Islamic tradition and will learn how Muslim thinkers engaged issues concerning scriptural authority, theology, mysticism, human happiness and flourishing, politics, colonialism and gender. The course approaches these writings with particular attention to analysis of the concepts central to Islamic thought and their interconnections, and to the forms of expression through which these concepts are presented to envisioned audiences. Throughout the course, emphasis will be placed on the implications of the ideas we study for values pertaining to justice, social hierarchy and inequality, freedom and domination. Ideas regarding the nature of human existence and its place within the universe always have relation to social life and order. Examining this relation in Islamic thought will involve probing our own notions on these matters and their implications in our own social life.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Noorani, Yaseen A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 8 / 30
RELI 335 – Rap, Culture and God
This course is a study of popular culture and religion in African-American and Latin@ communities, with a focus on the place of rap music in the cultural identity of these traditions. The class will begin with a study of some major themes in cultural studies concerning identity, class, race, and gender in addition to a study of the role of religion in Black and Latin@ communities. We will consider the approaches and self-understandings of identity and culture in rap music with special attention to the voices of protest, resistance, and spirituality among rap artists.
This course is a study of popular culture and religion in African-American and Latin@ communities, with a focus on the place of rap music in the cultural identity of these traditions. The class will begin with a study of some major themes in cultural studies concerning identity, class, race, and gender in addition to a study of the role of religion in Black and Latin@ communities. We will consider the approaches and self-understandings of identity and culture in rap music with special attention to the voices of protest, resistance, and spirituality among rap artists.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Nava, Alejandro E
- Days: Tu
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 200 / 200
RELI 336 – Spirituality, Psychology, and the Mind
Ever wonder why you believe what you believe? Ever been puzzled as to why other people believe such outrageous things? Spirituality, Psychology, and Mind (SPM) investigates the nature of beliefs and practices from a multidisciplinary perspective. We will explore different ways of studying and understanding religious beliefs and spirituality through psychological, sociological, biological, philosophical, and humanist lenses. This course aims to build connections between different ways of knowing to foster critical thinking and perspective-taking. SPM will not try to prove or disprove any religious, spiritual, agnostic, or atheist claims. But instead, it will use psychological theory and scientific research to examine how we come to believe what we do. The focus will be on scientific approaches to religion's psychological nature and function concerning health, psychopathology, and coping mechanisms.
Ever wonder why you believe what you believe? Ever been puzzled as to why other people believe such outrageous things? Spirituality, Psychology, and Mind (SPM) investigates the nature of beliefs and practices from a multidisciplinary perspective. We will explore different ways of studying and understanding religious beliefs and spirituality through psychological, sociological, biological, philosophical, and humanist lenses. This course aims to build connections between different ways of knowing to foster critical thinking and perspective-taking. SPM will not try to prove or disprove any religious, spiritual, agnostic, or atheist claims. But instead, it will use psychological theory and scientific research to examine how we come to believe what we do. The focus will be on scientific approaches to religion's psychological nature and function concerning health, psychopathology, and coping mechanisms.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Oberman, Hester Elsa
- Days: We
- Time: 03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 200 / 200
RELI 336 – Spirituality, Psychology, and the Mind
Honors Course
Ever wonder why you believe what you believe? Ever been puzzled as to why other people believe such outrageous things? Spirituality, Psychology, and Mind (SPM) investigates the nature of beliefs and practices from a multidisciplinary perspective. We will explore different ways of studying and understanding religious beliefs and spirituality through psychological, sociological, biological, philosophical, and humanist lenses. This course aims to build connections between different ways of knowing to foster critical thinking and perspective-taking. SPM will not try to prove or disprove any religious, spiritual, agnostic, or atheist claims. But instead, it will use psychological theory and scientific research to examine how we come to believe what we do. The focus will be on scientific approaches to religion's psychological nature and function concerning health, psychopathology, and coping mechanisms.
