Skip to main content

Course Descriptions

Courses primarily for:

Courses Primarily for Undergraduate Students

REL 101-20 – First-Year Seminar: Islamophobia

This course examines the history, politics, culture and economy of how Islam and Muslims have been represented in the north Atlantic world (the 'West'). It begins with a brief overview of Western representations of Muslims during the early modern period, then explores how colonialism shaped the modern history and politics of contemporary Islamophobia. The bulk of the course will focus in depth on the politics, culture and economy of Islamophobia in the United States, aiming to empower students to understand and navigate the contemporary context. The course gives particular attention to ways that Muslims have sought to challenge, complicate and subvert how they are represented.

REL 101-20 – First-Year Seminar: Tolerance: A Global History

In this course we will explore the ways that global Christianity laid the groundwork for European ideas about diversity and tolerance. The aim of the course is to understand how the historically contingent confrontations with religious diversity were foundational to, and indeed, shaped the terms of the development of modern assumptions not only about religious tolerance, but also about tolerance of cultural diversity broadly speaking.

REL 101-20 – First-Year Seminar: Tolerance: A Global History

In this course we will explore the ways that global Christianity laid the groundwork for European ideas about diversity and tolerance. The aim of the course is to understand how the historically contingent confrontations with religious diversity were foundational to, and indeed, shaped the terms of the development of modern assumptions not only about religious tolerance, but also about tolerance of cultural diversity broadly speaking.

REL 101-21 – First-Year Seminar: Myth and Legend in Tolkien

In developing Middle-earth, Tolkien intentionally sought to create a mythology. In this course, we will read The Silmarillion, The Hobbit, and The Lord of the Rings as mythology. We will analyze theories of myth, examine how Tolkien's scholarship and understanding of mythology shaped his tales, and explore the mythic themes in these works. We will also consider the enduring appeal of these stories as modern myth.

REL 170 – Introduction to Religion

Why do we say "bless you" when someone sneezes? How did the design of Starbucks' holiday-themed cups lead to a consumer boycott? Why did the University of Ottawa cancel its yoga classes? And are celebrities the new gods? This course sets out to develop a deeper and broader understanding of religion as a human phenomenon, by focusing on three interrelated questions: What is religion, How to study religion, and Why study religion.

REL 171 – Varieties of Religious Tradition

Introduction to a variety of the world's major religious traditions.

REL 173 – Religion, Medicine, and Suffering in the West

Examination of religious healing ceremonies and Christian perspectives on pain and suffering in light of the meaning of physical pain in the everyday lives of men and women.

REL 200 – Introduction to Hinduism

One of the largest and most ancient of all religions, 'Hinduism' is actually a family of related traditions. Over the last 4000 years or more, the Hindu traditions of South Asia have developed an astonishing diversity of rituals, beliefs, and spiritual practices and a pantheon of hundreds of gods and goddesses, from the elephant-headed Ganesa to the fierce goddess Kali. This course will examine the breadth of the Hindu traditions as they developed over time, highlighting the shared features that make them a family, such as ritual sacrifice, world renunciation, law, spiritual discipline, devotion, worship, and theology.

REL 210 – Introduction to Buddhism

Having begun in India some 2500 years ago, Buddhism now exists in almost all parts of the world. The Buddhist religion has shaped the thought and culture of Asia and has also influenced Western thought and culture in significant ways. To comprehend this diverse religion, this course approaches it from several perspectives: the historical, cultural, philosophical and religious. In the short time that we have in this quarter, our primary emphasis will be on investigating the philosophical and religious systems in the teachings of the Buddha in India as well as the thought of the later Buddhists in other parts of Asia. In looking at both the history and the philosophy, we see Buddhism as a religion that established a system of values, an interpretation of existence and a pattern of cultural practices and rituals that the Buddhists have interpreted in various ways to find meaning in life. (Spring 2018, Professor George Bond)

REL 220 – Introduction to Buddhism

Description not available

REL 221 – Introduction to New Testament

Today, the New Testament is widely known and accepted as Christians' authoritative and sacred collection of texts. But roughly two thousand years ago, there were no Christians, and there was no New Testament. Rather, there existed in the eastern part of the Roman Empire a small group of people who had begun worshiping a Jewish healer and teacher as divine. It is this historical moment to which we turn in this course. We will study the people, events, and texts of the first and second centuries that shaped a small Jewish movement into the religion now known as Christianity, using as our main evidence the letters and stories of the New Testament.

