Spring 2015 REL 3563 (01ED) AMERICAN CATHOLICISM

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Spring 2015 REL 3563 (01ED) AMERICAN CATHOLICISM TIME: T 5-6, TH 6 PLACE: WEIL 270 CREDITS: 3 Semester Hours Fulfills Humanities Gen. Ed and 6 Gordon Rule INSTRUCTOR: David G. Hackett Office - 122 Anderson Hall Office Hours Wednesdays 11 a.m. 2 p.m. and by appointment Phone 273-2929; e-mail: dhackett@.ufl.edu DESCRIPTION: This course explores the history of American Catholicism with particular emphasis on: colonial contact; the immigrant church; popular practices; spirituality; social justice; Vatican II; and the contemporary church. COURSE OBJECTIVES 1) learn about the historical experiences of Catholics in the United States from the colonial era to the present. 2) understand some of the diverse ways that Catholics have employed their religious tradition to make sense of the world and their place in it 3) learn how to reflect critically on how you arrived at your beliefs and values and bring to consciousness the degree that these might be shaped by outlooks in the various cultures and subcultures in which you participate. 4) improve your skills in writing and constructing persuasive arguments There is substantial assigned reading in this course. To do well, you must complete the assigned readings. REQUIRED BOOKS Allan Greer, Mohawk Saint (2005) James T. Fisher, A Communion of Immigrants (2002) Robert A. Orsi, The Madonna of 115 th Street: Faith and Community in Italian Harlem 1880-1950 2 nd Edition (2002) Thomas Merton, Seven Story Mountain: An Autobiography of Faith (1998) Mark S. Massa, Catholics and American Culture (1999) Christian Smith et al Young Catholic America (2014) REQUIREMENTS, EXPECTATIONS, AND RESOURCES: 1) Attendance. Class attendance is required. If you are absent from more than two classes without a written excuse, your final grade will be reduced one-third of a grade (e.g. B+ to B) for every absence after the first two. If you arrive late to class or leave early, I reserve the right to mark you absent. 2) Heard on the street (10% of grade). Twice you will be responsible for presenting some contemporary Catholic issue that you have read or heard about and you believe needs some common exploration by the class. What you are going to discuss, and why you think it is 1

important, should be emailed to me prior to class. You will be assigned your day for completing this task on the first days of class and according to the alphabetical list of class members. 3) In-class presentation (15% of grade). Three times you will make a brief, 3 minute presentation (about 2 pages, 600 words, double-spaced) to the class introducing a specific reading or readings. Your presentation should analyze the reading s primary themes and identify any problematic elements in it, and must offer questions to guide reading discussion. Your presentation is due to me as an email attachment by 11:59 p.m. the day before the class meeting in which the reading is discussed. Late presentations will lose one-third of a grade (e.g. B+ to B). You will be assigned your days for completing this task on the first days of class and according to a reverse alphabetical list of class members. 4) Six reaction papers (75%). You will write six reaction papers in response to class readings and discussions. The second through fifth papers will demonstrate your understanding and evaluation of the current section s readings. The sixth paper will apply what you have learned to your understanding of the contemporary church. Assignment dates, due dates, recommended length, and % of final grade are as follows. First Paper - Your Relationship to Catholicism Assigned 1/8, Due 1/15 3 pages (900 words) 5% of final grade. Second Paper - Catholicism and Native Americans Assigned 1/20, Due 1/27 Three pages (900 words) 10% of grade Third Paper - Popular Catholicism Assigned 2/12, Due 2/26 5 pages (1,500 words) 15% of final grade Fourth Paper - Spirituality and Social Justice Assigned 3/12, Due 3/26, 5 pages (1,500 words) 15% of final grade Fifth Paper - Vatican II Assigned 3/26 Due 4/14, 4 pages (1,200 words), 10% of final grade Sixth Paper Final Paper Assigned 4/21, Due 5/1 6 pages (1,800 words), 20% of final grade Late or Make-Up Papers: You may receive an extension on an assignment only in extraordinary circumstances and with prior approval from the instructor. If an extension is not granted, the assignment will be marked down 1/3 grade (e.g., from B+ to B) for each school day it is late. Papers will be graded according to the following criteria. An A essay demonstrates not only a factual command of the material but also the ability to construct a coherent and complex argument-driven thesis that is supported by evidence and presented in clear and accurate prose. A B grade will be assigned to essays that possess both an identifiable thesis and adequate factual command, but that lack sufficient detail, or clarity and/or complexity in thinking or writing. Grades in the C range reflect essays that lack a thesis, or that provide minimal detail or evidence, or that exhibit significant writing problems. D grades will be assigned to essays that are clearly inadequate in content, organization, and writing. 2