Ever wonder why you believe what you believe? Ever been puzzled as to why other people believe such outrageous things? Spirituality, Psychology, and Mind (SPM) investigates the nature of beliefs and practices from a multidisciplinary perspective. We will explore different ways of studying and understanding religious beliefs and spirituality through psychological, sociological, biological, philosophical, and humanist lenses. This course aims to build connections between different ways of knowing to foster critical thinking and perspective-taking. SPM will not try to prove or disprove any religious, spiritual, agnostic, or atheist claims. But instead, it will use psychological theory and scientific research to examine how we come to believe what we do. The focus will be on scientific approaches to religion's psychological nature and function concerning health, psychopathology, and coping mechanisms.
- +
- Section: 002
- Instructor: Oberman, Hester Elsa
- Days: We
- Time: 03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 200 / 200
RELI 350 – Hindu Mythology
Overview of the traditional Hindu narratives found in the Vedic, epic, and puranic literature. We will also examine Hindu myth in their many regional literary and artistic forms, and how these narratives influence culture, philosophy, literature, and folklore.
Overview of the traditional Hindu narratives found in the Vedic, epic, and puranic literature. We will also examine Hindu myth in their many regional literary and artistic forms, and how these narratives influence culture, philosophy, literature, and folklore.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Mamtora, Bhakti
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 12:30 PM - 01:45 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 25 / 70
RELI 351 – Zen, Tea, and Poetry: A Blending of Genres
This course will examine how the three genres of Zen Buddhism, the tea ceremony/tea culture, and poetry, have been presented over time as not only compatible, but as representative expressions of each other. We will consider the contemporaneous cultural, historical, and political factors that contributed to the formation of this discourse. We will also hold up to critical scrutiny the very concept of "genre" in pre-modern East Asia, as well as the distinction between "Zen Buddhism" and what may be termed "Zen culture." We will also investigate in depth how modern commentators such as Okakura Tenshin, Suzuki Daisetsu, and Hisamatsu Shin'ichi's dialogue with the West and Western models informed the now ingrained idea that the tea ceremony represents an artistic, aesthetic, and spiritual nexus of the other two genres, and indeed of East Asian Culture as a whole.
This course will examine how the three genres of Zen Buddhism, the tea ceremony/tea culture, and poetry, have been presented over time as not only compatible, but as representative expressions of each other. We will consider the contemporaneous cultural, historical, and political factors that contributed to the formation of this discourse. We will also hold up to critical scrutiny the very concept of "genre" in pre-modern East Asia, as well as the distinction between "Zen Buddhism" and what may be termed "Zen culture." We will also investigate in depth how modern commentators such as Okakura Tenshin, Suzuki Daisetsu, and Hisamatsu Shin'ichi's dialogue with the West and Western models informed the now ingrained idea that the tea ceremony represents an artistic, aesthetic, and spiritual nexus of the other two genres, and indeed of East Asian Culture as a whole.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Welter, Albert
- Days: We
- Time: 03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 3 / 30
RELI 358 – Tibetan Buddhism: Liberation, Identity, and Representation
How do Tibetans Buddhists innovate while staying connected with tradition? In the Tibetan language, biographies are referred to as liberation tales. In this course, students explore the life experiences of Tibetan Buddhists striving for a variety of forms of liberation, from samsara as well as from social marginalization and political oppression. Students disassemble stereotypes about Tibet by exploring fundamental aspects of its distinct Buddhist tradition. They analyze the stories of figures as diverse as an eighth-century demon-tamer and his enlightened female partner, a contemporary artist exploring questions of identity, a Buddhist yogi seeking to move beyond the confines of the self, and a debut novelist reflecting on writing as a form of agency. Students apply their knowledge to interpret representations of Tibet in sources ranging from early texts on the nature of reality to an Instagram takeover by contemporary Tibetan female poets. In the process, they generate tools for interpreting the host of representations they encounter in their daily lives.
