Department of Religion and Culture
- Overview
- Degree Requirements
- Religion and Culture Major (RLCL)
- Humanities for Public Service Major (HPS)
- Study Abroad
- Honors College
- Double Majors
- Religion and Culture Minors
- Undergraduate Course Descriptions (APS)
- Undergraduate Course Descriptions (HUM)
- Undergraduate Course Descriptions (JUD)
- Undergraduate Course Descriptions (RLCL)
Chair: Matthew Gabriele
Professors: B. Britt, M. Gabriele, S. Johnson, and M. Saffle
Associate Professors: A. Abeysekara, A. Ansell, Z. Ni, A. Puckett, E. Satterwhite, P. Schmitthenner, and R. Scott
Assistant Professors: A. Armstrong, D. Christensen, S. Patel, and B. K. Singh
Postdoctoral Fellow: M. Case
Research Associate: D. Polanco
Instructor: J. Laney
Overview
The Department of Religion and Culture critically investigates religion, culture, and their relationships by problematizing what is commonly considered self-evident, especially since these subjects are intrinsic to understanding the human condition both locally and globally. In our research, teaching, and engagement, we seek to craft and apply new forms of critical inquiry that advance integrative intellectual thought. These paths of inquiry inform our engagement with students, who become well prepared to understand complex transformations throughout their lives, whether they pursue graduate studies or other life trajectories.
The department offers undergraduate degrees in Religion and Culture (RLCL) and Humanities for Public Service (HPS) and minors in American Studies, Appalachian Studies, Judaic Studies, Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Middle East Studies, Popular Culture, and Religion.
The department also offers an M.A. in Material Culture and Public Humanities, two graduate certificates--one in Religious Studies and the other in Material Culture and Public Humanities; and is a core member of the Alliance for Social, Political, Ethical, and Cultural Thought (ASPECT) Ph.D. program.
Degree Requirements
The graduation requirements in effect at the time of graduation apply. When choosing the degree requirements information, always choose the year of your expected date of graduation. Requirements for graduation are referred to via university publications as "Checksheets". The number of credit hours required for degree completion varies among curricula. Students must satisfactorily complete all requirements and university obligations for degree completion.
The university reserves the right to modify requirements in a degree program. However, the university will not alter degree requirements less than two years from the expected graduation year unless there is a transition plan for students already in the degree program.
Please visit the University Registrar website at http://registrar.vt.edu/graduation-multi-brief/index1.html for degree requirements.
Religion and Culture Major (RLCL)
The Bachelor of Arts degree in Religion and Culture (RLCL) combines the strengths of the department in the areas of the humanities and study of religion in order to provide students with opportunities to examine several of the twenty-first century's most important global phenomena. Students completing this cutting-edge, one-of-a-kind degree will explore the impact of religious and cultural practices on politics, economics, the arts, and everyday life (including pop culture), as well as the impact of these practices on moral and ethical practices in today's world. Graduates will be prepared to contribute as employees and citizens to the state of Virginia, the United States, and indeed the world as all levels of society seek better ways to live and work together in the increasingly diverse contexts of the twenty-first century. Religion and culture shape the world and will continue to do so in dramatic and changing ways.
Students who choose this major will develop complex problem-solving skills, alongside critical thinking that will prepare them for a wide range of careers. The global focus of the major affords career opportunities in education, business, government, many private industries, and the non-profit sector. The major has a strong academic and career-advising component.
Humanities for Public Service Major (HPS)
Students in the major, Humanities for Public Service, build a strong foundation in humanistic learning about cultural and religious traditions with the aim of preparing for careers in public service. The major option cultivates cultural awareness and critical thinking skills, familiarizing students with the ways that people have conceptualized, encoded, and reflected on human experience. Therefore it prepares them to sensitively and thoughtfully work for the public good. Requirements include selected courses in both theory and applicaton, as well as a field study/internship.
Study Abroad
Students are strongly encouraged to complete an approved study abroad program outside of the U.S. Study abroad programs are occasionally run by faculty in the department.
Honors College
Eligible students are encouraged to participate in the University Honors Program. Completing a degree "In Honors" is an excellent way for outstanding students to integrate the knowledge from several disciplines. Honors students have considerable flexibility in completing the degree requirements.
Double Majors
For information on earning a double major or second degree, contact the Department Chair. Since Religion and Culture major is flexible and dynamic, students are encouraged to earn a second major.
Religion and Culture Minors
The department offers the following minors. Please contact our undergraduate advisor, Amanda Villar (avillar@vt.edu), for more information.
- American Studies
- Appalachian Studies
- Judaic Studies
- Medieval and Early Modern Studies
- Middle East Studies
- Popular Culture
- Religion
American Studies
American studies is an interdisciplinary field that draws upon a number of academic disciplines, including history, literature, and sociology, to consider relationships between culture and society in the United States as it is embedded in global processes and issues.
