You are here: Campus >Registrar's Office > Academic Catalog 2002-2003 > Courses > Religion

Religion (RELG)

Chair: Professor Anne E. Patrick

Professors: Richard E. Crouter, Roger R. Jackson, Louis E. Newman, Robert A. Oden, Jr., Anne E. Patrick

Assistant Professors: Paula K. R. Arai, Shahzad Bashir, Michael McNally

Visiting Instructor: Eitan P. Fishbane

The study of religion, in the context of a liberal arts education, draws upon multiple disciplines in the humanities and the social sciences. This is reflected in the variety of courses offered within the department: some introduce a religious tradition and trace its development historically; others examine in a cross-cultural context issues faced by all religious individuals and communities; and still others explore and compare diverse theories and methods employed in the study of religions. Throughout the curriculum, religion is approached as a significant and pervasive expression of human culture, both in the past and the present. Students interested in the study of religion or in a particular religious tradition are encouraged to begin by taking Introduction to Religion (Religion 110) or other introductory level courses, numbered 100-169. For those planning a career in teaching or ministry, courses in the department serve as an introduction to further graduate or professional study.

Requirements for a Major:

Sixty-nine credits in the department, including Religion 110; a minimum of two courses numbered 111-169; two courses numbered 211-299; two advanced seminars (320-379); Religion 300: Issues in the Study of Religion; Religion 399: Senior Research Seminar; and Religion 400: Integrative Exercise. Students planning to major in Religion should consult with their advisor in the spring of their sophomore year; a sequence of at least three courses in a religious tradition, theme, or topic is to be designed in consultation with an academic advisor by the end of the junior year, and majors are expected to build some cross-cultural diversity into their programs of study. Religion 300 is taken during the winter term of the junior year, Religion 399 during the winter term of the senior year, and Religion 400 in the spring term of the senior year. Since Religion 110 is a prerequisite for Religion 300, those planning to major in Religion must take Religion 110 before the winter of their junior year.

Religion Courses

RELG 100. The Sacred Body: Religious Reflections on the Human Form The human body has been a focus of religious reflection throughout history and across various traditions. Drawing on specific examples from different historical and cultural contexts, we will explore ways of constructing, deconstructing, cultivating, imagining, representing, manipulating, projecting, despising, and adorning the body in religious terms. Equal attention will be given to studying the body's treatment in religious discourses and to understanding actual physical activities such as rituals, ascetic discipline, and forms of meditation. The significance of social factors such as differentiation based on gender and class will also be considered while understanding particular religious worldviews. 6 credits cr., S/CR/NC, HU,RAD, FallS. Bashir

RELG 100. American Utopias America has offered fertile ground for a staggering array of intentional communities seeking to integrate the sacred with all concerns of life. This seminar explores questions concerning human nature, sin, perfection, work, sexuality, class, gender and the sacred as they are articulated and addressed by a range of colorful, sacred, perfectionist and experimental communities in American history. Course materials will draw on the literature, history, and organization of sacred time and space of various communities, including monasteries, the Shakers, the Oneida Community, urban Settlement Houses, and the midwestern liberal arts college. 6 credits cr., S/CR/NC, HU, FallM. McNally

RELG 110. Introduction to Religion The introductory course in the Religion department offers the student an opportunity to encounter and reflect upon religion in human life. The focus is on selected source readings and significant interpretations of religion in the past and present. This introduction to the field of religious studies includes cross-cultural materials and a variety of approaches, but it is not primarily a survey of world religions. 6 credits cr., HU, Fall,Winter,SpringStaff

RELG 111. Judaism, Christianity, Islam Western civilization has been shaped decisively by three monotheistic religious traditions—Judaism, Christianity and Islam. In this course, we explore some of the central beliefs, values, and ritual practices of these religions, some of their interactions, and some of the issues that divide them. Attention will be paid both to the historical development of these traditions and to the distinctive forms they have assumed in modern times. The course will be useful for anyone interested in the religious roots of western culture and it will prepare you to do more advanced work in any of these traditions. No prerequisites. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 120. Introduction to Judaism This course provides an overview of the Judaic tradition as a whole, exploring its history, modes of expression, and characteristic polarities as phenomena of general human significance. The contours of classical Jewish life and thought are explored, as well as the crises, challenges, and choices confronting Judaic faith and practice today. 6 credits cr., HU, FallE. Fishbane