REL 230 – Introduction to Judaism

This course attempts to answer the questions "What is Judaism?" and "Who is a Jew?" by surveying the broad arc of Jewish history, reviewing the practices and beliefs that have defined and continue to define Judaism as a religion, sampling the vast treasure of Jewish literatures, and analyzing the unique social conditions that have made the cultural experience of Jewishness so significant. The class will employ a historical structure to trace the evolutions of Jewish literature, religion, and culture through the ages. (Spring 2018, Professor Barry Wimpfheimer)

REL 240 – Introduction to Christianity

We will explore the development of Western varieties of Christianity by investigating key figures in their contexts:  Jesus, Paul the Apostle, the Emperor Constantine, medieval visionary Hildegard of Bingen, theologian John Calvin, early twentieth-century founders of Pentecostalism William J. Seymour and Aimee Semple McPherson, and Salvadoran martyr Oscar Romero.  In these contexts, we’ll discuss how race, the state, gender, migration, and other cultural forces shaped and were shaped by the movement that became Christianity.  We’ll also explore the imprints of this history in contemporary Christian worship and architecture. (Spring 2018, Professor Traina)

REL 250 – Introduction to Islam

This course introduces Islam, one of the major religious traditions of world history, developing a framework for understanding how Muslims in varying times and places have engaged with Islamic scripture and the prophetic message of the Prophet Muhammad through diverse sources: theological, philosophical, legal, political, mystical, literary and artistic. While we aim to grasp broad currents and narrative of Islamic history, we will especially concentrate on the origins and development of the religion in its formative period (the prophetic career of the Prophet Muhammad, the Qur'an, Islamic belief and ritual, Islamic law, and popular spirituality) and debates surrounding Islam in the contemporary world (the impact of European colonialism on the Muslim world, the rise of the modern Muslim state, and discourses on gender, politics and violence).

REL 260 – Introduction to Native American Religion

This course examines diverse Native American religious traditions in the shifting historical and contemporary contexts of Euro-American and Native American interaction and exchange. We will balance our examination of particular traditions—including those originating in the Northwest, Southwest, Great Plains, Midwest and Southeast—with a consideration of broader themes including identity, artistic expression, politics, and the environment. We will also consider ethical issues pertinent to the study of Native American religions, such as the debate about cultural appropriation, and discuss the impact of colonialism on Native American religious groups. (Spring 2018, Professor Sarah Dees)

REL 261 – American Religion, Ecology, and Culture

The historical rise of environmentalism in American culture and its impact on religious thought and practice. Taught with ENVR POL 261; may not receive credit for both courses.

REL 264 (HISTORY 200-22) – American Religious History From 1865 To The Great Depression

This course examines major developments, movements, controversies, and figures in American religious history from the end of the Civil War, as the nation struggled to make sense of the carnage of war and to apportion responsibility, to the 1930s, when economic crisis strained social bonds and intimate relations and challenged Americans to rethink the nature of public responsibility. Topics include urban religion; religion and changing technologies; African American religion; religion and politics; and the religious practices of immigrants and migrants.