Appalachian Studies
Appalachian Studies is an academic program supporting teaching, research, outreach, and service on topics pertaining to Appalachia in relation to pertinent transglobal issues. Appalachian Studies faculty focus on these issues from a critical regionalism perspective in which the relationship between these issues and region is considered problematic and open to investigation.
Judaic Studies
Endowed in 1996, the Malcolm and Diane Rosenberg Program in Judaic Studies offers students the opportunity to explore, examine, and critically engage the rich and multifaceted history, religion, and culture of the Jewish people. Judaic culture has significantly contributed to Western and other civilizations.
Medieval and Early Modern Studies
Medieval & Early Modern Studies fosters an interdisciplinary approach to the Medieval and Early Modern Worlds (roughly 300-1700 C.E.).
Middle East Studies
The interdisciplinary minor in Middle East Studies allows students to gain a broad understanding and appreciation of the languages, religions, and cultures of the Middle East and of the region's history and its place in international relations.
Popular Culture
The Minor in Popular Culture provides an understanding of the broadly shared cultures made possible by mass production. Popular culture includes all widely practiced and distributed expressions: news; entertainment; religion; sports; popular art; and styles of decoration, dress, and architecture.
Religion
By examining a diversity of traditions and viewpoints, a program in religious studies provides the resources for an intellectually responsible appraisal of one's own value commitments. A minor in Religion is part of a broad liberal arts education and may lead to graduate study in a variety of fields or to professional training in ministerial or social service vocations.
Undergraduate Course Descriptions (APS)
1704 (HUM 1704): INTRODUCTION TO APPALACHIAN STUDIES
Introduces students to the history of the Appalachian region
from European contact to the present. Traces the idea of
Appalachia by tracing ways in which Americans have imagined
the region over time. Explores humanistic problems of
cultural identity, race and ethnicity, place and
globalization, and impacts of natural resource extraction.
(3H,3C)
2124 (MUS 2124): MUSIC TRADITIONS IN APPALACHIA
Survey and study of music traditions in Appalachia.
Investigation of the formal elements of this music,
including instruments and musical terms and forms.
Exploration of style as a reflection of many cultural
influences. Study of the impact and development of these
traditions in contemporary musical practices.
(3H,3C)
2404 (HUM 2404): FOLK CULTURES IN APPALACHIA
Examination of the expressive genres and cultural processes
of communities in Appalachia. Documentation of art and skill
in everyday life, including material culture (e.g.,
foodways, architecture), customary behavior (e.g., music,
ritual, occupational practice), and verbal art (e.g.,
narrative, speechplay), and analysis of how people have used
these forms to shape social identities, physical spaces, and
power relations.
(3H,3C)
2434: THE CULTURAL POLITICS OF MUSIC IN APPALACHIA
Examines cultural, political, and social aspects of music
in, of, and about Appalachia, including such commercialized
and increasingly globalized products as "old-time",
"bluegrass", and "country". Ways in which music contests
and reproduces social relations of race, class, and gender.
Role of migration and racial diversity in formation of
Appalachian music. Economic significance of music, such as
Virginia's The Crooked Road as a regional touristic
undertaking.
(3H,3C)
2974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
2974H: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Honors
Variable credit course.
2984: SPECIAL STUDY
Variable credit course.
3464 (AHRM 3464) (GEOG 3464) (HD 3464) (HUM 3464) (SOC 3464) (UAP 3464): APPALACHIAN
COMMUNITIES
The concept of community in Appalachia using an
interdisciplinary approach and experiential learning.
Interrelationships among geographically, culturally, and
socially constituted communities, public policy, and human
development. Pre: Junior standing.
(3H,3C)
3984: SPECIAL STUDY
Variable credit course.
4034 (SOC 4054): APPALACHIAN LANGUAGES AND CULTURES
An empirical examination of how Appalachian speech both
reflects and constitutes regional cultures. Emphasis is on
applying sociological and anthropological methods and
theories to the study of language in use.
(3H,3C)
4094 (PHS 4094) (SOC 4094): APPALACHIAN COMMUNITY RESEARCH
Undergraduate participatory community research as applied to
issues of cultural heritage, sustainability, and identity.
Students engage in projects defined by community groups and
organizations as being critical to their well-being,
continuity, or growth. Emphasis is on developing concepts of
civic professionalism and developmental democracy.
(3H,3C)
4414 (HUM 4414): ISSUES IN APPALACHIAN STUDIES
Research conducted by students on issues relevant to local
or regional sustainability in contemporary Appalachia on
contemporary environmental and community issues. Focus on
environmental justice ethical issues expressed in or created
by various forms of discourse.
Pre: HUM 1704 or APS 1704.
(3H,3C)
4964: FIELD STUDY
Pass/Fail only. Variable credit course.
4974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
4974H: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Honors
Variable credit course.
4984: SPECIAL STUDY
Variable credit course.
4994: UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH
Variable credit course.
4994H: UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH
Honors
Variable credit course.