How do Tibetans Buddhists innovate while staying connected with tradition? In the Tibetan language, biographies are referred to as liberation tales. In this course, students explore the life experiences of Tibetan Buddhists striving for a variety of forms of liberation, from samsara as well as from social marginalization and political oppression. Students disassemble stereotypes about Tibet by exploring fundamental aspects of its distinct Buddhist tradition. They analyze the stories of figures as diverse as an eighth-century demon-tamer and his enlightened female partner, a contemporary artist exploring questions of identity, a Buddhist yogi seeking to move beyond the confines of the self, and a debut novelist reflecting on writing as a form of agency. Students apply their knowledge to interpret representations of Tibet in sources ranging from early texts on the nature of reality to an Instagram takeover by contemporary Tibetan female poets. In the process, they generate tools for interpreting the host of representations they encounter in their daily lives.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Dachille, Rae Erin
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 03:30 PM - 04:45 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 9 / 60
RELI 363 – Religion and Sex
In this course, students will analyze attitudes towards sexuality in major world religions, both globally and in the context of the United States.
In this course, students will analyze attitudes towards sexuality in major world religions, both globally and in the context of the United States.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Law, Colin
- Days: MoWe
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 47 / 55
RELI 367 – Yoga
In this course we examine the philosophy, practice, historical roots, and development of yoga. Students are asked to use and reflect on the disciplinary perspectives of the historian to examine premodern primary texts (in English translation) that provide a window into the origins of yoga, as well as the perspectives of the anthropologist and cultural critic to examine contemporary yoga practices. Students will compare and contrast perspectives of Indian yogis and contemporary international yoga influencers in order to understand how the experience of yoga differs across time and culture and how social systems of power and inequality are both subverted and reinforced by yoga and its practitioners.
In this course we examine the philosophy, practice, historical roots, and development of yoga. Students are asked to use and reflect on the disciplinary perspectives of the historian to examine premodern primary texts (in English translation) that provide a window into the origins of yoga, as well as the perspectives of the anthropologist and cultural critic to examine contemporary yoga practices. Students will compare and contrast perspectives of Indian yogis and contemporary international yoga influencers in order to understand how the experience of yoga differs across time and culture and how social systems of power and inequality are both subverted and reinforced by yoga and its practitioners.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Mamtora, Bhakti
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 311 / 400
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Mamtora, Bhakti
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 311 / 400
RELI 370A – History of the Jews: Modern Jewish History
Survey of major political, socioeconomic, and cultural developments in the history of Diaspora Jewry: Modern Jewish history.
Survey of major political, socioeconomic, and cultural developments in the history of Diaspora Jewry: Modern Jewish history.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Ribak, Gil
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 3 / 40
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Ribak, Gil
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 3 / 40
RELI 370B – History of the Jews: Cultural Loss and Resilience from the Middle Ages to the French Revolution
Survey of major political, socioeconomic, and cultural developments in the history of Diaspora Jewry from the Middle ages to the French Revolution.
Survey of major political, socioeconomic, and cultural developments in the history of Diaspora Jewry from the Middle ages to the French Revolution.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Kaye, Deborah A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 21 / 40
- +
- Section: 201
- Instructor: Kaye, Deborah A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 21 / 40
RELI 372A – Interpreting the Bible (Old Testament): Approaches to Understanding Israelite Religion and Society
The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) is one of the most influential and widely studied texts in the world. For more than two millennia, it has played a central role in shaping Western culture, religion, and ethics. However, the stories, laws, and prophetic writings contained in the Bible are products of a specific time and place--embedded in the ancient Near East, where the Israelite people lived and interacted with other cultures over the course of many centuries. This course explores the contexts in which the Bible was written and compiled, drawing on literary analysis, historical criticism, and the witness of archaeology evidence. Students analyze key topics in Israelite religion and society, including the daily life of men and women, the emergence of monotheism, the role of the priesthood, development of the prophetic tradition, the political formation of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah among others.