REL 265 (HISTORY 200-22) – American Religious History from WWII to Present

This course examines major developments, movements, controversies and figures in American religious history from the 1920s, the era of excess and disillusionment, to the 1980s, which saw the revival of conservative Christianity in a nation becoming increasingly religiously diverse. Topics include the liberalism/fundamentalism controversy of the 1920s; the rise of Christian realism in the wake of the carnage of World War I; the making of the "tri-faith nation" (Protestant/Catholic/Jew); the supernatural Cold War; the Civil Rights Movement; the revolution in American Catholicism following the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) and the rise of Catholic political radicalism in the 1960s; religion and the post-1965 immigration act; the religious politics of abortion; and the realignment of American religion and politics in the 1970s and 1980s.

REL 270 – Introduction to Theology

Theology as an academic discipline with a long history of asking -- in dialogue with thinkers past and present -- fundamental questions about religious experience, texts, practices, and ideas.

REL 271 – Theology of Love

Love seems central to human existence: parents’ sacrificial love for children, erotic love between romantic partners, the love of friendship. Love is also central to the intersection between Christian theology and Christian ethics. Christian theology studies concepts related to God and God’s relation to persons. Ancient Christians described God’s being as a relation of love between Father, Son, and Spirit. God’s enduring presence with God’s people, they then said, comes by way of a gift of love (i.e. the Holy Spirit) into the human heart. This way of understanding God and God’s manner of being with people has circumscribed love into the core of the Christian tradition. The concept of love must be defined by identifying and describing its predicates in order to more fully understand the intersubjective reality that is God and the human person in relation.

Christian ethics is a branch of Christian theology. It zeroes in on the intersubjective reality created between the individual person and the world, but does so on the basis of the individual’s relation to God. Christian ethics begins with the position that God is just. Then, this discipline assesses and prescribes ways in which the self-world relation can be moved closer to God’s justice by promoting human virtue or happiness. Love functions in Christian ethics as a mode and manner of action towards this ideal. ‘God is Love’ may be the nominal predication of theology, but ‘love God and neighbor’ is the active exhortation of Christian ethics. The goal of this seminar is twofold: first, to give predication to the Christian theological concept of love by examining the historical development of this idea in terms of God and God’s relation to human beings; second, to then examine the ethical ramifications of this concept on social life. We seek to understand the theological concept of love on its own terms and as it is used to promote a more just society. (Spring 2018, Professor Candace Kohli)

REL 272 (GERMAN 272) – Luther and the West

Examination of Luther's work in the context of his life and times. Introduces basic dimensions of Western thought, showing how theology relates to broader cultural, political, social, and aesthetic issues. Taught with GERMAN 272; may not receive credit for both courses.

REL 275 – Mysticism & Spirituality

Mysticism is often defined in terms of some specific type of mystical experience, or a mystical relationship with the divine, or a mystical form of prayer, or mystical consciousness, all of which may be grounded in specific religious traditions but often moves beyond the boundaries of those traditions. Spirituality is a less specific term; it often refers to a sense of spiritual presence or to spiritual practices, and it may be unconnected with any religious traditions. This course examines the ways both mysticism and spirituality relate on the one hand to experience, and on the other hand to traditions. It focuses also on the ways texts (the writings of the mystics and those claiming spiritual inspiration) can be read, and introduces ways of studying these matters not only across religious traditions but outside traditions.

REL 309-21 – Religion in Ancient India (RLP)

This class is a survey of one of the most dynamic and important periods in world religious history, in which Buddhism, Jainism, and Classical Hinduism all were born. This course explores the religious history of South Asia from the Vedic period to the fall of the Gupta Empire, about 1500 BCE – 600 CE. We will cover the migration of the Indo-Aryan tribes into South Asia, Vedic Hinduism, the rise of city-states and empires, foreign invasions and the influences they brought, the emergence of Buddhism and Jainism, the reign of the Buddhist emperor Aśoka Maurya, the development of Mahāyaṇa Buddhism, the so-called ‘Brāhmaṇical revival’, the ‘Sanskrit Cosmopolis’, and the end of the classical period. We will explore this history through texts, archaeology, and art. One of our main goals will be to identify the contingencies that led to the development of Classical Hinduism in the early centuries of the Common Era. Counts towards (RLP) Religion, Law and Politics. (Spring 2018, Professor McClish)

REL 310-1 – Buddhist Scripture

Origins, development, and content of Buddhist sacred literature. Prerequisite: 170 or 210.