Undergraduate Course Descriptions (HUM)
1324: INTRODUCTORY HUMANITIES: THE MODERN WORLD
The shifts in thought and values during the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries in the global imagination, including
issues of commerce, scientific inquiry, industrialization,
nationalism, war, labor, gender, class differences, race,
and the beginnings of postmodernity. Emphasis on
interpretive and analytic skills in terms of reading,
discussing, and writing about the interrelationships among
the arts, literature, philosophy, history, religion, and
science, and their contributions toward shaping the values
and aspirations of the age, including global contexts and
Asian cultures.
(3H,3C)
1604: INTRODUCTION TO HUMANITIES AND THE ARTS
Explores the written, visual, and performing arts of
selected periods and cultures, setting them in the context
of their times. Study of these periods linked with
overarching questions of cultural encounters, interactions,
and negotiations. Introduces principles of each art form as
well as the means of appreciation. Students taught methods
in researching, writing, and presenting on these art forms.
(3H,3C)
1704 (APS 1704): INTRODUCTION TO APPALACHIAN STUDIES
Introduces students to the history of the Appalachian region
from European contact to the present. Traces the idea of
Appalachia by tracing ways in which Americans have imagined
the region over time. Explores humanistic problems of
cultural identity, race and ethnicity, place and
globalization, and impacts of natural resource extraction.
(3H,3C)
2104 (AINS 2104): ORAL TRADITIONS AND CULTURE
Examination of the world's great oral traditions, both
ancient and contemporary. Emphasis on performance contexts,
relationships among multicultural traditions, including
American Indian oral traditions, and the relationships among
orality, literacy, technology, media, and culture.
(3H,3C)
2204: THE CREATIVE PROCESS
Explores ways in which creativity and design can be
understood historically as well as understood and practiced
in a classroom setting. Subjects include any or all of the
following: theories of creativity; traditions associated
with understanding and making several kinds of art; studying
artworks from different cultural backgrounds, working with
the limitations and possibilities inherent in design
projects, and examining how and why they were created; and
preparing final creative projects for classroom
presentation.
(3H,3C)
2404 (APS 2404): FOLK CULTURES IN APPALACHIA
Examination of the expressive genres and cultural processes
of communities in Appalachia. Documentation of art and skill
in everyday life, including material culture (e.g.,
foodways, architecture), customary behavior (e.g., music,
ritual, occupational practice), and verbal art (e.g.,
narrative, speechplay), and analysis of how people have used
these forms to shape social identities, physical spaces, and
power relations.
(3H,3C)
2504 (RLCL 2504): INTRODUCTION TO AMERICAN STUDIES
Methodology and tools of American studies, with a focus on
developing analytic skills to assess discourse across varied
media. Interdisciplinary investigation of histories,
politics, cultures, and beliefs in the Americas, including
the impacts of encounter and exchange. Intensive study of a
specific topic or period.
(3H,3C)
2964: FIELD STUDY
Pass/Fail only. Variable credit course.
2974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
2974H: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
2984: SPECIAL STUDY
Variable credit course.
3034 (RLCL 3034): THEORIES OF POPULAR CULTURE
Examination of theories for understanding the ways in which
popular objects and practices (such as television programs,
films, or attending sporting events) represent, maintain,
and contest societal norms, including norms regarding gender
and sexuality, race and ethnicity, and class and place, with
an emphasis on the United States.
(3H,3C)
3034H (RLCL 3034H): THEORIES OF POPULAR CULTURE
Examination of theories for understanding the ways in which
popular objects and practices (such as television programs,
films, or attending sporting events) represent, maintain,
and contest societal norms, including norms regarding gender
and sexuality, race and ethnicity, and class and place, with
an emphasis on the United States.
(3H,3C)
3044: TOPICS HUMANITIES AND ARTS
Focuses on interdisciplinary topics involving
interrelationships among various arts and/or artists.
Explores the religious and/or cultural impacts of arts
and/or artists on societies and of societies on artistic
expression. Investigates humanistic debates about the nature
of art. May be taken a maximum of 3 times for credit with
different topics.
(3H,3C)
3204 (RLCL 3204): MULTICULTURAL COMMUNICATION
Exploration of communication in and among various cultural
groups through an examination of communicative practices,
registers, discourse, and performance. Emphasis on
understanding cultural differences and similarities in the
different styles and stances in communication and their
meanings to participants.
(3H,3C)
3464 (AHRM 3464) (APS 3464) (GEOG 3464) (HD 3464) (SOC 3464) (UAP 3464): APPALACHIAN
COMMUNITIES
The concept of community in Appalachia using an
interdisciplinary approach and experiential learning.
Interrelationships among geographically, culturally, and
socially constituted communities, public policy, and human
development. Pre: Junior standing.
(3H,3C)
3954: STUDY ABROAD
Variable credit course.
4034 (RLCL 4034): FUNCTIONS OF POPULAR CULTURE
Popular culture as a humanistic discipline; emphasis on
archetypes, formulas, and genres; the function of ideas,
images, and icons on the popular imagination.