The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) is one of the most influential and widely studied texts in the world. For more than two millennia, it has played a central role in shaping Western culture, religion, and ethics. However, the stories, laws, and prophetic writings contained in the Bible are products of a specific time and place--embedded in the ancient Near East, where the Israelite people lived and interacted with other cultures over the course of many centuries. This course explores the contexts in which the Bible was written and compiled, drawing on literary analysis, historical criticism, and the witness of archaeology evidence. Students analyze key topics in Israelite religion and society, including the daily life of men and women, the emergence of monotheism, the role of the priesthood, development of the prophetic tradition, the political formation of the kingdoms of Israel and Judah among others.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Tor, Naomi
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 10 / 40
RELI 372B – Early Judaism and Christianity: One Book, Two Religions Second Temple Judaism and its Legacy
This course surveys scriptures and stories, wisdom texts, histories and apocalyptic visions that Jews living in the Persian and later Greco-Roman worlds produced and circulated in Second Temple period (539 BCE -135 CE). Examining Jewish history and writings of the Second Temple period is key to understanding an important time not only in Jewish religious formation but also the emergence of early Christianity, first as a Jewish sect and later, as a separate religion.
This course surveys scriptures and stories, wisdom texts, histories and apocalyptic visions that Jews living in the Persian and later Greco-Roman worlds produced and circulated in Second Temple period (539 BCE -135 CE). Examining Jewish history and writings of the Second Temple period is key to understanding an important time not only in Jewish religious formation but also the emergence of early Christianity, first as a Jewish sect and later, as a separate religion.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Graizbord, David L
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 02:00 PM - 03:15 PM
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 4 / 40
RELI 389 – Middle Eastern Ethnic and Religious Minorities
Overview of ethnic and religious minorities in the contemporary Middle East, study of ethnic and religious diversity and its origin and manifestations in the modern Middle East. Examination of how the concept of religious and ethnic minority has emerged as a key factor in state policies towards minorities as well as the cultural, economic, political, religious, and educational lives of its people.
Overview of ethnic and religious minorities in the contemporary Middle East, study of ethnic and religious diversity and its origin and manifestations in the modern Middle East. Examination of how the concept of religious and ethnic minority has emerged as a key factor in state policies towards minorities as well as the cultural, economic, political, religious, and educational lives of its people.
- +
- Section: 101
- Instructor: Abbas, Shabbir Agha
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 11 / 32
- +
- Section: 102
- Instructor: Bayman, Yigit
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 7 / 32
RELI 401A – Early Christian Literature: Greek Texts
This course involves in depth study of early Christian texts together with related contemporary Jewish and Greco-Roman literature. Students will engage in careful analysis of individual texts in the New Testament and from the first four centuries of the Common Era, focusing on questions of genre, authorship, and meaning. Alongside these, students will examine writings by contemporary Jewish, Greek, and Roman authors (e.g., Philo, Josephus, Seneca, and Plutarch) as illustrative of the wider literary and religious culture. For students who have completed GRK 201, an option for readings in ancient Greek will be available as part of the course.
This course involves in depth study of early Christian texts together with related contemporary Jewish and Greco-Roman literature. Students will engage in careful analysis of individual texts in the New Testament and from the first four centuries of the Common Era, focusing on questions of genre, authorship, and meaning. Alongside these, students will examine writings by contemporary Jewish, Greek, and Roman authors (e.g., Philo, Josephus, Seneca, and Plutarch) as illustrative of the wider literary and religious culture. For students who have completed GRK 201, an option for readings in ancient Greek will be available as part of the course.
- +
- Section: 001
- Instructor: Friesen, Courtney
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 14 / 30
RELI 405 – Traditional Indian Medicine: Health, Healing and Well Being
Traditional Indian Medicine, or TIM, is a concept that refers to Indigenous knowledges expressed through the varied healing systems in Indigenous communities. This course will pay particular attention to American Indian nations and healing knowledges that are intersecting and intertwined relationships with the natural world, the Indigenous body and the sacred. We will examine both how Indigenous healing systems have persisted as well as responded to social conditions, such as genocide, colonization and historical, as well as contemporary, forms of oppression. Topics include intergenerational trauma as well as how resilience is expressed in practices of wellbeing, healing and self-determination. We will also explore TIM as containing systems of healing that may/may not operate in conjunction with allopathic medicine. This course takes a transdisciplinary approach, incorporating readings from American Indian/Indigenous studies and health to explore a complex portfolio of American Indian/Indigenous wellbeing.