REL 312 – Buddhism and Gender

The unifying theme of this seminar is gender and Buddhism. We take as our point of departure Carolyn Bynum's statement: "No scholar studying religion, no participant in ritual, is ever neuter. Religious experience is the experience of men and women, and in no known society is this experience the same." Bearing this in mind, we will explore historical, textual and social questions relevant to gender in the Buddhist worlds of India, Tibet, and the Himalayas from the time of Buddhism's origins to the present day. Topics covered in this course will include the roles of women, men, femininity, and masculinity in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism, Buddhism and the family, gender and the body in Mahayana Buddhism, the roles of female goddess figures such as dakinisin Vajrayana Buddhism, Buddhism and sexuality, and the status of Buddhist nuns.

REL 313 – Tibetan Religion and Culture

Propagation of religions in Tibet in their larger historical, cultural, and political contexts.

REL 314 – Buddhism in the Contemporary World

Some say America is currently undergoing a process of “Buddhification,” meaning that Buddhism is cropping up everywhere, even in places one would least expect. Tech industry billionaires tout Buddhist mindfulness techniques at the annual Wisdom 2.0 conference, and Google offers mindfulness training courses taught by a Zen abbot. Mindfulness is also being presented as a panacea for those suffering from physical and mental pain, readily available in American hospital settings and psychological counseling services. Buddha images too can be found far from Buddhist temples—at the hip restaurant Buddha-Bar located in many cities around the world one can sip cocktails and dine before a massive Buddha statue while listening to lounge music. And in the Chicago area, one encounters Buddha head sculptures positioned on the ground in parks, by roads, and even in public school playgrounds as part of the Ten Thousand Ripples art project.

How, and why, did aspects of Buddhism enter all of these different social locations? 

Why does Buddhism receive a pass more often than other religions by the “spiritual but not religious” crowd? Can Buddhism be secular? In what ways is Buddhism compatible with science, and can Buddhist practices be proven effective using scientific methods? Can paying better attention by means of Buddhist meditation practices liberate us from suffering caused by digital distraction? In what ways can Buddhist articulations of interdependence, no self, and compassion be resources for addressing racial and structural injustice, even as sexual abuse, racism, and trans/homophobia continue to traumatize members of some Buddhist communities? These are some of the many questions we will consider through readings by some of the most creative Buddhist leaders, critics, and consumers of our time. (Spring 2018, Professor Sarah Jacoby)

REL 318 – Topics in East Asian Religions

Content varies. May be repeated for credit with change of topic.

REL 319 – Topics in Buddhism

Content varies. May be repeated for credit with change of topic.

REL 329 – The Gospel of Matthew: At the Crossroads of Early Christianity

In its portrayal of Jesus and his mission, the Gospel of Matthew draws deeply on the Jewish heritage of early Christianity while, at the same time, orienting the Christian community to further engage the wider Greco-Roman world.  The success of this gospel made it the dominant gospel of Early Christianity.  This course will engage in a thorough reading of this foundational first century document and the historical and religious context in which it was composed.  The format is primarily lectures and class discussion.  (Spring 2018, Professor Donald Senior)

REL 330 – Varieties of Ancient Judaism

Introduction to the Judaisms that flourished from the fifth century BCE to the third century CE.

REL 332 – Modern Jewish Thought

How Judaism dealt with modernity and the problems it posed: Spinoza, Mendelssohn, Cohen, Buber, Rosenzweig, and Levinas.

REL 333 – Judaism in the Modern World

Radical changes that emancipation and modernity have brought to the religious expression of Judaism. May be repeated for credit.

