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COURSE OFFERINGS
Spring 2009
RELIGIOUS
STUDIES 101 Section 1 (1 unit)
MWF 11:10 - 12noon
Introduction to Western Religions
CRN # 3375
Ron Mourad
Humanities
Division Credit; Historical and Cultural Analysis Mode Credit; Required for Religious Studies Major and Minor
Course
Description:
Contemporary Americans must
contend with an unprecedented plurality of religious
viewpoints. In this course, we will seek to address this
situation responsibly by examining three prominent “Western”
religions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. We will analyze
the characteristic beliefs and practices of these three
traditions so as to understand and appreciate their similarities
and differences. While we will survey the distinctive origins
and histories of these religions, we will also study their
contact with one another and explore the conditions necessary
for dialogue between them. Our approach will be academic rather
than confessional or apologetic.
RELIGIOUS
STUDIES 101 Section 2 (1 unit)
MWF 10:10 - 11:00am
Introduction to Western Religions
CRN # 3376
Nancy Weatherwax
Humanities
Division Credit; Historical and Cultural Analysis Mode Credit; Required for Religious Studies Major and Minor
Course
Description:
This course
explores the scriptures, beliefs, practices, history, and
ethics of the three major Abrahamic religions: Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam. How have these religious traditions
shaped life for individuals and communities in the past and
present? What do these religious traditions have in common?
How do they differ? How have they developed over the
centuries? What sorts of diversity do we find within each
religious tradition? We will give special attention to the
presence and interaction of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam
in contemporary North America. Our approach will be academic
rather than confessional.
RELIGIOUS
STUDIES 102 Section 1 (1 unit)
MWF 9:10 - 10:00am
Introduction to Eastern Religions
CRN # 3377
Mark Soileau
Humanities Division Credit; Historical and Cultural Analysis
Mode Credit; Required for Religious Studies Major
and Minor
Course
Description:
Religion has always played an important role in the identities
of individuals, in society and in politics, but today, as
adherents of different religions are coming into closer contact
with one another, it is becoming increasingly important to try
to understand religious faiths other than our own. This course
is an introduction to the religions that have developed in South
and East Asia, including Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Jainism,
Confucianism, Daoism and Shinto. We will analyze the histories,
myths, beliefs and practices of these religious traditions, and
note similarities and differences between them.
RELIGIOUS
STUDIES 102 Section 2 (1 Unit)
TR 1:10 - 2:30pm
Introduction to Eastern Religions
CRN # 3378
Steven Chamberlin
Humanities Division Credit; Historical and Cultural Analysis
Mode Credit; Required for Religious Studies Major
and Minor
Course
Description:
In light of a typology of religious phenomena, this course
will critically explore the religious wisdom of the East as
represented by Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Shinto,
Confucianism, and Taoism, and expressed in their respective
sacred literature, myths, symbols, beliefs, and practices. In
addition to intellectual familiarity, the course aims to
inculcate in students a critical appreciation for the religious
imagination of a tradition other than one's own.
RELIGIOUS STUDIES 104 (1 unit)
MW 1:10 - 2:30pm
Introduction to Islam
CRN # 3379
Mark Soileau
Humanities Division Credit; Historical and Cultural
Analysis Mode Credit;
Fulfills Islamic
Religion requirement for Religious Studies Major and Minor.
Course Description:
This course is
an introduction to the beliefs and practice of Islam in its
various manifestations, with additional emphasis on the history,
politics and gender issues which have both influenced and been
influenced by Islam. Throughout the course there will be a focus
on Islam as it is lived by people, so that students can gain an
appreciation of what it is like to live as a Muslim, and we will
look at many cultural expressions of Islam. We will also analyze
the ways Islam is represented in the news media and on the
internet, since these have become the main sources of
information – and misinformation – presented on Islam in the
United States.
While the
course will consist in part of lectures, class discussions are
also important, and active participation by students is
required. Students will be expected to have read the readings
before class, and be ready to discuss them in class. We will
make one field trip to a local mosque, and students will be
expected to ask questions. Students will also keep a journal to
record their impressions of certain readings, websites, other
media and the field trip. Students’ grades will be calculated
based on a midterm, a final, a term paper, other assignments,
the journal and class participation.
