DEPARTMENT OF RELIGION UNDERGRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS SPRING 2018 As of : Friday, October 27, 2017 (subject to change)

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DEPARTMENT OF RELIGION UNDERGRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS SPRING 2018 As of : Friday, October 27, 2017 (subject to change) Course Number Title Description Day(s) Campus Cross-Listing Comments 01:840:101:01 Index: 18482 MTh1 DC 01:840:101:02 Index:15599 01:840:101:03 Index: 15591 01:840:101:04 Index: 18483 01:840:111:01 Index: 19729 Secular Age Secular Age Secular Age (Hybrid) Secular Age Religion, Myth and Harry Potter (Hybrid) This course introduces students to the academic study of religion by focusing on four major areas of inquiry: myth; religious authority; purity and sacred space; and ritual practices. We will draw on diverse source material, including Indian, Muslim, Greek, Chinese, and Christian traditions but maintain a focus on the appropriation and re-interpretation of these traditions in the modern, secular west. Sub-topics will include popular notions of cults, magic, and illegitimate religion; race, ethnicity, and gender; religious fundamentalism and violence; and debates about religion and science in the 20 th and 21 st centuries. Another goal will be to familiarize students with major theories of religion, including the work of E. B. Tylor, Sigmund Freud, Karl Marx, Émile Durkheim, Clifford Geertz, and Bruce Lincoln as well as contemporary Cognitive Science research. [21C] [AH]. Prof. Surowitz Same as above. Prof. Fruchtman TTh4 DC Same as above. Prof. Wasserman Tues 3 DC Hybrid course. Some meetings online. Same as above. Prof. Surowitz MTh2 DC This course will focus on a major theme found in the narratives of nearly every major (and minor) world religious tradition: the hero s quest. This common theme appears in the scriptures, stories, and legends of religions as different as the animism of the Trobriand islanders to the strict monotheism of Islam. While the details differ, representations of the hero s quest follow a remarkably similar pattern across time and distance. In analyzing this common theme, we will explore the genre of mythology, as it relates to other categories of religious narratives. While examining the Hero s Quest step by step as it appears in Page 1 of 6 T5 LC Hybrid course. Some meetings online.

Course Number Title Description Day(s) Campus Cross-Listing Comments religious narratives, we will also discover how this theme is present in the contemporary world in popular fantasy literature and film. Some 20 th century scholars of religion have argued that modern man lives in a desacralized world, and we will use the course material to question this assumption, and consider what is meant by the term modern, and indeed, what is meant by the term religion, in today s world. Prof. Russell Jones 01:840:202:01 New Testament Interpretation of basic Christian scriptures in translation; TTh6 DC 01:563:223:01 Index: 00365 influence of Jesus and Paul on the early Christian community (same as 563:223). SAS Core Code: HST. Prof. Jeong 01:840:206:01 Intro. Bible II Second course of two-semester sequence. Introduce students MTh2 LC 01:563:206:01 Index: 10825 to the literature of the Bible, focusing on the Prophets, historical backdrop of the prophetic message as revealed mainly through the book of Kings, and other relevant poetic material (Psalms, Job, etc.). Emphasis placed on literary, historical, theological matters. Special use made of archaeological discoveries. Bible studied against the backdrop of ancient Near Eastern culture. (Credit not given for both this course and 01:563:206). [HST] [AHp] Prof. Ballentine 01:840:211:01 Religion in Asia Introduction to the history of religions in South, Southeast, and TTh4 CAC Index: 03741 East Asia. [HST] [AHo] [AHp] Prof. Lammerts 01:840:211:02 Religion in Asia Introduction to the history of religions in South, Southeast, and TTh5 CAC Index: 03328 East Asia. [HST] [AHo] [AHp] Prof. Sherbow 01:840:212:01 Religions of the Religious beliefs, practices and sacred writings of Judaism, MTh3 LC Index: 03740 Western World Christianity, and Islam. [HST] [SCL] [AHo] Prof. Ballentine 01:840:212:02 Religions of the Religious beliefs, practices and sacred writings of Judaism, MW4 DC Index: 03588 Western World Christianity, and Islam. [HST] [SCL] [AHo] Prof. Pavlin 01:840:212:03 Religions of the Religious beliefs, practices and sacred writings of Judaism, MW6 DC Index: 18484 Western World Christianity, and Islam. [HST] [SCL] [AHo] Prof. Pavlin 01:840:222:01 The Question of God Questions faced by religion in the contemporary era: faith and MTh2 DC Index: 19730 in Modern Culture reason, religious experience, role of religion in a scientific society, nature of God. [HST] [AHo] Prof. Kolbaba 01:840:226:01 Index: 18485 Islam (Hybrid) Muhammad and the development of Muslim beliefs and practices; major movements and their effects on historical and current events. [HST] [AHo] Prof. Mojaddedi W6 CAC 01:685:226:01 Hybrid course. Some meetings online. 01:840:305:01 Index: 16936 Apocalypse Now? Religious Movements and the End of Time The course compares ancient, Medieval, and contemporary apocalyptic movements. Case studies will include the Jewish apocalyptic movement associated with the Dead Sea Scrolls and Pauline Christianity, Medieval apocalypticism surrounding Joachim of Fiore and the Crusades, and more contemporary movements such as Jonestown and the Left Behind series of Christian thrillers. [HST] [WCR] [WCD] Prof. Jeong TTh7 DC Page 2 of 6

