Introduction to Islam Instructor: Kamran Scot Aghaie

Similar documents
Christology TH600/700 Fall PREREQUISITES: TH500 Introduction to Constructive Theology

History 145 History of World Religions Fall 2015

HSTR th Century Europe

Studies in the Prophetic Books

Islamic Civilization: The Formative Period ca History Fall 2018 Monday and Wednesday 11:00 AM-12:15 PM Location: HLT 190

TH 390/TH 590 ECCLESIOLOGY: The Theology of the Church Summer Session Syllabus

History 145 History of World Religions Fall 2012

HSTR th Century Europe

Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad HUM 3553, section 1; 3 credits FALL 2010 MWF 10:30-11:20 AM, CL1 320

SYLLABUS. GE Area C2 Learning Outcomes: Students who have completed a GE sub-area C2 course should be able to:

GSTR 310 Understandings of Christianity: The Global Face of Christianity Fall 2010

Syllabus for GBIB 626 The Book of Acts 3 Credit Hours Spring 2015

INTRODUCTION TO HINDUISM ANS 301M (30428) DESCRIPTION TEXTS

Syllabus for GBIB 766 Introduction to Rabbinic Thought and Literature 3 Credit Hours Fall 2013

Major Themes in the Qur an (Rel. 115): Fall 2011

Fall 2016 Biblical and Post-Biblical Wisdom Literature Hebrew 2708 / Jewish Studies 2708 Meeting Time/Location Instructor: Office Hours:

Syllabus for GTHE 624 Christian Apologetics 3 Credit Hours Spring 2017

Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad HUM 3553, section 1; 3 credits FALL 2012 MWF 12:30-1:20 PM, ENGR 327

Course Objectives: Upon successful completion of this course, students will have demonstrated

Department of Religious Studies REL 2011: Introduction to Religion. Class Time: Saturday 9:30 am- 12:15 pm Semester: Spring 2019 Classroom: PC211

Religion 20 Introduction to the Study of Religion: Comparative Spring 2007

REL 011: Religions of the World

THE 1501 The Hebrew Bible Saint Joseph s University / Fall 2007 M, W, F: 9:00-9:50 / 10:00-10:50 Course website on Blackboard

Department of Religious Studies Florida International University STUDIES IN WORLD RELIGIONS REL 3308

Introduction to Islam. Fall 2017 COURSE OUTLINE. Matherly Hall 18

Text: We ll use: Consider Ethics: Theory, Readings, and Contemporary Issues, Third Edition, by Bruce N. Waller.

INDIAN RELIGIONS AND PHILOSOPHIES: THE HISTORY OF HINDUISM REL

Syllabus for GBIB 774 Jewish Apocalyptic Literature 3 Credit Hours Fall 2012

Instructor: Dr. James Pavlin Office: Loree Bldg. 130/DC; Office Hours: MW 6:30-7:00, or by appointment

Syllabus for GBIB Corinthians 3 Credit Hours Fall 2012

COURSE SYLLABUS. Course Description

Syllabus for BIB 421 Pentateuch 3.0 Credit Hours Spring The purpose of this course is to enable the student to do the following:

Istituto Lorenzo de Medici Summer Program. HIS 120 Introduction to World History. Course Outline

PHL 170: The Idea of God Credits: 4 Instructor: David Scott Arnold, Ph.D.

Religion and Ethics. Or: God and the Good Life

THE SUPERNATURAL IN CROSS-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVE

Instructor: Dr. Khaled Keshk, Phone: Office Hours: 2333 N. Racine Avenue: By appointment.

UNDERSTANDINGS OF CHRISTIANITY

LA Mission College Mark Pursley Fall 2016 Note:

Fall 2013 COURSE OUTLINE

Course Syllabus - Pierce College 2018 History 1 Introduction to Western Civilization. Office Hours: 3:00-3:40 pm M-TH or by appointment

Professor Dr. Bruce Wells / Bellarmine 208 / office phone: / Office hours: Monday and Wednesday 11:00 a.m. 12:30 p.m.

RS 216: ISLAM. No correspondence to the official address:

THE CENTER FOR ASIAN AMERICAN STUDIES The University of Texas at Austin Spring 2012 SYLLABUS

Jensen, Irving L., Jensen s Survey of The Old Testament Survey, Moody Bible Insitute, 1978.