REL 339-20 – The "Occidental-Oriental" Divide in Israel

This course covers the history of Jews of Middle Eastern origin, commonly referred to as "Sephardim" or "Mizrahim," in the State of Israel, a community that is often erroneously viewed as monolithic and whose contributions to Israeli culture are frequently downplayed or ignored in favor of a historiography that is more focused on the contributions of Ashkenazi Jews (Jews of northern European descent) to the country. This course will focus on the importance of the Ashkenazi-Mizrahi divide, its history, origins, meaning, and future trajectory through the lens of Mizrahi history.

REL 339-20 – The Settlement Movement & the National Religious Camp in Israel (RLP)

This class discusses the Israeli “Settlement Movement” in the West Bank and its relationship to the “National Religious” (or “Religious Zionist”) Camp in Israel. We will explore the political, ideological, economic and social underpinnings, implications, and political effects of Religious Zionism, National Religious politics, and the Settlement Movement – underpinnings that, though currently related and overlapping, are distinct and often in tension with one another and reflect the heterogeneous nature of both the settlement movement and the National Religious camp. Counts towards (RLP) Religion, Law and Politics. (Spring 2018, Professor Joseph Ringel)

REL 339-20 (POLI SCI 390-20) – Religion and Politics In The State Of Israel

This course explores the historical development and socio-political impact of the relationship between religion and state in Israel both in terms of its domestic and foreign policies. As part of our exploration, we will delve into the extent to which the Israeli model represents broader trends in the Middle East specifically and in the world at large; the complex nature of the relationship between democracy and religion, and between religion and politics in a democracy; and the impact of religion on political violence and peace-making.

REL 339-21 – Reading the Talmud

The Talmud is one of the most important works of Jewish literature. For the last millennium, Talmud study has been a central part of Jewish religious and cultural practice. Despite the splintering of Judaism into different denominations, Jews the world over are unified by their commitment to studying Talmud. The Talmud is an unusual work of literature, and it has been credited as an influence on codes of law, sermons, modern works of Jewish literature, and even Seinfeld. This course will explain the Talmud's import and durability within Jewish culture while introducing students to the rigors of legal analysis that lie at the heart of most talmudic passages. The course is ideal for those interested in religion, law, logic games and questions of textural interpretation. The course will study the Talmud entirely in English translation; there is neither a language prerequisite nor an expectation of prior experience reading the Talmud.

REL 339-21 – The Art of Rabbinic Narrative

Rabbinic literature contains a large corpus of stories. In this course we will explore different methods of reading such stories. These range from naïve historiography to sophisticated historiography, from reading these stories as fables with didactic morals to reading them as windows onto a class-stratified and gender-divided rabbinic culture. Our analysis of these methods of reading rabbinic stories will be conducted in conversation with different twentieth century literary theorists. (Spring 2018, Professor Barry Wimpfheimer)

REL 339-21 (GNDR_ST 390-20) – Jews and the Transgender Movement

The past few years have come to be labeled a "transgender movement" because of the increasing visibility of transgendered individuals in law, the media and popular culture. This course is a theoretical rumination on the intersection of Jewishness and gender fluidity in terms of personal identity, cultural politics and institutional normativity. Both Jewishness and gender identity are cultural constructions with strong relationships to biological "facts." They share the experience of internal cohesion through external labeling and persecution. Modernity has transformed both gender identity and Jewish identity into somewhat autonomous self-characterizations even as the choice to transform one's identity comes with significant social judgment and cost.

REL 341 – Medieval Christianity

Christian thought, institutions, and figures of medieval Christianity, c. 500-1500.

REL 342 – Christian Mystical Theology

Writings of mystics-e.g., Meister Eckhart, Cloud of Unknowing, Julian of Norwich, Teresa of Avila-in their cultural context.

REL 344 – Blood, Sex, and Justice: Issues in Christian Ethics

Four contemporary moral issues viewed from a variety of Christian approaches. Prerequisite: 170, 221, 240, or 260.