Traditional Indian Medicine, or TIM, is a concept that refers to Indigenous knowledges expressed through the varied healing systems in Indigenous communities. This course will pay particular attention to American Indian nations and healing knowledges that are intersecting and intertwined relationships with the natural world, the Indigenous body and the sacred. We will examine both how Indigenous healing systems have persisted as well as responded to social conditions, such as genocide, colonization and historical, as well as contemporary, forms of oppression. Topics include intergenerational trauma as well as how resilience is expressed in practices of wellbeing, healing and self-determination. We will also explore TIM as containing systems of healing that may/may not operate in conjunction with allopathic medicine. This course takes a transdisciplinary approach, incorporating readings from American Indian/Indigenous studies and health to explore a complex portfolio of American Indian/Indigenous wellbeing.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Pepion, Millicent Michelle
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 4 / 30
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Pepion, Millicent Michelle
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 1 / 30
RELI 406 – Religious Diversity in Healthcare: Intercultural Training
This course is designed to offer tools for engaging religious and cultural diversity within healthcare settings, which includes consideration of religious patients, religious healthcare workers, faith-based healthcare institutions, and the impact of religious communities on healthcare laws and services. To develop skills for navigating intercultural differences, students will practice applying academic approaches to religion to health-related case studies.
This course is designed to offer tools for engaging religious and cultural diversity within healthcare settings, which includes consideration of religious patients, religious healthcare workers, faith-based healthcare institutions, and the impact of religious communities on healthcare laws and services. To develop skills for navigating intercultural differences, students will practice applying academic approaches to religion to health-related case studies.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Dachille, Rae Erin
- Days: Tu
- Time: 12:30 PM - 01:45 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 11 / 20
RELI 408A – Islamic Movements in the Contemporary Muslim World
The course objectives are (1) to acquaint students with traditional literature and contemporary research on Islamic movements, and 2) to introduce students to the historical and ideological basis of an emerging globalized political Islam.
The course objectives are (1) to acquaint students with traditional literature and contemporary research on Islamic movements, and 2) to introduce students to the historical and ideological basis of an emerging globalized political Islam.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Lucas, Scott C
- Days: MoWe
- Time: 03:00 PM - 04:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 9 / 30
RELI 419 – Contemporary Muslim Societies
This course presents an anthropological analysis of Islam as a key factor for understanding contemporary Muslim societies. The course addresses the significance of Islam in public and domestic life. Moving beyond approaches that locate Islam geographically, highlighting its particularities and links to local cultural contexts, this course offers a comparative approach to the examination of central cultural, social, and political practices of contemporary Muslim societies. The course examines the ways in which regional, cultural, and historical processes intersect with Islam as a religious, legal, cultural, economic, and political system and provide frameworks for understanding Islam as the globalizing phenomena that it is today.
This course presents an anthropological analysis of Islam as a key factor for understanding contemporary Muslim societies. The course addresses the significance of Islam in public and domestic life. Moving beyond approaches that locate Islam geographically, highlighting its particularities and links to local cultural contexts, this course offers a comparative approach to the examination of central cultural, social, and political practices of contemporary Muslim societies. The course examines the ways in which regional, cultural, and historical processes intersect with Islam as a religious, legal, cultural, economic, and political system and provide frameworks for understanding Islam as the globalizing phenomena that it is today.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Ilahiane, Hsain
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 09:30 AM - 10:45 AM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 9 / 20
RELI 475 – Religion and the Law
The evolving relationship between law and religion has had a profound influence on American political life and discourse since the country's founding. This course is designed to develop familiarity with that history and the resulting major tenets of the First Amendment's religion clauses. Taking as our starting point the concept of the separation of church and state, we examine what this idea has meant in U.S. Constitutional law. Class time will be structured around in-depth study of the Constitution and of Supreme Court precedents, and will integrate these formative Supreme Court decisions and decisions from state and lower federal courts into the social and historical contexts from which they derive meaning. In addition, the course will survey the scholarly treatment of such threshold questions as the meaning of "religion" in society, and will evaluate the evolving notion of religious liberty in a pluralistic society. We conclude with an examination of current legal debates and cases and of the prominent role of religious discourse about law, social change, politics and culture in today's society.