RELG 121. Introduction to Christianity A study of the classical teachings, rituals, social and cultural forms of the Christian religion in its early Christian, Eastern Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Protestant, and contemporary Third World developments. The course includes field visits and visual materials as well as lectures and discussions. 6 credits cr., HU, SpringR. Crouter

RELG 122. Introduction to Islam This course introduces Islam, a 1400-year old religion whose more than one billion adherents are spread throughout the world today. Of the various ways of approaching such an extensive tradition, we will follow a socio-cultural method with particular emphasis on how various types of Muslims have understood and interpreted their religion over the course of history. We will examine Islamic religious ideals, practices, institutions, and personalities to elicit the broad parameters that give coherence to Islamic religion and civilization. The course will also emphasize the diversity of Islamic religious perspectives, paying attention to social factors such as language affiliation, ethnicity, nationality, and gender. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, FallS. Bashir

RELG 130. Native American Religions This course explores the history and contemporary practice of Native American religious traditions, especially as they have developed amid colonization and resistance. While surveying a broad variety of ways that Native American traditions imagine land, community, and the sacred, the course focuses on the local traditions of the Ojibwe and Lakota communities. Materials include traditional beliefs and practices, the history of missions, intertribal new religious movements, and contemporary issues of treaty rights, religious freedom, and the revitalization of language and culture. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, FallM. McNally

RELG 140. Religion and American Culture This course explores the colorful, contested history of religion in American culture. While surveying the main contours of religion in the U.S. from the colonial era to the present, the course concentrates on a series of historical moments that reveal tensions between a quest for a (Protestant) American consensus and an abiding religious and cultural pluralism. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, WinterM. McNally

RELG 150. Religions of South Asia A survey of the origins and classical development of the major religious traditions of the Indian subcontinent. Primary attention will be given to the Hindu and Buddhist traditions, but Islam and the Jain and Sikh traditions also are considered. Readings are drawn mainly from Indian sources in English translation. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, FallR. Jackson

RELG 151. Chinese Religion and Culture This course examines Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism in the Chinese context. An exploration of religious rituals, texts, and practices will guide our introduction to Chinese religious experience. Based upon this foundation, we will see how religious values influence decision-making processes in personal and public matters. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, FallP. Arai

RELG 152. Japanese Religion and Culture An examination of the interplay of Shinto and Buddhism, with a focus on how Buddhism was transformed through the centuries according to Japanese assumptions concerning human nature, reality, and ultimacy. Art (visual, literary, and performative) will serve as a window upon Japanese religious experience. Based upon this foundation, we will see how religious values influence decision-making processes in personal and public matters. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, WinterP. Arai

RELG 211. Religion and Modern Literature An exploration of the religious significance of selected works of fiction, poetry, and drama by literary artists of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The close literary analysis of these texts will be accompanied by a unifying interest in the problem of faith and doubt in the modern era and in the various stances adopted by modern thinkers with regard to historical religious traditions. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 218. Hindu Classics: The Bhagavad Gita In-depth exploration of a single classic text from the Hindu tradition, in English translation. The text will be set in its cultural and historical context, and adumbrated by traditional and modern commentaries where available, but the primary focus will be on a close, sustained reading of the text itself, in an attempt to draw out the explicit and implicit meanings it may have had for its original audience. The text will vary from year to year and the course may be repeated. The text for 2002-2003 is the Bhagavad Gita. This devotional and philosophical masterpiece from the late centuries B.C.E. is arguably the best-known and most widely influential of all Hindu texts. 3 credits cr., HU,RAD, FallR. Jackson

RELG 219. Buddhist Classics: The Lotus Sutra In-depth exploration of a single classic text from the Buddhist tradition, in English translation. The text will be set in its cultural and historical context, and adumbrated by traditional and modern commentaries where available, but the primary focus will be on a close, sustained reading of the text itself, in an attempt to draw out the explicit and implicit meanings it may have had for its original audience. The text will vary from year to year and the course may be repeated. The text for 2002-2003 is the Lotus Sutra. This early Mahayana sutra, which has profoundly affected Buddhism in both south and east Asia, is a vital source for understanding Mahayana ideas about enlightenment and enlightened action in the world. 3 credits cr., HU,RAD, FallR. Jackson