REL 345 – Sainthood

The phenomenon of sainthood opens a range of issues: a saint is an exemplar of heroic virtue, and ideas of sainthood reflect the ethical norms of a particular Christian society; a saint is the focus of veneration, and the ways people behave toward saints (going on pilgrimage to venerate their relics, showing reverence to their images, etc.) tells a great deal about official and unofficial Christian piety; a saint is a figurehead for some interest group such as a religious order or a city, and in churches that have a process of canonization this becomes a mirror of ecclesiastical politics.

REL 346 – Church Architecture

Survey of historical and recent churches: spatial dynamics, centering focus, aesthetic impact, and symbolic resonance.

REL 349-20 – Religion and Literature

No description available

REL 350 – The Qur'an

Islam's sacred scripture and its origins; Muslim understandings of revelation and prophecy.

REL 351 – Islamic Law (RLP)

Islamic law, the sacred law of Islam grounded in the Qur’an, the practice of the Prophet Muhammad, and the writings of Muslim scholars and jurists, stretches back nearly 1400 years. After critically examining the concept of ‘law’, we will explore the emergence legal discourses in the Qur’an and prophetic model (sunna). We will trace the development of Islamic legal methodologies and schools in the classical era by way of key primary and secondary sources. We then examine case studies from both classical and contemporary angles, covering family, ritual purity, gender, jihad and just war, commerce, and criminal law. Finally, we seek to understand the dual impacts of colonialism and the attempt to implement Islamic law through the apparatus of the modern nation-state. We conclude with reflections on new trends in Islamic legal hermeneutics. Prerequisite: 250 or consent of instructor. Counts towards (RLP) Religion, Law and Politics. (Spring 2018, Professor Brannon Ingram)

REL 359 – Topics in Islam – Islam in Asia

This class introduces you to a wide variety of ethnographies on Muslim communities in Asia, both in the range of regions and states – Iran, Pakistan, India, Malaysia, Indonesia, and China – as well as in terms of themes – how Muslims engage secularizing states, coexist with hegemonic non-Muslim majorities, survive as refugees on the battleground of rival nation states, and, with native languages other than Arabic, make the Qur’an collectively meaningful. At the same time, you will sharpen your ability to read and evaluate difficult books.  We will analyze the ethnographies as texts to understand how the authors combined different kinds of texts to achieve the effect of a unified ethnographic whole, which different fieldwork activities yielded specific forms of data or empirical materials, which writing techniques authors used to give voice to different groups of informants, and how authors attempted to represent the hold of the past on the “now” of fieldwork. (Spring 2018, Professor Stefan Henning)

REL 360 – African-American Religions

Exploration of the historical diversity of African American religious experiences and identities.

REL 363 – Topics in Women and Religion in America

Topics, figures, events, and dynamics in the history of American women and religion.

REL 364 – American Teenage Rites of Passage

Examination of various rites of passage experienced by US teens.

REL 369-20 – Media, Earth, and Making a Difference

The course explores the use of media as tools for moral engagement in addressing the environmental challenges of the Anthropocene, while posing a series of dilemmas to students in evaluating the efficacy of these materials. (Spring 2018, Professor Sarah Taylor)

REL 369 (ASIAN_AM 350-1) – Asian American Religions

No description available

REL 371 – Religion and Film

In the aftermath of the World War I, many artists and filmmakers asked new questions about the relationship between realism and religion.  Could one reconcile concrete reality (or realism) with faith in the other-worldly? 

Many of the artists under discussion in the course drew upon themes that had already been raised by Kierkegaard in the 19th century but were also inspired by the development of ideas about the human unconscious mind developed by Freud.  Both thinkers developed their ideas in texts that will be foundational for our discussions about how the following questions drove the filmmakers under discussion in this class: 

(Spring 2018, Professor Molina)

REL 373 – Religion and Bioethics

Analysis of contemporary dilemmas in medicine and the life sciences; responses to these dilemmas from religious perspectives.