(3H,3C)
4104 (RLCL 4104): EXPLORATIONS IN ADVANCED HUMANITIES TOPICS
In-depth study of special interdisciplinary topic. Topics
vary but involve a close and extensive study of the
interrelationship between cultural ideas and their
expressions in several of the following forms: literature,
philosophy, religion, art, music, drama, material culture,
and popular culture. May be repeated with different topics,
for a maximum of 9 credits.
(3H,3C)
4414 (APS 4414): ISSUES IN APPALACHIAN STUDIES
Research conducted by students on issues relevant to local
or regional sustainability in contemporary Appalachia on
contemporary environmental and community issues. Focus on
environmental justice ethical issues expressed in or created
by various forms of discourse.
Pre: 1704 or APS 1704.
(3H,3C)
4964: FIELD STUDY
Pass/Fail only. Variable credit course.
4974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
4974H: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
4984: SPECIAL STUDY
Variable credit course.
4994: UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH
Variable credit course.
4994H: UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH
Variable credit course.
Undergraduate Course Descriptions (JUD)
1105-1106 (HEB 1105-1106): ELEMENTARY MODERN HEBREW
Introduction to speaking, listening, reading, and writing
the modern Hebrew language. Emphasis on developing
proficiency in practical language use, comprehension and
cultural competency. 1105: Basic tasks such as greetings,
counting, and simple requests; for students with no prior
knowledge of the language. 1106: More advanced tasks like
asking directions, expressing personal preferences, or
making purchases.
(3H,3C)
2134 (RLCL 2134): JUDAISM: A SURVEY OF HISTORY, CULTURE, AND HERITAGE
Introduction to the academic study of Judaism; a variety of
scholarly approaches to Jewish textual and cultural sources,
including the Hebrew Bible, rabbinic literature, and diverse
contemporary cultural, religious, and social expressions.
Emphasis on developing skills in critical thinking, reading,
and writing about Judaism as a way of understanding the
beliefs, philosophies, and histories of global Jewish
communities past and present.
(3H,3C)
2414 (RLCL 2414): HEBREW BIBLE/OLD TESTAMENT
Introduction to the academic study of the Hebrew Bible (Old
Testament), including its contents, contexts, major themes,
and reception; a variety of scholarly approaches, including
historical-critical, literary, ethical, and gender studies
methods. Emphasis on developing skills in critical
thinking, reading, and writing about the Hebrew Bible (Old
Testament).
(3H,3C)
2974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
2974H: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
2984: SPECIAL STUDY
Variable credit course.
3404 (RLCL 3404): TORAH AND TRADITION
Detailed study of the first five books of the Bible, known
as the Torah or Pentateuch. Scholarly approaches will
include historical-critical research; comparative mythology;
form and canon criticism; gender and literary studies; and
the reception of these books in the Hebrew Bible, the New
Testament and beyond.
Pre: REL 2414.
(3H,3C)
3494 (HIST 3494) (RLCL 3494): THE HOLOCAUST
This course provides a historical account, a psychological
analysis, and an occasion for philosophical contemplation on
the Holocaust. We will examine the deliberate and
systematic attempt to annihilate the Jewish people by the
National Socialist German State during World War II.
Although Jews were the primary victims, Gypsies, people with
disabilities, homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses and political
dissidents were targeted; we will discuss their fate as
well. The class will be organized around the examination of
primary sources: written accounts, photographic and film,
personal testimony.
(3H,3C)
3544 (PSCI 3544) (RLCL 3544): THE STATE OF ISRAEL: A POLITICAL HISTORY
This course provides a survey on the political history of
the State of Israel and highlights major themes uniquely
characterizing the specific events surrounding its
establishment and its first 50 years of existence.
Additionally, the course will add a comparative dimension by
using the political history of Israel as a case study to
discuss major themes in political science such as democracy,
government, political economy, etc.
Pre: 2134 or PSCI 1024.
(3H,3C)
4424: ADVANCED TOPICS IN JEWISH CULTURE, HISTORY & THOUGHT
Selected topics in Jewish culture, history and thought.
Possible topics includes: the philosophy of Maimonides,
Spinoza or Buber, or a course dedicated to one of the
following topics: Kabbalah, Hasidism, The American Jewish
experience in the first half of the 20th century, and
Oriental Jewish art and folklore. Two JUD courses or senior
standing required. Alternate years.
(3H,3C)
4974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
4974H: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
4994: UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH
Variable credit course.
4994H: UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH
Variable credit course.
Undergraduate Course Descriptions (RLCL)
1004: INTRODUCTION TO RELIGION AND CULTURE
This course introduces students to foundational concepts and
debates within the humanities and social sciences by
studying one of a rotating set of themes (e.g. love, evil,
apocalypse) located at the intersection of religion and
culture. Emphasis on cultural diversity, historical
transformation, interdisciplinary inquiry, problem-solving
and the application of academic discussions to everyday life
situations.