HARTFORD SEMINARY, SPRING Islamic Political Theology (TH-692) Course Description. Evaluation. Logistics

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, NORTHRIDGE INTRODUCTION TO RELIGIOUS STUDIES. RS 100 (Class Number: 14080) SPRING 2018

COURSE SYLLABUS. Course Description. Course Textbooks

TEXTBOOKS: o Vernon O. Egger, A History of the Muslim World to 1405: The Making of a Civilization, (Required)

Syllabus. Reza Aslan, No god but God: the Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam (New York: Random House, 2011) ISBN

Syllabus for GTHE 551 Systematic Theology I - ONLINE 3 Credit Hours Fall 2014

Biblical School of World Evangelism. Milford, Ohio SYLLABUS. Chronological Bible. Spring 2014 BI 106 (Catalog Number) David L.

Office Hours: By Appointment. Syllabus

Fall 2015 COURSE OUTLINE. & Fridays (discussion) group locations:

RLST 204 Introduction to the Hebrew Bible MWF 12:00 12:50 PM Spring Semester 2013

CHRI OLD TESTAMENT Summer 2013 (Session I: June 3-July5) Department of Theology

Syllabus for PRM 669 Practice Preaching 3 Credit Hours Spring 2017

Required Reading: 1. Corrigan, et al. Jews, Christians, Muslims. NJ: Prentice Hall, Individual readings on Blackboard.

Mailbox: Baker Hall 135. I check my mailbox each day in case you want to drop something off for me to read.

Syllabus for PRM 661 Introduction to Preaching 3 Credit Hours Fall 2013

Syllabus for PRM 669 Practice Preaching 3 Credit Hours Fall 2013

Final grades will be determined by 6 components: Midterm 20% Final 20% Problem Sets 20% Papers 20% Quizzes 10% Section 10%

Introduction to Islam

DESCRIPTION TEXTS EVALUATION

The Bible and Western Culture I RELS 2310 Dr. Caryn Tamber-Rosenau MW 1-2:30 p.m. GAR (Susanna Garrison Gymnasium) 209

COURSE SYLLABUS. Course Description

History 101, Sections 1-3 Fall 2017 State University of New York at Stony Brook MW 12:00-12:50, PLUS section meeting Melville W4550

course PHIL 80: Introduction to Philosophical Problems, Fall 2018

INDIAN RELIGIONS AND PHILOSOPHIES: THE HISTORY OF HINDUISM REL

Syllabus for GTHE 507 Holy Spirit in the Now - ONLINE 2-3 Credit Hours Summer 2012

Syllabus PHIL 1000 Philosophy of Human Nature Summer 2017, Tues/Wed/Thurs 9:00-12:00pm Location: TBD

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS PHL201 WORLD RELIGIONS. 3 Credit Hours

Syllabus for GBIB 583 The Parables of Jesus in Their Jewish Context 3 Credit Hours Spring 2014

Syllabus for GTHE 763 The Biblical Doctrine of Grace 3 Credit Hours Spring 2012

1) Students will analyze primary evidence related to the civilizations of the world from the end of the last ice age through the fifteenth century.

REL 230 South Asian Religions

TEXTBOOKS: o James L. Gelvin, The Modern Middle East:A History, (Required)

An Introductory to the Middle East. Cleveland State University Spring 2018

Introduction. The Challenge of Meaning & Interpretation Case Study of the End of the World

Syllabus for GTHE 507 Holy Spirit in the Now - ONLINE 2-3 Credit Hours Spring 2012

Theology 023, Section 1 Exploring Catholicism: Tradition and Transformation Fall 2011

History 247: The Making of Modern Britain, College of Arts and Sciences, Boston University Fall 2016, CAS 226 MWF 10-11am

A Syllabus for GTHE 561 Systematic Theology II - ONLINE 3 Credit Hours Spring 2014

TH501 THEOLOGY SURVEY I Fall 2015 Dr. Laura Miguélez Quay, Instructor Wednesdays, 2:00 5:00 PM

PHR-126 The Islamic Scriptures

Syllabus for GTHE 763 The Biblical Doctrine of Grace 3 Credit Hours Spring 2014

Other Recommended Books (on reserve at library):

Syllabus for GTHE 581 -Church History II 3 Credit Hours Spring 2015

Philosophy 301L: Early Modern Philosophy, Spring 2011

PLSC 4340 POLITICS AND ISLAM

Night Argumentative Essay Prompt

(254) :00 4:00 PM * T: 4:00 6:00 PM * R: 12:00 1:00 PM

- THE CHURCH - PURPOSE AND LEARNING OBJECTIVES:

Religious Studies 3370/3396 The Bible and Modern Science Fall 2011 Syllabus. Jane Pearce

ST540 Christian Encounter with Islam Reformed Theological Seminary, Orlando

Office: HumB 373; Tel ; Office Hours: M, W 12:00-2:00; T, Th 2:00-4:00; and by appointment