Course Number Title Description Day(s) Campus Cross-Listing Comments 01:840:307:90 Index: 08981 Jesus (Online) 01:840:307:91 Index: 11179 01:840:319:01 Index: 18486 01:840:321:01 Index: 18462 01:840:333:01 Index: 18487 Jesus (Online) Religion in American History Yoga: History and Philosophy Caribbean Religion The career and teaching of Jesus viewed in historical context; development of the Gospel tradition and its effect on later concepts of Christ. Prof. Ketchum The career and teaching of Jesus viewed in historical context; development of the Gospel tradition and its effect on later concepts of Christ. Prof. Ketchum Survey of American religious history, exploring the relationship between religion and trends in such areas as politics, science, technology, gender relations, economy, and immigration.[hst] [WCr] [WCd] Prof. Williams While Yoga conjures up images of bodily postures and stretches in popular western culture, this aspect of yoga is only the third and preliminary step of the eight steps outlined in the Yoga Sutras, the classical ancient Indian treatise on the practice of Yoga. This course will have three components. The first will consist of a close reading of the original Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, with particular attention paid to the pre-modern commentaries of the text, thus exposing students to the traditional un derstanding of the practice of classical Yoga and its goals. The second component of the course will consist of an analysis of the history of Yoga in India, consider ing its variegated expressions in some of the classical traditions of the subcontinent. The third component will be a consideration of Yoga s transplantation to the West. Additionally, Students will have the optional op portunity of attending a Yoga class on campus. Prof. Bryant Examination of the history and role of the diverse religious components of the Caribbean basin from Indigenous practices to Catholicism, Protestantism, Judaism and the emergence and development of African belief systems and practices such as Vodou, Santeria and Rastafarianism from the 18th century to the present (same as 01:595:333). [21C), [SCL], [WCR]. Prof. Surowitz N/A N/A Online Course. Chat Sessions Thurs., 10 a.m.-12 p.m. N/A N/A Online Course. Chat Sessions Thurs., 4-6 p.m. MW4 CAC TTh4 CAC 16:840:521:01 MTh3 DC 01:595:333:01 Page 3 of 6