The Writing Requirement (Gordon Rule) ensures students both maintain their fluency in writing and use writing as a tool to facilitate learning. Effective Summer A/C 2009, an additional grading component has been added to successfully complete and receive word credit for courses that meet the university writing requirement (Gordon Rule). Course grades now will have two components. Professors will indicate whether or not students met the writing requirement AND will assign a course grade. Therefore, to receive writing credit students must receive a grade of C or higher AND satisfactory completion of the writing component. It is possible not to meet the writing requirement and still pass the class. Students should review their degree audits after receiving their grades to verify receipt of credit for the writing component. 6) Grading Scale Final letter grades will be assigned according to the following scale: A 93 100; A- 90-92; B+ 87-89; B 83-86; B- 80-82; C+ 77-79; C 73-76; C- 70-720 D 60-69; E 0-59. 7) Common Courtesy. Cell phones and other electronic devices must be turned off during class. Students who receive or make calls during class will be asked to leave. You may take notes on a laptop computer or other device, although the instructor reserves the right to ask you to turn off the computer. The instructor also reserves the right to ask any student engaging in disruptive behavior (e.g., whispering, reading a newspaper) to leave the class. Repeat violations of these rules will result in dismissal from the class. 8) Honor Code. On all work submitted for credit by students at the University of Florida, the following pledge is either required or implied: On my honor, I have neither given nor received unauthorized aid in doing this assignment. The university specifically prohibits cheating, plagiarism, misrepresentation, bribery, conspiracy, and fabrication. For more information about the definition of these terms and other aspects of the Honesty Guidelines, see http://www.chem.ufl.edu/~itl/honor.html. Any student demonstrated to have cheated, plagiarized, or otherwise violated the Honor Code in any assignment for this course will fail the course. In addition, violations of the Academic Honesty Guidelines shall result in judicial action and the sanctions listed in paragraph XI of the Student Conduct Code. 9) Accommodation for Disabilities. Students requesting classroom accommodation must first register with the Dean of Students Office. The Dean of Students Office will provide documentation to the student, who must then provide this documentation to the Instructor when requesting accommodation. 10) Counseling Resources available on campus for students: a. University Counseling Center, 301 Peabody Hall, 392-1575 b. Student Mental Health, Student Health Care Center, 392-1171 c. Sexual Assault Recovery Services (SARS), Student Health Care Center, 392-1161 d. Career Resource Center, Reitz Union, 392-1601 11) Software Use. All faculty, staff, and students of the University are required and expected to obey the laws and legal agreements governing software use. Failure to do so can lead to monetary damages and/or criminal penalties for the individual violator. Because such violations are also against University policies and rules, disciplinary action will be taken as appropriate. 3

CLASS SCHEDULE AND ASSIGNMENTS *available within the course reserves tab on course web site **available within the resources tab on course web site. INTRODUCTION What do you want to get out of this class? What types of approaches are we going to take when we try to understand the history of Roman Catholicism in the United States? What do we mean when we say American Catholicism? Tuesday 1/6 Orientation. No reading assignment. Thursday 1/8 Orientation. No reading assignment. First Paper Assigned: What is your relationship to Catholicism? If you understand yourself as a Catholic, provide an overview of your history. What are your expectations for this course? If you are not Catholic, what is your religious background (if any), and what are your expectations for this course. Due 1/15 Three pages (900 words) 5% of final grade I CATHOLICISM AND NATIVE AMERICANS Tuesday 1/13 Reading: Greer, Mohawk Saint, 3-25, 50-58, 72-88 Thursday 1/15 Reading: Greer, Mohawk Saint, 102-110, 111-146 First Paper Due Tuesday 1/20 Reading: Greer, Mohawk Saint, 147-205 Second Paper Assigned: In Mohawk Saint, what was the relationship between the Jesuit priests understanding of Catholicism and the ways in which this Catholicism was understood by the Native Americans? Due 1/27 Three pages (900 words) 10% of grade II CATHOLICS IN THE COLONIAL WORLD Thursday 1/22 Reading: Fisher, A Communion of Immigrants, 1-42 4