RELG 220. The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) The central religious beliefs and moral values of ancient Israel will be explored both in relation to other ancient near eastern cultures and as the basis of later developments in Judaism and Christianity. Attention will also be given to the diversity of literary genres exemplified in the Hebrew Bible and to the problems of interpreting biblical texts. 6 credits cr., HU, WinterE. Fishbane

RELG 221. Jesus, Paul, and Christian Origins (New Testament) An introduction to the literature and theology of the New Testament in its historical setting and to the origins and social worlds of early Christian movements. Attention is given to the interpretation of the Synoptic Gospels, Paul, and John, and to the perspectives of the New Testament on theological and ethical issues. 6 credits cr., HU, WinterR. Crouter

RELG 224. Women and Christianity Cross-listed with WGST 224. An examination of selected texts and issues with emphasis on women's historical involvement in Christianity and on the variety of "reformist" and "radical" options proposed by contemporary religious feminists. 6 credits cr., HU, SpringA. Patrick

RELG 225. Contemporary Catholic Theology Christian theology was at the heart of the curriculum when universities were established at Oxford, Paris, and Bologna eight centuries ago. The discipline has changed a great deal since then, but its findings remain both fascinating and controversial today. This course will meet once a week to consider the current state of various theological questions, using recent essays by Catholic authors on topics ranging from biblical interpretation and the doctrine of God to ethics and spirituality. The course has no prerequisites; it is designed to introduce students to contemporary Roman Catholic theology and to prepare them for specialized work in areas such as liberationist and feminist approaches to theology. 3 credits cr., HU, WinterA. Patrick

RELG 227. Liberation Theologies Cross-listed with LTAM 227. An introduction to Black Theology, U.S. Hispanic Theology, Latin American Liberation Theology, and Feminist Theology through writings of various contemporary thinkers. Attention will be directed to the social settings out of which these thinkers have emerged, their critiques of "traditional" theologies, and the new vision of Christian life they are developing. Previous study of Christianity is recommended but not required. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 228. Issues in Christian Ethics This course explores a range of issues in the practice of Christian faith, including: ethical decision making; the tensions of discipleship in a pluralistic culture; conscience and the authority of scripture, church, and tradition; and, moral issues related to developments in science and society, such as bioethical questions. Previous study of Christianity is recommended but not required. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 230. Kabbalah: Jewish Mysticism This course will explore the place of mysticism in the history of Jewish religion from antiquity to the modern period. Students will be introduced to the historical varieties of spiritual thought and practice in Judaism. Among the topics we will consider are: secrecy and the search for deeper levels of meaning; the centrality of the master-disciple relationship; kabbalistic theology; mysticism as a vision of cosmic oneness; contemplation and the cultivation of higher states of mind; symbolic reading and mystical interpretation; the mystical meaning of prayer and ritual performance. Prior courses in Judaism and/or Religion will be helpful, but are not required. 6 cr., HU, SpringE. Fishbane

RELG 231. Protestant Thought This course treats the historical forms, classical expressions, and religious practices of Protestant Christianity from the original Reformation through the nineteenth century. Focus is on the interpretation of texts (Luther, Calvin, Book of Common Prayer, Bunyan, Schleiermacher, Kierkegaard) and movements (Puritanism, Pietism) in their historical contexts and their contemporary relevance. The relationship of these texts to Roman Catholicism, to the rise of historical-critical inquiry and modern secular rationality will also be examined. 6 credits cr., HU, SpringR. Crouter

RELG 235. Women and Islamic Constructions of Gender Cross-listed with WGST 232. A survey of issues significant for women's lives in various parts of the Muslim world. We will briefly examine women's status and image in classical Islamic thought, and the bulk of the course will focus on contemporary Muslim women in a number of different cultural contexts. Issues to be discussed include: veiling, kinship structures, war and violence, health, feminist activism, and literary and artistic expression. The course aims to provide both a broad understanding of the factors affecting women's lives, and an appreciation of the diversity of social and material conditions that exist within the Muslim world. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 236. Philosophy of Religion Refer to PHIL 236 or description. 6 credits cr., HU, WinterP. Mason