REL 374 – God After the Holocaust

Throughout the history of the Jewish religion, times of crisis and collective suffering have given rise to theological innovation and creative shifts in religious expression as Jews sought to understand their tradition in light of their experiences. In the wake of the Holocaust, Jews and others faced a similar need for religious rethinking. In theological terms, they asked: where was God and should we expect God to act in human history? What does this event indicate about God's existence? In human terms, they asked: how do we live as Jews today? How do we live as human beings?

REL 375 – Foundations of Christian Thought

This course will examine the central issues in premodern Christian thought. We will begin with two works that show Christian thinkers struggling with theological issues that arise largely from their own experience: St. Augustine's Confessions and Julian of Norwich's Showings. Then we will examine the teachings on God and Christ, as set forth by writers in the Eastern and Western Churches.

REL 376 – Christianity and the Making of Modernity

Role of Christian thought in shaping the turbulent history of the West from the 16th to the late-18th centuries. Christianity's engagement with local and global events, from reformation to revolution, reason to romanticism.

REL 377 – Christian Thought in Global Perspective

Globalization of Christian thought in the 19th-21st centuries, considering religious differences, colonialism, war, and democracy. Approaches to theology in Asia, Latin America, and Africa.

REL 378 – Death: Myth and Meaning

Death is the most universal of all human experiences, and the process of coming to terms with our own death and coping with the death of others stands at the center of much of religion, philosophy, and culture since the immemorial. This class offers an exploration of central myths, beliefs, practices, questions, fears, and hopes associated with death, and ranges across different times and places, from ancient Mesopotamia to contemporary America. The purpose of this class is to get acquainted with some of the most interesting and influential ideas on death in the history of human civilization, and to acquire a kit of intellectual and conceptual tools to help us better understand our own death and the death of others as an inescapable part of life.

REL 379 – Religion and Magic

This course will examine the ways magic is viewed and practiced in various cultures, its relationship to
mainstream religious practice in each of those cultures, and a range of theories that have been proposed
regarding the relationship between magic and religion. Counts towards the Religion, Sexuality, and Gender (RSG) major concentration.

REL 379-21 (POLI SCI 382-20) – Politics of Religious Diversity

No description available

REL 379-21 (SESP 351-21) – Religion and Identity

No description available

REL 381 – Global Catholicism in the Contemporary World

Historical and contemporary global Catholicism. Topics include the church and political modernity; local saints; controversies over worship styles; Catholics and political revolutions; the Vatican; the pontificate of John Paul II.

REL 382 – Catholicism in the Making of the Modern World

16th-17th-century Catholic influences on missions, colonial ventures, science, and the development of nonEuropean history; the effects of these efforts upon Catholicism's understanding of itself and early "global culture."

REL 383 – Catholic Social Ethics

Ecclesiastical, academic, and popular Catholic social ethics from 1891 to the present - for example, the living wage and Catholic Worker movements, peace initiatives, liberation ethics, and immigration, environment, sexuality, and gender issues.

REL 384 – Soundings in the Catholic Tradition

Topics in Catholic religious thought or religious movements. May be taken multiple times with different content.

REL 385 – Topics in US Catholicism

Historical and contemporary subjects in the study of Catholic culture in the United States. May be taken multiple times with different content.

REL 386 – Topics in Latin American Catholicism

Historical and contemporary subjects in the study of Catholic culture in Latin America. May be taken multiple times with different content.