RELIGIOUS
STUDIES 122 (1 unit)
MWF 11:10 - 12noon
History,
Literature, and Religion of the New Testament
CRN # 3380
Jocelyn McWhirter
Fulfills Textual Analysis mode
requirement (new core), Fulfills Biblical Studies Requirement for
Religious Studies Majors
Course
Description:
This course introduces students
to the New Testament as a collection of literary works that interpret
first-century Jewish traditions in light of events that affected the
first Christians. Such events include life and death of Jesus as well as
the spread of Christianity throughout the Roman Empire, the Jewish War,
and the persecution of Christians under the Emperor Domitian. We will
read six of Paul’s letters, the four canonical Gospels, The Acts of the
Apostles, and Revelation. In the process, we will become more competent
interpreters of these ancient texts.
RELIGIIOUS STUDIES 204 (1 unit)
TR 10:10 - 11:30am
Islam and Modern World
CRN # 3381
Mark Soileau
Humanities Division Credit; Fulfills Global Studies
Category Requirement;
Fulfills Islamic Religion requirement for Religious Studies Major
and Minor.
Course Description:
Islam is the second largest religion in the
world, and one that has been increasingly in the news in recent
years. Much of this recent interest has been due to terrorist
acts perpetrated in the name of Islam and to conflicts in
countries with majority Muslim populations. Many of these
problems are in turn related to difficulties Islam has faced in
incorporating values introduced from the West and to the history
of Muslim interaction with the West. This course analyzes Muslim
intellectual responses to some of these issues and examines
developments in some Muslim countries in the twentieth century.
This will help provide students with an understanding of the
dynamics behind many of the events that affect our world today.
We will begin with an overview of the Islamic religion and
Islamic history, and then look at the responses of certain
influential Muslim intellectuals to issues such as modernism,
democracy, secularism, nationalism, science and women’s rights.
With this background, we will next focus on the ways Islam has
developed and influenced politics in certain countries, as well
as on the transnational organization al-Qaeda, and specifically
Shi‘i developments. Finally, we will look at the ideas of
progressive Muslims in the West.
RELIGIOUS STUDIES 215
(1 unit)
MW 2:10 - 3:30pm
Jewish Life and Thought
CRN
# 3382
Jocelyn McWhirter
Course Description:
As one of the oldest world religions, Judaism has been
practiced since about 1000 BCE, when David established the
cult of YHWH in Jerusalem. Times have changed over the last
3,000 years, and Judaism has changed with the times. Our
survey of Judaism will take us from the Golden Age of David
and Solomon to the Babylonian Exile, the Roman destruction
of the Second Temple, the Middle Ages, the Enlightenment,
the Holocaust, and the founding of the modern state of
Israel. In order to learn about the development of Jewish
thought, we will read from the Bible, rabbinic literature,
and the works of figures like Moses Maimonides, Baruch
Spinoza, Martin Buber, and Elie Wiesel. In order to
experience a bit of Jewish life, we will eat Jewish food,
listen to Jewish music, visit a synagogue, and participate
in a Passover Seder demonstration.
RELIGIOUS STUDIES 289.1H
(1 unit)
MWF 2:10 - 3:00pm
Early Christianities: The First
Five Centuries
CRN # 3383
Nancy Weatherwax
Humanities Division Credit; Historical and
Cultural Analysis Mode Credit
Course
Description:
This course explores the diversity of early Christianities
over the first five centuries in the Greco-Roman world and
beyond. The unifying theme will be the dual trajectories of
change and continuity in beliefs and practices in early
Christian communities, as the categories of “orthodoxy” and
“heresy” are constructed and a normative mainstream
eventually emerges. Topics include Christological and
Trinitarian controversies, processes of scriptural
canonization, sacraments and spirituality, leadership
structures, roles of class and gender, martyrdom,
interaction with the wider culture, and church-state
relations. Students will read a wide range of writings by
early Christians, including noncanonical gospels.
RELIGIIOUS
STUDIES 289.1T (1 unit)
MWF 12:10 - 1:00pm
Religion and Literature
CRN # 3384
Nancy Weatherwax
Humanities
Division Credit; Textual Analysis Mode Credit
Course
Description:
Using methods of literary
analysis with awareness of cultural and historical context,
students will analyze a range of major 20th-century works
(novels, short stories, and drama) that explore diverse
religious, philosophical, and ethical questions and answers
(or lack of answers).
RELIGIOUS
STUDIES 289.03 (1 unit)
TR 3:10 - 4:30pm
Explaining Religion
CRN # 3385
Steven Chamberlin
Humanities
Division Credit
Course
Description:
An interdisciplinary
investigation into the contributions of various theoretical
approaches to the phenomenon of religion. This course will
be universal in scope and humanistic in its approach. We
will pay attention to more than one religious tradition and
focus our attention on definitional considerations, theory
and method, and address the consequences of this inquiry for
problems of understanding American society.
To learn more about the Major, browse the Major in
Religious Studies.
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