RELG 238. Topics in Medieval History: Papacy, Church and Empire Cross-listed with HIST 238,FRST 238,WGST 233. In the late eleventh century, the foundations of medieval society began to shake. Monks and clerics, kings and princes, lay men and women, challenged the traditional order of European society, demanding purity, freedom, and justice for their church and the reform of institutions grown corrupt. Yet the traditional order had its defenders, too. In this course we will examine their struggles—verbal and physical—as they debate such issues as clerical marriage and purity, institutional corruption, the relationship of Church and King, the meaning of canon law, the concept of just war, and the power of the pope within the Church. 3 credits cr., HU, WinterW. North

RELG 238. The World of Bede Cross-listed with HIST 238,FRST 238,WGST 233. This course will examine the works and world of the Venerable Bede (c. 673-731), one of the great Christian thinkers and historians of the Middle Ages and a key witness to the history of early medieval Ireland and Anglo-Saxon England. Through close study of Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People and other contemporary sources, we shall address such issues as Christian vs. Germanic rulership; the nature of religious conversion in early medieval societies; monasticism and conceptions of sanctity; Ireland and England as outposts of classical and Christian culture; and the problems of historical thought and writing in the early Middle Ages. 3 WinterW. North

RELG 238. Topics in Medieval History: Gender and Ethics in Medieval France Cross-listed with HIST 238,FRST 238,WGST 233. Acknowledged by contemporaries as one of the leading intellects of her time, Christine de Pizan (ca. 1364-ca. 1431) was an author of unusual literary range and perceptiveness. In addition to romances, poetry, and a quasi-autobiographical Vision, she composed works on political theory, arms and chivalry, and her famous defenses of women—The City of Ladies and the Treasure of the City of Ladies. Using Christine's writings as a foundation, we will explore problems and perceptions of gender, love, the ethics of personal relations, and the exercise of power in domestic and public spheres in late medieval France. 3 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 239. Religion and the American Landscape The American landscape has shaped and has been shaped by the religious imaginations of its various inhabitants. This course considers different ways of imagining the relationship between land, community, and the sacred and how these traditions have been inscribed on the land itself. Native American and Latino traditions will be considered, as will a variety of European-American traditions, including Puritans, Mormons, Romantics, Deep Ecologists, and immigrant farming traditions of the upper midwest. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 243. Native American Religious Freedom This course explores historical and legal contexts in which Native Americans have practiced their religions in the United States. Making reference to the cultural background of Native traditions, and the history of First Amendment law, the course explores landmark court cases in Sacred Lands, Peyotism, Free Exercise in prisons, and sacralized traditional practices (whaling, fishing, hunting) and critically examines the conceptual framework of "religion" as it has been applied to the practice of Native American traditions. Service projects will integrate academic learning and student involvement in matters of particular concern to contemporary native communities. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, WinterM. McNally