(3H,3C)
1004H: INTRO TO RELIGION & CULTURE
This course introduces students to foundational concepts and
debates within the humanities and social sciences by
studying one of a rotating set of themes (e.g. love, evil,
apocalypse) located at the intersection of religion and
culture. Emphasis on cultural diversity, historical
transformation, interdisciplinary inquiry, problem-solving
and the application of academic discussions to everyday life
situations.
(3H,3C)
1024: JUDAISM, CHRISTIANITY, AND ISLAM
Nature of religion and the analysis of it from an academic
perspective. Basic tenets of Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam, including their manifestations in the United States
and their involvement in critical issues in a global context
Interpretation of key texts from various historical and
cultural contexts.
(3H,3C)
1024H: JUDAISM, CHRISTIANITY, ISLAM
Nature of religion and the analysis of it from an academic
perspective. Basic tenets of Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam, including their manifestations in the United States
and their involvement in critical issues in a global context
Interpretation of key texts from various historical and
cultural contexts.
(3H,3C)
1034: RELIGION AND THE MODERN WORLD
Modern challenges to traditional religion and responses to
these challenges, including: religion as an object of
critique; law, sovereignty, and religion; religion, gender,
and race; religion, science, and technology; religion and
media presentations.
(3H,3C)
1034H: RELIGION AND THE MODERN WORLD
Modern challenges to traditional religion and responses to
these challenges, including: religion as an object of
critique; law, sovereignty, and religion; religion, gender,
and race; religion, science, and technology; religion and
media presentations.
(3H,3C)
1044: RELIGIOUS ETHICS
Influential representative social and religious ethical
perspectives from ancient Greek philosophers to the present;
ethical reasoning on current pressing and perennial social
issues - bioethics, sexuality, family, poverty-- based on
historical and ethical analysis of case studies; theoretical
assumptions about morality as the relation between living a
virtuous life and performing ethical duties.
(3H,3C)
1134 (CLA 1134): THE ANCIENT MEDITERRANEAN WORLD
Ancient cultures of the Mediterranean world with a focus on
their embodiments in the arts, literature, history,
philosophy, and religion. Emphasis on Greek, Hellenistic and
Roman cultures, their interrelationships with each other and
their historical, cultural, material and intellectual
encounters with contemporary Mediterranean cultures as well
as their influence on later and modern cultures.
(3H,3C)
1214: THE MEDIEVAL WORLD
Introduction to Europe and the Mediterranean world in the
period between antiquity and the European encounter with the
Americas. Investigation of the arts, literature,
philosophy, and history of the period in the Christian,
Jewish, and Islamic traditions and the multiple types of
encounters that those communities experienced. Analysis of
the impact the medieval world continues to have on the
modern West.
(3H,3C)
1904: RELIGION AND CULTURE IN ASIA
Historical and geographical overview of diverse
religious/cultural traditions in Asia, such as Hinduism,
Buddhism, Sikhism, Confucianism, Daoism, and Shinto.
Investigation of the categories "religion" and "culture" and
their interactions in Asia. Examination of different
methodological and interdisciplinary approaches and their
integration, with emphasis on critical thinking about the
complexities of studying religion and culture in Asia. Asia
on a global stage, including Western views of Asia and Asian
views of the West.
(3H,3C)
1904H: RELIGION AND CULTURE IN ASIA
Historical and geographical overview of diverse
religious/cultural traditions in Asia, such as Hinduism,
Buddhism, Sikhism, Confucianism, Daoism, and Shinto.
Investigation of the categories "religion" and "culture" and
their interactions in Asia. Examination of different
methodological and interdisciplinary approaches and their
integration, with emphasis on critical thinking about the
complexities of studying religion and culture in Asia. Asia
on a global stage, including Western views of Asia and Asian
views of the West.
(3H,3C)
2004: CASE STUDIES IN RELIGION AND CULTURE
Significant case studies in the study of religion and
culture with an emphasis on influential and emerging
research. Focused engagement with humanities and social
sciences research grounded in analysis, comparison, and
evaluation of relevant case studies.
(3H,3C)
2054 (SOC 2054): ETHNOGRAPHY: STUDYING CULTURE
Introduction to the methodological tools used by
anthropologists and other social scientists to study
culture. Engagement with the development of, and debates
about, ethnographic methods, as well as their application to
case studies. Focus on sample ethnographic accounts of
peoples throughout the world, as well as research techniques
applicable to many different cultural environments.
(3H,3C)
2104 (GR 2104): GREEK NEW TESTAMENT
Readings from the New Testament in Greek, with attention to
grammatical analysis, historical background and other clues
interpretation. May repeated with different content for a
maximum of 9 credits.
Pre: GR 1106.
(3H,3C)
2124: RELIGION IN AMERICAN LIFE
Understanding and integrating source materials for the study
of religion in American life. Genealogy of religion and
culture in America (USA). Changes and transformations in
religious beliefs and practices and their influences on
American life. Debates about religion and culture.