01:840:340:01 Index: 20283 01:840:362:01 Index: 19652 01:840:364:01 Index: 20222 The Dead Sea Scrolls Postmodern Approaches to Sacred Literature Sikhism and North Indian History The discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls was one of the most dramatic archaeological finds of the twentieth century. Since their discovery in 1947, the Dead Sea Scrolls have been the subject of intense study and debate, and have profoundly influenced the way in which we understand the ancient Jewish world, as well as the origins of Christianity and Rabbinic Judaism. In this class, we will examine a number of the Dead Sea Scrolls, attempting to understand them within their original historical contexts, as well as their significance for later Jewish and Christian traditions. All readings are in English. Prof. Yadin-Israel An examination of some significant aspects of postmodern literary, psychological and cinematic approaches to religion through the close analysis of a few select texts. The course does not deal primarily with the theological or historical interpretation of canonic sacred texts, but rather is designed to highlight the literary daring and the sometimes even outrageous postmodern freedom of authors who, through a process of bricolage, and via reference to a canonical sacred text, create statements of religious orientation and personal declarations of faith. By means of the elaboration of a creative and original literary, cinematic and/or psychological response, these authors come to terms personally with the ongoing power of the sacred text to captivate modern minds. Their own texts, when put into juxtaposition with the original sacred texts, may be taken to some degree as personal confessions in terms of their particular sensibilité religieuse. The course will analyze key texts by such original postmodern interpreters as Sigmund Freud (Moses and Monotheism/the Biblical story of Moses), D.H. Lawrence (Apocalypse/ John of Patmos Apocalypse), C.G. Jung (Answer to Job/The Book of Job), and Marcel Proust (Time Regained/the ritual of the Tridentine Mass). The analysis will also include films of two modern directors (Peter Weir s The Last Wave/apocalyptic themes) and Haifaa al- Mansour s Wadjda (secret messages), and my own literary contextualization of the Bhagavad Gita (based initially on van Buitenen s The Gita in the Mahabharata). These analyses will provide material for the study of such postmodern religious themes as the antinomy of Good and Evil, apocalypse as a myth of both world and individual transformation, and the feminine side of God. Course Cross-listing: 840:362:01. Prof. Walker The history of the Sikh religious tradition from the 16th century up to the present day. Prof. Shah MTh3 CAC 01:563:340:01 MW7 CAC 01:195:318:01 MW7 CAC Page 4 of 6

01:840:368:01 Index: 15596 01:840:369:01 Index: 15597 01:840:380:01 Index: 18488 01:840:396:01 Index: 00366 01:840:423:01 Index: 18489 01:840:427:01 Index: 20302 Hindu Philosophy Buddhist Philosophy Religious Healing in the U.S. Research in Religion Seminar in Buddhism: Buddhism and the Family Seminar in the Study of Religion: Readings in Biblical Hebrew Poetry. Upanishads, Patanjali, Bhagavad-Gita; theories of matter, energy, states of consciousness; meditation. Yogas of knowledge, action, devotion. Karma. Ethics. Comparison of Hindu and Western cosmology. [HST] [AHo] [AHp] Prof. Bryant Interdependence, impermanence, relativity; suffering; path to liberation; meditation; karma as cosmic justice; death and rebirth. Compassion as central ethical value. Theravada, Mahayana, and Tibetan Buddhism (same as 01:730:369). [HST] [AHo] Prof. Jiang This course will explore the history of religious healing in the United States, focusing especially on the following questions: How have major social, cultural, economic, and political trends in the United States impacted the way in which religious Americans defined illness and its cure? How have individuals from various religious traditions responded to the ascendancy of the medical establishment and the growing prestige of medical science? How does the practice of modern medicine compare to explicitly religious healing rituals? How have different healing traditions interacted within an American context? [HST] [WCr] [WCd] Prof. Williams N/A TTh5 CAC 01:730:368:01 TTh4 CAC 01:730:369:01 MW5 Although Buddhism is frequently represented as a religion of renunciation, buddhas, bodhisattvas, deities, monks, nuns, and the Buddhist laity are in fact deeply embedded within and influenced by their familial relations. Across Asia throughout history, various configurations of "family" play a central role in Buddhist ritual activity, religious motivation, social engagement, and political transformation. This seminar will consider the relationship of Buddhism and the family, a vast subfield of Buddhist Studies (including approaches to difference, gender, and sexuality) that has received significant attention from scholars in recent years. Through readings of primary Buddhist texts in translation as well as secondary sources, participants in the Seminar will explore the often controversial histories of family matters in Asian Buddhisms from antiquity to the present. Prof. Lammerts W2/3 CAC Intermediate knowledge of Hebrew required. Prof. Rendsburg MW5 CAC 01:563:434:01 CAC By Arrangement Page 5 of 6

01:840:456:01 Index: 18490 01:840:496:01 Index: 00367 01:840:498:H1 Index: 00368 Seminar on Rumi Research in Religion Honors in Religion BIG TEN ACADEMIC ALLIANCE DISTANCE LEARNING COURSE. On the basis of primary sources in English translation, this seminar will focus on Rumi's didactic writings (poetry and prose), in order to identify his distinctive teachings and their place in the context of the Sufi tradition and Persian mystical literature. (prerequisite: 01:840:226 or 01:840:356 or 372; only open to majors in their junior or senior year). Prof. Mojaddedi N/A N/A W4/5 CAC 16:840:556:01 By arrangement By Arrangement Page 6 of 6