GVPT 241, Political Theory: Ancient and Modern, fall 2016

AFS4935/08CA & ANT4930/062E ISLAM IN THE WEST Tuesday: period 8-9 (3:00pm to 4:55pm) Thursday: period 9 (4:05pm to 4:55pm) Room: TUR 2305

REL Research Paper Guidelines and Assessment Rubric. Guidelines

REL/JSP 200: The Early History of God Syracuse University Spring 2016 Whitman 003 T/Th 12:30-1:50

Transcription:

Introduction to Islam Instructor: Kamran Scot Aghaie Course Number: ISL 310; HIST 306N (Topic 7); RS 319; MES 310 (Topic 1) Class Room & Time: MEZ 1.306 T. & Th. 2:00-3:30 PM Office Hours: WMB 6.102D T. & Th. 12:00-1:30 PM Phone: (512) 475-6400 Email: kamranaghaie@austin.utexas.edu The course website will be on Blackboard Teaching Assistants: James Casey and Lauren Baker TA Office Hours: FAC 27 TBA TA Email Address: jfbcasey@gmail.com; lmariebaker@gmail.com Course Description: This course provides an introduction to the religion of Islam. It is designed for students with a general interest in the Islamic world, in religion, or in History. We will examine the theology, history, and main social and legal institutions of Islam. Islam, as a major system of belief in the world, is experienced by Muslims and non-muslims alike. Consequently, besides studying the basic tenets and texts of the religion, this course will focus on the variety of ways in which Muslims and non-muslims have understood and interpreted Islam. We will review the debates surrounding the life of the prophet of Islam, Islamic pre-modern and modern history, the Islamic concept of God and society, the role of women, and finally, Islamic government and movements. The course is designed for students with a general interest in the Islamic world, religions, or history. No prior knowledge of Islam or Islamic history is necessary. Requirements: Weekly reading assignments, short quizzes, a midterm, and a final exam. Students must complete all the reading assignments and participate in class. Prerequisites: None Grading: Attendance 25% Seven short quizzes (drop the lowest grade) 25% Midterm 25% Final Exam (offered on two dates) 25% Textbooks: Fazlur Rahman. Islam. F. M. Denny. An Introduction to Islam. F. E. Peters. A Reader on Classical Islam N. J. Dawood. The Koran. (or any other Qur an translation) Ira Lapidus. A History of Islamic Societies.

MISCELLANIOUS COURSE POLICIES -Students must complete all readings prior to the class session for which they are assigned. -Materials on the website are only for use by the students in this class. Distribution or dissemination of any sort is not allowed. -Any Tech. devices that students bring to class must be turned off and put away during the class session. This includes computers, PDAs, cameras, audio or video recorders, cel phones, ipods, etc. The same applies to outside reading materials. Note: The University of Austin provides upon request appropriate academic accommodations for qualified students with disabilities. For more information, contact the Office of the Dean of Students at 471-6259. GRADING POLICIES -Attendance will be taken at random times during class on randomly selected days, beginning after the last day to add the course. Any students who are absent at the moment when the attendance is taken will be counted as absent for that particular class session. -Quizzes cover reading materials assigned for that week, not lectures or outsides materials. -The midterm and final are essay exams, 1 hour and 15 minutes in length. Students must bring large-size bluebooks for the exam. A study sheet of questions will be available on the web site prior to the exams. Grades for the essay exams will be assigned based on the grading rubric provided below. -Students have two choices for taking the final exam. The first option is the last class session and the second option is the regularly scheduled final exam time. Students will sign up for one or the other toward the end of the term. -Plus and minus grades will be assigned as follows. All numbers that involve decimals will be rounded up or down; for example, an 85.4 is an 85, and an 85.5 is an 86. F D- D D+ C- C C+ B- B B+ A- A 0-59 60-62 63-66 67-69 70-72 73-76 77-79 80-82 83-86 87-89 90-92 93-100 -Any student who feels that there may have been a mistake in the grading of his or her exam may submit it to be re-graded. In such cases the original grade will be erased and the paper will be re-graded using the same standards as the first time. Whatever the new grade is will be recorded in place of the original grade (whether it is higher, lower, or the same). Also, since the grading process must remain objective, students cannot be included in, nor can they directly influence, the grading process. Therefore, this option is available to any student as long as he or she has not discussed the content of the exam or the details of the grade with the TA or the instructor.