RELG 246. Healing and Religion in America Illness and health have been central concerns of a wide variety of American religious traditions. Religious traditions of healing have sometimes complemented, sometimes challenged the professionalization of medicine in their unique ways of imagining the intimate relations of body, mind, and spirit and of individual body, social body, and the cosmos. Against the historical backdrop of the professionalization of medicine, this course explores ritual healing in Native American, Afro-Caribbean, and Asian-American communities, Mexican American curanderismo, hygienic movements, Christian Science, and faith healing. Prerequisite: One religion course or consent of the instructor. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 250. Hindu Traditions An exploration of selected texts and topics from the dominant religious tradition of India. Drawing from both classical and modern sources, we consider a range of expressions of Hindu religiousness, from philosophic speculation, to mythic narrative, yogic practice, daily ritual, ecstatic devotion, and social and ethical prescription. Religion 150 is recommended but not required. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 251. Theravada Buddhism Study of Buddhism's beginnings in India and its spread to Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia, where it is a dominant religious and cultural form. The first part of the course focuses on Theravadin interpretations of the Buddha's life and basic teachings, as found in the Pali canon. The second part of the course analyzes Buddhism's function as a cultural system in one or more Theravadin society, with special attention to such issues as Buddhist legitimization of secular power, popular religious practices, the relation between monks and laity, and the role of women. Religion 150 recommended but not required. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 252. Indian Mahayana Buddhism Self-consciously styled as the "Greater Vehicle" of the Buddhist tradition, the Mahayana stream of Indian Buddhism had a profound impact on the shape of Buddhism in India and beyond. This course will examine a range of Indian Mahayana doctrines and practices, focusing especially on the "new metaphysics" of emptiness; controversies in the conception of Buddhahood; the centrality of compassion and the bodhisattva ideal; visualization and other meditation techniques; the role of faith and the practices of lay people; and the Buddhist tantra. Religion 150 recommended but not required. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 253. Tibetan Buddhism Against a background of the essential ideas and practices of Hinayana and Mahayana Buddhism, this course examines the development within Mahayana of the esoteric traditions of Tantra, and then traces the rise and development of the complex, Tantra-dominated Buddhism of Tibet. Topics include the role of the lama, ideas about death and reincarnation, tantric meditative practices, debates about such doctrines as emptiness and skillful means, the place of women, and the history of the Dalai Lamas. Religion 150 is recommended but not required. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, SpringR. Jackson

RELG 254. Delusion and Enlightenment in Zen Buddhism A study of the development of Zen Buddhism as it changed over the centuries in various cultural climates, including its inception in China, growth in Japan, and emergence in the west. Special attention will be given to Zen's basic philosophy, its position within Mahayana Buddhism, its practices, and its contemporary activities. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, WinterP. Arai

RELG 255. East Asian Buddhist Thought and Practice Selected major figures and schools of East Asian Buddhism are examined in historical succession, focusing on China and Japan and including Korea. Representative figures will be examined from the Philosophical Schools, Zen, and Pure Land Buddhism, as well as others. Primary texts in translation will be examined in detail. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 260. Myth, Ritual, and Symbolism Cross-listed with SOAN 260. Exploring the ways in which people make sense of their world through myth, ritual and symbolism, this course takes an anthropological approach to the study of comparative religion. What is the relationship between "myth" and "history?" How do animals, food, color, music, and the human body function as idioms of symbolic communication? Why is ritual credited with the ability to heal illnesses, offer political commentary, maintain cosmic harmony, and foster social cohesion through the exhibition of interpersonal tensions? Examining major theories in the anthropology of religion, students learn to record and analyze both "familiar" and "unfamiliar" myths, rituals, and symbols. 6 credits cr., SS, WinterJ. Levi

RELG 261. Sociology of Religion Cross-listed with SOAN 228. The social dimension of religion and the relationship between religion and society. Sociological theories of religion; conversion and commitment; sects, churches and cults; secularization debate; institutionalization; civil religion and new religious movements; religion and politics; and social basis of religious behavior and organization. Prerequisite: Sociology 111 or consent of instructor. 6 credits cr., SS, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 262. Millennialism in Cross-Cultural Perspective This course is an examination of millennial and "end-time" beliefs in a variety of cultures around the world. Topics include: roots of millennial ideas, Jewish apocalypticism, beginnings of Christianity and Islam, and modern case studies from the Pacific Islands, China, Iran and the United States. The course will elicit general conclusions regarding millennial and messianic ideas through detailed discussions of specific examples. Previous coursework in religious studies, history, or anthropology will be helpful but is not required. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, SpringS. Bashir

RELG 263. Sufism A survey of the large complex of Islamic intellectual and social perspectives subsumed under the term Sufism. Sufi mystical philosophies, liturgical practices and social organizations have been a major part of the Islamic tradition in all historical periods, and sufism has also served as the primary muse behind Islamic aesthetic expression in poetry, music, and the visual arts. We will treat the material in three sections: basics of Sufism, historical evolution of the tradition, and the impact of modern ideas. The course aims to deepen students' understanding of Islam and to underscore the diversity of human ways of being religious in the world. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 264. Muslims on the Margins: A Survey of Islamic Minority Traditions This course will highlight the diversity of Islamic religious ideas and practices by treating minority sects and groups that have been a feature of Islamic societies in all historical periods. We will survey the various Shi'i sects that originated in the earliest centuries of Islam and continue to the present. In addition, we will consider other groups exemplifying minority views such as antinomianism, divine incarnation, and transmigration of souls. The course will also emphasize the significance of local Asian and African settings in the formation of Islamic ideas. Our chief objective will be to challenge the idea of a single hegemonic Islamic tradition by considering historical and ethnographic materials in detail. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, WinterS. Bashir