Entanglements of religion, politics, race, ethnicity, and
law.
(3H,3C)
2134 (JUD 2134): JUDAISM: A SURVEY OF HISTORY, CULTURE, AND HERITAGE
Introduction to the academic study of Judaism; a variety of
scholarly approaches to Jewish textual and cultural sources,
including the Hebrew Bible, rabbinic literature, and diverse
contemporary cultural, religious, and social expressions.
Emphasis on developing skills in critical thinking, reading,
and writing about Judaism as a way of understanding the
beliefs, philosophies, and histories of global Jewish
communities past and present.
(3H,3C)
2144 (AFST 2144): AFRICAN RELIGIONS
The role of religious (or belief) systems in African
societies, especially the three predominant religious
traditions in Africa: the so-called African Traditional
Religious, Islam, and Christianity; the universe of
religious systems and religious experiences and processes of
Africa, in particular, Sub-Saharan Africa; critical
examination of the mythic stature of Africa's "religions"
within Western cultural (and scholarly) world views and
institutions.
(3H,3C)
2204 (AFST 2204) (WGS 2204): RACE AND GENDER IN RELIGION AND CULTURE
Influence of race and gender on religion and culture.
Overview of approaches to categories of diversity,
particularly race and gender, in religious and cultural
traditions. Utilization of humanistic and social scientific
approaches to investigate geographically variable historical
and/or contemporary case studies.
(3H,3C)
2324: ISLAM
Addresses the rise of Islam under the Prophet Muhammad in
Arabia, the development of Islam in the Middle Ages, and its
resurgence in the 20th century. Issues of geographical,
temporal, and ideological diversity, and critical thinking
about representations of Islam in the West. Islamic
orthodoxy addressed by
examining the question of who
represents Islam, when, and how.
(3H,3C)
2374 (HIST 2374): GODS AND KINGS IN PREMODERN INDIA
History of India from pre-historical times to approximately
1700, with particular focus on the interplay between
religion and politics. Emphasis on sources for and
interpretations (historiography) of early Indian history.
Literary versus archaeological record of pre-historic India,
the earliest empires and rulers, and impact of the Islamic
and wider world on India. Legacies of ancient and medieval
India in the contemporary world.
(3H,3C)
2384 (HIST 2384): GANDHI IN THE MAKING OF MODERN INDIA
History of India since approximately 1700, with particular
focus on Gandhi's influence on modern India and the world.
Emphasis on sources for and interpretations (historiography)
of modern Indian history. Examination of pre-colonial and
colonial pasts and legacies. Exploration of Gandhi's role in
political, social, cultural, and religious movements of the
early 20th century, and Gandhi's legacy in the independent
states of South Asia and the contemporary world.
(3H,3C)
2414 (JUD 2414): HEBREW BIBLE/OLD TESTAMENT
Introduction to the academic study of the Hebrew Bible (Old
Testament), including its contents, contexts, major themes,
and reception; a variety of scholarly approaches, including
historical-critical, literary, ethical, and gender studies
methods. Emphasis on developing skills in critical
thinking, reading, and writing about the Hebrew Bible (Old
Testament).
(3H,3C)
2424: NEW TESTAMENT
Introduction to the academic study of the New Testament,
including gospels, Pauline materials, theological themes,
and sources on the emerging church. A variety of scholarly
approaches to the New Testament texts and contexts,
including historical-critical, redaction critical, and
literary methods. Emphasis on developing skills in critical
thinking, reading, and writing about the New Testament and
the ancient Mediterranean world as a way of understanding
the religion and history of early Christianity.
(3H,3C)
2444 (CLA 2444) (ENGL 2444): GREEK AND ROMAN MYTHOLOGY
Surveys ancient Greek and Roman mythology. Provides
students with an introduction to selected myths from ancient
Greek and Roman literature, including appropriate historical
background information. Familiarizes students with how
theories of myth have been applied to individual stories and
how such mythological tales have been received by authors
and artists in subsequent cultures. Explores the
interaction and interdependence of mythological tales from
different cultures and perspectives. In English.
(3H,3C)
2464 (STS 2464): RELIGION AND SCIENCE
Exploration of the relationships between religion and
science in the western tradition. Basic frameworks for
relationships between religion and science in historical and
cultural context, types of human knowledge and truth,
similarities and differences between science and religion,
evolution, the origins of the creationist movement, and
contemporary moral and ethical issues.
(3H,3C)
2474 (IS 2474): RELIGION AND VIOLENCE
Investigation of the categories of religion and secularity
as they apply to war and peace. Analysis of episodes from
both past and present in which religion seems to have played
a role. Introduction to research skills related to the
study of religion and violence, building from theoretical
and historical considerations.
(3H,3C)
2504 (HUM 2504): INTRODUCTION TO AMERICAN STUDIES
Methodology and tools of American Studies, with a focus on
developing analytic skills to assess discourse across varied
media. Interdisciplinary investigation of histories,
politics, cultures, and beliefs in the Americas, including
the impacts of encounter and exchange. Intensive study of a
specific topic or period.