GRADING RUBRIC FOR ESSAY EXAM QUESTIONS: The Superior Essay (A) Question is answered directly, clearly and thoroughly. Thesis: Easily identifiable, plausible, novel, sophisticated, insightful, crystal clear. Structure: Evident, understandable, appropriate for thesis. Excellent transitions from point to point. Paragraphs support solid topic sentences. Evidence: Information used to buttress every point with at least one example. Examples support mini-thesis and fit within paragraph. Logic and argumentation: All ideas in the paper flow logically; the argument is identifiable, reasonable, and sound. The Good Essay (B) Thesis: Promising, but slightly unclear, or lacking in insight. Structure: Generally clear and appropriate, though may wander occasionally. May have a few unclear transitions, or a few paragraphs without strong topic sentences. Use of evidence: Examples used to support most points. Some evidence does not support point, or may appear where inappropriate. Analysis: Evidence often related to mini-thesis, though links perhaps not very clear. Logic and argumentation: Argument of answer is clear, usually flows logically and makes sense. The Borderline Essay (C) The essay does not adequately address the question asked on the exam. Thesis: May be unclear (contain many vague terms); provides little around which to structure the paper. Structure: Generally unclear, often wanders or jumps around. Few or weak transitions, many paragraphs without topic sentences. Use of evidence: Examples used to support some points. Points often lack supporting evidence, or evidence used where inappropriate (often because there may be no clear point). Logic and argumentation: Logic may often fail or be unclear. The "Needs Serious Help" Essay (D) Does not address the question at all. (or) Thesis: Difficult to identify at all, may be bland restatement of obvious point. Structure: Unclear, often because thesis is weak or nonexistent. Transitions confusing and unclear. Few topic sentences. Use of evidence: Very few or very weak examples. General failure to support statements, or evidence seems to support no statement. Analysis: Very little or very weak attempt to relate evidence to argument; may be no identifiable argument, or no evidence to relate it to. Logic and argumentation: Ideas do not flow at all, usually because there is no argument to support. Simplistic view of topic. The Failing Essay (F) Shows obviously minimal lack of effort or comprehension of the assignment. Very difficult to understand owing to major problems with mechanics, structure, and analysis. Has no identifiable thesis, or utterly incompetent thesis.

WEEKLY SCHEDULE: WEEK ONE Introduction to the Course, Syllabus & policies January 18-20 Denny, Chapter 1 Lapidus, Chapters 1 WEEK TWO The Message and the Messenger January 25-27 Rahman, Chapter 1 Denny, Chapters 2 Peters, Chapter 2 Lapidus, Chapter 2 WEEK THREE-FOUR The Qur an and the Traditions (Sunna) February 1-10 Denny, Chapters 6-7 (Quiz 1, Feb. 8) Rahman, Chapter 2-3 Peters, Chapter 4, pp. 212-226 Dawood, p. 9; pp. 165-175; pp. 416-435 (Surahs 1, 12, 78-114) WEEK FIVE The Early Muslim Community February 15-17 Denny, Chapter 3 (Quiz 2, Feb. 15) Peters Chapter 3 WEEK SIX Islamic Empire February 22-24 Denny, Chapter 4 (Quiz 3, Feb. 22) Lapidus, Chapters 3-5 WEEK SEVEN-EIGHT Sunni Orthodoxy & Sectarian Debates March 1-10 Rahman, Chapter 5, 10 (Quiz 4, March 8) Denny, Chapter 8, 10, 11 Peters, Chapter 7, 8 Lapidus, Chapters 8-12 SPRING BREAK March 14-18 No Class MIDTERM EXAM In MEZ 1.306 March 22 WEEK NINE-TEN Popular Beliefs and Ritual Practices March 24-31 Denny, Chapter 5, 12, 13 (Quiz 5, March 29) Peters, Chapter 6 Rahman, Chapter 8, 9, 11 WEEK ELEVEN Islamic Orthodoxy, Law & the State April 5-7 Rahman, Chapters 4 & 6 (Quiz 6, April 5) Denny, Chapter 9 Peters, pp. 227-256 Dawood, pp. 60-79 (Surah 4) Lapidus, Chapter 6, 7

WEEK TWELVE-THIRTEEN Late Islamic Empires; Colonialism & Response April 12-21 Rahman, Chapter 12 (Quiz 7, April 19) Denny, Chapter 14 Lapidus, pp. 197-225, 453--468, Ch. 22-24 WEEK FOURTEEN Revivalism, Fundamentalism and Modernism April 26-28 Denny, Chapter 15 Rahman, Chapter 13-14 WEEK FIFTEEN Revivalism, Fundamentalism and Modernism May 3 Lapidus, Chapters 25, 27, 30 and pp. 814-872 FINAL EXAM TIMES: Date Time Room Option A: May 5 (Thur.) 2:00-3:30 PM MEZ 1.306 Option B: May 11 (Wed.) 2:00-3:15 PM TBA