The evolving relationship between law and religion has had a profound influence on American political life and discourse since the country's founding. This course is designed to develop familiarity with that history and the resulting major tenets of the First Amendment's religion clauses. Taking as our starting point the concept of the separation of church and state, we examine what this idea has meant in U.S. Constitutional law. Class time will be structured around in-depth study of the Constitution and of Supreme Court precedents, and will integrate these formative Supreme Court decisions and decisions from state and lower federal courts into the social and historical contexts from which they derive meaning. In addition, the course will survey the scholarly treatment of such threshold questions as the meaning of "religion" in society, and will evaluate the evolving notion of religious liberty in a pluralistic society. We conclude with an examination of current legal debates and cases and of the prominent role of religious discourse about law, social change, politics and culture in today's society.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Mcdaniel, Judith A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 23 / 30
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- Section: 201
- Instructor: Mcdaniel, Judith A
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 23 / 30
RELI 484 – History of East Asian Buddhism
Buddhism in China, Korea and Japan with emphasis on the relationship between East Asian Buddhist thought and practice and the various historical contexts in which they emerged.
Buddhism in China, Korea and Japan with emphasis on the relationship between East Asian Buddhist thought and practice and the various historical contexts in which they emerged.
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- Section: 101
- Instructor: Wu, Jiang
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 8 / 25
RELI 486 – History of Japanese Religions: Medieval
Selective survey of the history of religions in Japan from the 11th century through the 16th. Topics covered may include the medieval worldview; apocalyptic thought and related practices; Pure Land Buddhism; Zen; and proselytization and religious competition in medieval Japan.
Selective survey of the history of religions in Japan from the 11th century through the 16th. Topics covered may include the medieval worldview; apocalyptic thought and related practices; Pure Land Buddhism; Zen; and proselytization and religious competition in medieval Japan.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Miura, Takashi
- Days: We
- Time: 03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 11 / 15
RELI 491 – Preceptorship
Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of instruction and practice in actual service in a department, program, or discipline. Requires faculty member approval, preceptor application on file with department.
Specialized work on an individual basis, consisting of instruction and practice in actual service in a department, program, or discipline. Requires faculty member approval, preceptor application on file with department.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - Mar 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 0 / 0
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Adamson, Grant W
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Mar 17 - May 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 0 / 0
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- Section: 014
- Instructor: Hasaki, Eleni
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 0 / 0
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- Section: 015
- Instructor: Oberman, Hester Elsa
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Closed
- Enrollment: 0 / 0
RELI 493 – Internship
As part of the Religious Studies for Health Professionals curriculum, the internship provides first-hand experience working within a community organization or employment area that engages issues of health and religion. The internship involves 120 contact hours with a selected internship site as well as 15 academic hours to enhance the learning experience. Before enrolling, students must work with the Religious Studies for Health Professionals internship coordinator to find an appropriate internship site that fulfills the goals of the program and the students interests.
As part of the Religious Studies for Health Professionals curriculum, the internship provides first-hand experience working within a community organization or employment area that engages issues of health and religion. The internship involves 120 contact hours with a selected internship site as well as 15 academic hours to enhance the learning experience. Before enrolling, students must work with the Religious Studies for Health Professionals internship coordinator to find an appropriate internship site that fulfills the goals of the program and the students interests.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Seat, Karen K
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 0 / 12
RELI 498H – Honors Thesis
Honors Course
An honors thesis is required of all the students graduating with honors. Students ordinarily sign up for this course as a two-semester sequence. The first semester the student performs research under the supervision of a faculty member; the second semester the student writes an honors thesis.