(3H,3C)
2514 (SOC 2514): ASIAN AMERICAN EXPERIENCE
Interdisciplinary overview of the diverse Asian American
experience, incorporating non-Eurocentric perspectives on
the Asian immigrant experience and dialogue between Asian
American and non-Asian American students. Examination of
different historical tracks of various Asian ethnicities,
experience of racism, discrimination, cultural adaptation
and conflict, and economic survival and success. Gender,
age, religious affiliation, family values and inter-
generational differences among Asian Americans. The
complexity of minority status and the stereotype of "model
minority." Activism, political participation, leadership and
the meaning of citizenship among Asian Americans.
Representations of Asian Americans in the arts and media.
(3H,3C)
2964: FIELD STUDY
Pass/Fail only. Variable credit course.
2974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
2974H: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
2984: SPECIAL STUDY
Variable credit course.
3014 (WGS 3014): WOMEN AND GENDER IN ISLAM
An examination of women and gender in Islam from a variety
perspectives including Muslim women in Islamic history,
normative constructions of the role of women in Islam, and
women's roles in contemporary Muslim societies.
Understanding of women in classical Islam; feminist and
reformist approaches; and Western constructions of the
"rights of women if Islam."
(3H,3C)
3024 (ENGL 3024): RELIGION AND LITERATURE
Read works from world literature, guided by selected
critical readings. Compare/contrast diverse models of
"religion" and "literature." Study how modernity has
impacted traditions of religion and culture. Interpret
literary texts that draw from multiple religions. Analyze
religion-literature controversies in a range of social,
cultural, political contexts. Synthesize sources of
multiple media, formats, and contexts.
(3H,3C)
3034 (HUM 3034): THEORIES OF POPULAR CULTURE
Examination of theories for understanding the ways in which
popular objects and practices (such as television programs,
films, or attending sporting events) represent, maintain,
and contest societal norms, including norms regarding gender
and sexuality, race and ethnicity, and class and place, with
an emphasis on the United States.
(3H,3C)
3034H (HUM 3034H): THEORIES OF POPULAR CULTURE
Examination of theories for understanding the ways in which
popular objects and practices (such as television programs,
films, or attending sporting events) represent, maintain,
and contest societal norms, including norms regarding gender
and sexuality, race and ethnicity, and class and place, with
an emphasis on the United States.
(3H,3C)
3144 (ENGL 3144) (SOC 3144): LANGUAGE AND ETHNICITY IN THE UNITED STATES
Exploration of how racial and ethnic identity are expressed
through the use of different languages and dialects.
Examination of how language is related to issues of
equality, social opportunity, and discrimination in the
United States.
Pre: ENGL 1106 or ENGL 1204H or COMM 1016.
(3H,3C)
3204 (HUM 3204): MULTICULTURAL COMMUNICATION
Exploration of communication in and among various cultural
groups through an examination of communicative practices,
registers, discourse, and performance. Emphasis on
understanding cultural differences and similarities in the
different styles and stances in communication and their
meanings to participants.
(3H,3C)
3214: RELIGION AND CULTURE IN INDIA
Interdisciplinary examination of the genealogy of Indian
religions (including Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and
Sikhism) through anthropological, literary, historical, and
textual source materials. Colonial construction and reform
of these religions according to modern, "universal" European
ideas of religion; how European notions of the modern
nation-state, law, and religious tolerance, and European
concepts of self, autonomy, community, (univocal) language,
and multiculturalism impacted Indian religions. Pre-modern
versus modern notions of tradition and power in Indian
religions. Concepts of secularism, gender, race, conversion,
caste, and religious-political identity.
(3H,3C)
3224: RELIGION AND CULTURE IN CHINA AND JAPAN
Premodern model of Chinese and Japanese religions:
interactions of various traditions (e.g. Confucianism,
Buddhism, Daoism, Shinto, and folk); inseparability of
religion, culture, society, and politics. Modern
reinventions of religion in China and Japan in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Contemporary
issues such as state-religion relations in East Asia,
religions of China and Japan in America, East Asian
religions and globalization.
(3H,3C)
3404 (JUD 3404): TORAH AND TRADITION
Detailed study of the first five books of the Bible, known
as the Torah or Pentateuch. Scholarly approaches will
include historical-critical research; comparative mythology;
form and canon criticism; gender and literary studies; and
the reception of these books in the Hebrew Bible, the New
Testament, and beyond.
Pre: 2414.
(3H,3C)
3414: JESUS IN EARLIEST CHRISTIANITY
Literary survey of the various representations of Jesus of
Nazareth in canonical and apocryphal Christian literature of
the first four centuries. Perspectives on Jesus and the
interpretive authority involved in producing such variety.
Ancient and modern interpretive frameworks for understanding
the person and legacy of Jesus in earliest Christianity,
including historical-critical frameworks, redaction
criticism, genre criticism, and other literary methods.