REL 395 – Theories of Religion

No description available

REL 396-1 – Senior Honor Seminar

No description available

REL 396-2 – Senior Honor Seminar

No description available

Courses Primarily for Graduate Students

REL 471 (GNDR_ST 490-23) – Graduate Seminar: Catholicism and Modern Sexualities

Roman Catholicism was one of—if not the—major force in shaping modern sexualities, as irritant, fantasy, boundary, and more. From whatever perspective—aesthetics, theology and ritual, penitential practice and disciplines, of the control of bodies and desires, the construction of sexual identities over time, missionaries and the extension of Catholic sexuality beyond Europe and North America—the Catholic imaginary is central to the history of modern sexuality. In the era after the Council of Trent in 1545, when the history of modern Catholicism begins, there was a determined effort within the Church to discipline Catholics around the world into obedience and submission to Roman rules and rubrics. Sexuality was mobilized in different ways as a site of disciplinary action and of resistance in this project, within Catholicism and at the border between Catholicism and other cultures.

REL 471 – Graduate Seminar: Feminist Theory and the Study of Religion

This course aims to put feminist theory and religious studies into conversation with each other in order to examine the resulting intersections, points of mutual illumination, and aporias. The course will investigate the history of feminist approaches to religious studies as well as new directions in current scholarship including feminist and womanist theologies, goddess feminism, secular and post-secular feminisms, as well as postcolonial and transnational feminisms. We will consider the following questions: What does it mean to apply a gender studies lens to the study of religion? How do feminist conceptions of “liberation” reinforce or reject religious conceptions of “liberation”? What are the implications of the “return of religion” currently invoked in some feminist discourses? In thinking through these topics, we will read works by Judith Butler, Luce Irigaray, Hélène Cixous, Saba Mahmood, and Rosi Braidotti, among others. This course seeks to move beyond prevalent assumptions of Judeo-Christian normativity in its analysis of feminist contributions to the study of religion. It pays particular attention to feminist approaches to the study of Asian religions, but with flexibility to highlight other geographic/thematic areas of interest to graduate students enrolled in the course.

Selected Readings:
1) Chandra Mohanty. Feminism Without Borders: Decolonizing Theory, Practicing Solidarity. Durham: Duke University Press, 2003, ISBN 9780822330219.
2) Stacey M. Floyd-Thomas (ed). Deeper Shades of Purple: Womanism in Religion and Society. New York: New York University Press, 2006, ISBN 9780814727539.
3) Linda Alcoff and John Caputo (eds). Feminism, Sexuality, and the Return of Religion. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2011, ISBN 9780253223043.
4) Talal Asad. Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity. Stanford UP, 2003, ISBN 9780804747684.
5) Donaldson/Kwok (eds). Postcolonialism, Feminism, and Religious Discourse. New York: Routledge, 2002. ISBN: 0415928885.

REL 472 (ANTHRO 474) – Graduate Seminar: Religion and Values

No description available

REL 473 – Graduate Seminar: Studies in Buddhism

This course will survey the state of the field of Tibetan Buddhist Studies by examining a selection of recent monographs in the field covering a broad array of topics including tantra, medicine, ritual, literature, history, and art history. The focus will be on analyzing how authors of recent monographs in Tibetan studies constructed these works including their main methodological influences and primary sources with an eye towards preparing graduate students for their own writing projects.

REL 481-1 – Graduate Seminar: Classical Theories and Methods

This course covers the emergence of the field of religious studies by exploring its early theorists and their impact. Authors covered include but are not limited to Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud, Emile Durkheim, William James, Rudolf Otto, Mircea Eliade, E.B. Tylor, and Ludwig Feuerbach. Students will give brief presentations on resources they have prepared for common use and will write a final paper on the reception history of one author.

REL 481-2 – Graduate Seminar: Theories of Religion

This course builds on the foundation of Rel 481-1. Focusing on recent monographs in the field, the course aims to provide a genealogy of the category of religion itself as it was constituted within Euro-American intellectual and social history. It gives particular attention to ways that the category migrated within, and was mediated by, colonial and imperial networks in Asia and Africa, and to recent debates about secularity as a discourse that attempts to draw boundaries between 'religion' and not-religion ('culture', 'politics', 'superstition', and so on).

REL 482 – Graduate Seminar: Themes in Comparative Religion

No description available.