III THE IMMIGRANT CHURCH Tuesday 1/27 Film: Out of Ireland Reading: Fisher, A Communion of Immigrants, 43-92 Second Paper Due Thursday 1/29 Reading: Orsi, The Madonna of 115 th Street, 1-49 Tuesday 2/3 Reading: Orsi, The Madonna of 115 th Street, 50-162 Thursday 2/5 Reading: Orsi, The Madonna of 115 th Street, 163-218 Tuesday 2/10 Reading: Orsi, The Madonna of 115 th Street, 219-231 **Reading: Orsi, Mildred is it Fun to be a Cripple? The Culture of Suffering in Mid-Twentieth Century American Catholicism Third Paper Assigned: Popular Catholicism Due 2/24 5 pages (1,500 words), 15% of final grade IV SPIRITUALITY AND SOCIAL JUSTICE Thursday 2/12 Reading: Fisher, A Communion of Saints, 92-113 Tuesday 2/17 A. Spirituality Film: Merton: A Film Biography Reading: Merton, Seven Story Mountain, 3-74 Thursday 2/19 Reading: Merton,, Seven Story Mountain, 75-184 Tuesday 2/24 Reading: Merton, Seven Story Mountain, 185-282 Thursday 2/26 Reading: Merton, Seven Story Mountain, 283-462 Reading: Massa, Young Man Merton in Catholics and American Culture, 38-56 Third Paper Due Spring Break

B. Social Justice Tuesday 3/10 Film: Don t Call Me a Saint **Reading: Robert Ellsburg, ed. Introduction and Therese in Dorothy Day: Selected Writings. Thursday 3/12 Reading: Massa, The Downward Path in Catholics and American Culture, 102-127. **Video excerpts of Dorothy Day https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lzoowztafna Fourth Paper Assigned: Spirituality and Social Justice Due 3/31, 5 pages (1,500 words) 15% of final grade V VATICAN II A. Fifties Catholicism Tuesday 3/17 Reading: Fisher, Communion of Immigrants, 114-136 Reading: Massa, Oh the Irony of it All in Catholics and American Culture, 1-10 Film: Going My Way **Andrew Greeley, The Catholic Imagination of Bruce Springsteen, http://www.americamagazine.org/content/article.cfm?article_id=11047 Thursday 3/19 Reading: Massa, Life is Worth Living in Catholics and American Culture, 82-101 Fulton Sheed Video Excerpts in Class Reading: Massa, A Catholic for President in Catholics and American Culture, 128-137 **Video: John F. Kennedy, * Address to the Greater Houston Ministerial Association, http://www.americanrhetoric.com/speeches/johnfkennedyhoustonministerialspeech.html B. The Second Vatican Council 1. Overview Tuesday 3/24 Reading: Fisher, A Communion of Immigrants, 137-165 Reading: **Gaudium et Spes summary http://www.shc.edu/theolibrary/resources/summary_gaudium.htm Thursday 3/26 2. The Laity Reading: Mark Massa, Into Uncertain Life in Catholics and American Culture, 148-171 3. Birth Control Reading: *Leslie Tentler, The Church s First Duty is Charity from Catholics and Contraception: An American History, 264-279. Fourth Paper Due Fifth Paper Assigned: Vatican II Due 4/7 pages, (1,200 words), 10% of final grade

VI THE CHURCH TODAY A. Latino Catholicism Tuesday 3/31 Reading: **Matovina and Riebe-Estrella, eds. Introduction pp. 1-16 in Horizons of the Sacred Reading: **Roberto S. Goizueto, The Symbolic World of Mexican American Religion pp. 119-138 in Horizons of the Sacred Reading: **Robert Orsi, thoughts on Vatican II in Have You Ever Prayed to St. Jude?: Reflections on Fieldwork in Catholic Chicago 152-157. Thursday 4/2 Reading: **Matovina, Epilogue: Transformations in America s Largest Church pp. 245-250 in his Latino Catholicism Reading: **Richard Rodriguez, Credo pp. 77-110 from his Hunger of Memory Reading: **Pew Forum, The Shifting Religious Identities of Latinos in the United States http://www.pewforum.org/2014/05/07/the-shifting-religious-identity-of-latinos-in-the-unitedstates/ B. The Sex Abuse Scandal Tuesday 4/7 View on UTube PBS Frontline Documentary The Silence Thursday 4/9 Reading:*John McGreevy, A Consistent Ethic and Sexual Abuse, in his Catholicism and American Freedom, 282-295. C. Young Catholics Today Tuesday 4/14 Reading: Smith, Young Catholic America 1-88 Fifth Paper Due Sixth Paper Assigned: Final Paper Due 5/1, 6 pages (1,800), 20% of final grade Thursday 4/16 Reading: Smith, Young Catholic America 89-200 Tuesday 4/21 Reading: Smith, Young Catholic America 201-274 Sixth Paper Due at noon on Friday, May 1st