Analyses of modern religious/political discourses as
continuations of ancient theological debates. Emphasis on
developing skills in critical thinking and close reading of
early Christian texts as a means of understanding the
religion(s) and histories of the earliest Christians.
(3H,3C)
3424: ORTHODOXY AND HERESY IN EARLY CHRISTIANITY
Literary survey focusing on the diversity of Christian
beliefs in the first four centuries. Highlights a variety of
theological debates and the historical and cultural contexts
involved in the eventual production of a Christian
orthodoxy, over and against so-called heresy. The history
and content of early Christian texts, both canonical and
apocryphal. Ancient and modern interpretive frameworks for
understanding the variety and diversity of earliest
Christian beliefs, including historical-critical frameworks,
comparative reading, source criticism, and other literary
methods. Emphasis on developing skills in critical thinking
and close reading of early Christian texts as a means of
understanding the religion(s) and histories of the earliest
Christians.
(3H,3C)
3454 (PHIL 3454): PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION
A consideration of religious belief and its justification
with attention to such philosophical issues as the nature
and existence of the Judeo-Christian-Muslim God, proofs for
the existence of God, the problem of evil, a religious basis
for ethics, the nature of faith, and the variety of
religious beliefs.
(3H,3C)
3494 (HIST 3494) (JUD 3494): THE HOLOCAUST
This course provides a historical account, a psychological
analysis, and an occasion for philosophical contemplation on
the Holocaust. We will examine the deliberate and systematic
attempt to annihilate the Jewish people by the National
Socialist German State during World War II. Although Jews
were the primary victims, Gypsies, people with disabilities,
homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses and political dissidents
were targeted; we will discuss their fate as well. The class
will be organized around the examination of primary sources:
written accounts, photographic and film, personal testimony.
(3H,3C)
3504 (HIST 3504): THE AGE OF THE CRUSADES
The origins and development of religious violence examined
from an interdisciplinary and cross-cultural perspective;
the place of that phenomenon in medieval society.
Christianity, Islam, Judaism and their interactions in the
medieval world.
(3H,3C)
3544 (JUD 3544) (PSCI 3544): THE STATE OF ISRAEL: A POLITICAL HISTORY
This course provides a survey on the political history of
the State of Israel and highlights major themes uniquely
characterizing the specific events surrounding its
establishment and its first 50 years of existence.
Additionally, the course will add a comparative dimension by
using the political history of Israel as a case study to
discuss major themes in political science such as democracy,
government, political, economy, etc.
Pre: JUD 2134 or PSCI 1024.
(3H,3C)
3604: ISLAM AND THE MODERN WORLD
Issues facing the contemporary Islamic world, with a focus
on the Islamic resurgence and the concept of Jihad. Muslims
re-formulate the Islamic tradition as a response to the
pressures of modernity.
(3H,3C)
3954: STUDY ABROAD
Variable credit course.
4024 (SOC 4024): SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION
Religion as a social structure as well as an institution;
with special attention to the functions of religion for
individuals, groups and societies, social organization; and
the interplay between religion and other social institutions
including economics and polity. Taught alternate years.
Pre: SOC 1004.
(3H,3C)
4034 (HUM 4034): FUNCTIONS OF POPULAR CULTURE
Popular culture as a humanistic discipline; emphasis on
archetypes, formulas, and genres; the function of ideas,
images, and icons on the popular imagination.
(3H,3C)
4104 (HUM 4104): EXPLORATIONS IN ADVANCED HUMANITIES TOPICS
In-depth study of special interdisciplinary topic. Topics
vary but involve a close and extensive study of the
interrelationship between cultural ideas and their
expressions in several of the following forms: literature,
philosophy, religion, art, music, drama, material culture,
and popular culture. May be repeated with different topics,
for a maximum of 9 credits.
(3H,3C)
4124 (SOC 4124): TOPICS IN CULTURE
Uses sociological, anthropological, as well as artistic and
humanist paradigms to analyze culture. Discusses 20th and
21st century cultural trends. Analyzes the implications of
social context for cultural artifacts such as art. Topics
are variable. Example topics include the cultural
construction of race and the culture of the nineteen
sixties. Course may be repeated with different course
content for up to 6 credits. Junior or Senior standing.
Pre: SOC 1004 or SOC 1014 or AFST 1714 or AINS 1104 or RLCL 1004 or RLCL 2004 or WGS
1824.
(3H,3C)
4324: TOPICS IN RELIGION AND CULTURE
Selected topics from the religions of the world such as time
and the sacred, preliterate religions, women and religion,
religion and science, mysticism. May be taken three times
for credit with different topics.
Pre: 2004.
(3H,3C)
4964: FIELD STUDY
Pass/Fail only. Variable credit course.
4974: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
4974H: INDEPENDENT STUDY
Variable credit course.
4984: SPECIAL STUDY
Variable credit course.
4994: UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH
Variable credit course.
4994H: UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH
Variable credit course.