An honors thesis is required of all the students graduating with honors. Students ordinarily sign up for this course as a two-semester sequence. The first semester the student performs research under the supervision of a faculty member; the second semester the student writes an honors thesis.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Nava, Alejandro E
- Days:
- Time:
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 0 / 3
RELI 501A – Early Christian Literature: Greek Texts
This course involves in depth study of early Christian texts together with related contemporary Jewish and Greco-Roman literature. Students will engage in careful analysis of individual texts in the New Testament and from the first four centuries of the Common Era, focusing on questions of genre, authorship, and meaning. Alongside these, students will examine writings by contemporary Jewish, Greek, and Roman authors (e.g., Philo, Josephus, Seneca, and Plutarch) as illustrative of the wider literary and religious culture. For students who have completed GRK 201, an option for readings in ancient Greek will be available as part of the course. Graduate level requirements included a extended research papers drawing on appropriate levels of training in language, literature, and knowledge of the ancient world.
This course involves in depth study of early Christian texts together with related contemporary Jewish and Greco-Roman literature. Students will engage in careful analysis of individual texts in the New Testament and from the first four centuries of the Common Era, focusing on questions of genre, authorship, and meaning. Alongside these, students will examine writings by contemporary Jewish, Greek, and Roman authors (e.g., Philo, Josephus, Seneca, and Plutarch) as illustrative of the wider literary and religious culture. For students who have completed GRK 201, an option for readings in ancient Greek will be available as part of the course. Graduate level requirements included a extended research papers drawing on appropriate levels of training in language, literature, and knowledge of the ancient world.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Friesen, Courtney
- Days: TuTh
- Time: 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 14 / 30
RELI 506 – Religious Diversity in Healthcare: Intercultural Training
This course is designed to offer tools for engaging religious and cultural diversity within healthcare settings, which includes consideration of religious patients, religious healthcare workers, faith-based healthcare institutions, and the impact of religious communities on healthcare laws and services. To develop skills for navigating intercultural differences, students will practice applying academic approaches to religion to health-related case studies.
This course is designed to offer tools for engaging religious and cultural diversity within healthcare settings, which includes consideration of religious patients, religious healthcare workers, faith-based healthcare institutions, and the impact of religious communities on healthcare laws and services. To develop skills for navigating intercultural differences, students will practice applying academic approaches to religion to health-related case studies.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Dachille, Rae Erin
- Days: Tu
- Time: 12:30 PM - 01:45 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 11 / 20
RELI 508A – Islamic Movements in the Contemporary Muslim World
The course's objectives are (1) to acquaint students with traditional literature and contemporary research on Islamic movements, and 2) to introduce students to the historical and ideological basis of an emerging globalized political Islam. Graduate-level requirements include a 12 page student essay and final paper 25-30 pages.
The course's objectives are (1) to acquaint students with traditional literature and contemporary research on Islamic movements, and 2) to introduce students to the historical and ideological basis of an emerging globalized political Islam. Graduate-level requirements include a 12 page student essay and final paper 25-30 pages.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Lucas, Scott C
- Days: MoWe
- Time: 03:00 PM - 04:15 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 9 / 30
RELI 586 – History of Japanese Religions: Medieval
Selective survey of the history of religions in Japan from the 11th century through the 16th. Topics covered may include the medieval worldview; apocalyptic thought and related practices; Pure Land Buddhism; Zen; and proselytization and religious competition in medieval Japan. Graduate-level requirements include oral presentations and longer, more in-depth papers.
Selective survey of the history of religions in Japan from the 11th century through the 16th. Topics covered may include the medieval worldview; apocalyptic thought and related practices; Pure Land Buddhism; Zen; and proselytization and religious competition in medieval Japan. Graduate-level requirements include oral presentations and longer, more in-depth papers.
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- Section: 001
- Instructor: Miura, Takashi
- Days: We
- Time: 03:30 PM - 06:00 PM
- Dates: Jan 15 - May 7
- Status: Open
- Enrollment: 11 / 15