RELG 268. Jews and Judaism in America Over the past two centuries, Jews have combined elements of traditional Judaism with aspects of American culture to create distinctive forms of Jewish life and thought. We will trace the history of American Jews and analyze the character of American Judaism, with special emphasis on the diverse contemporary forms of Jewish life. Prior study of Judaism and/or Hebrew Bible will be useful, but is not required. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 269. Jewish Ethics How do religious beliefs shape our moral perspectives? In this course we will examine the ways in which this has happened within the Jewish tradition, paying attention to both ethical theory and issues in applied ethics. Both traditional and contemporary approaches to Jewish ethics will be examined and these will be compared with other religious as well as secular ethical traditions. Prior study of religion and/or ethics will be useful, but is not required. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 271. Issues in Contemporary Religious Thought: The Holocaust This course explores the profound theological and moral issues raised by the Nazi policy of systematic genocide. Attention will be given to a wide range of issues, including Jewish and Christian responses to these events, collaboration with the perpetrators, spiritual resistance, whether there are "unforgivable" crimes, and the use of scientific data from experiments on concentration camp inmates. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 273. Indian Philosophy Cross-listed with PHIL 275. An introduction to the classical philosophical tradition of India. The primary emphasis is on reading and discussion of selected Hindu and Buddhist sources in English translation, though contemporary and comparative materials also may be included. In terms of the "fields" of Western philosophy, the major focus is on Indian approaches to metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics, with secondary consideration of logic, linguistic philosophy, and aesthetics. Some prior work in either Western philosophy or South Asian religion is highly desirable. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, SpringR. Jackson

RELG 276. Religious Autobiography in Comparative Perspective The course explores the lives of persons who have intensely pursued self-knowledge and the knowledge of God or ultimate reality. Through close attention to the insights offered by individual experience and by knowledge of dynamic religious traditions such as Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, and Judaism, the course studies the personal quest for meaning and its debt to diverse ideas and beliefs. The course approaches religious autobiography as the product of a mutually creative interplay between religious tradition and the search for spiritual insight and sense of purpose. Authors include Augustine, Thoreau, Gandhi, M.L. King, Mernissi and Basho. Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 300. Issues in the Study of Religion This seminar is designed to acquaint junior religion majors with some of the basic theories, methods, and problems in the field of religious studies. 6 credits cr., HU, WinterR. Crouter

RELG 320. Conscience and Community: Challenges in Catholic Moral Theology How are contemporary Roman Catholics forming their consciences on disputed moral questions? How does a religious tradition accommodate diversity and change and also maintain unity and continuity? Such questions will inform this seminar, which will consider debates on bioethics, feminism, authority and dissent, sexuality and reproduction, and ecology. Prerequisite: One course in ethics or Christianity, or consent of the instructor. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 321. Kierkegaard This seminar consists of reading in works by Søren Kierkegaard (1813-1855) that are concerned with his pseudonymity and indirect communication, i.e. his strategies and arguments that inform his depiction of the aesthetic, ethical, and religious spheres of human existence. Emphasis is placed on (a) ways of reading Kierkegaard, and (b) trying to grasp the Danish writer's significance for contemporary philosophy of religion, literary criticism, psychoanalysis, and Christian theology. 6 credits cr., HU, FallR. Crouter

RELG 322. Christian Feminist Theologies Cross-listed with WGST 322. Since the early 1970s feminist scholars have made important contributions to Christian theology, especially in the areas of biblical studies, systematic theology, and ethics. This seminar will investigate works by a diverse range of Catholic and Protestant thinkers who are influencing these theological disciplines and also contributing to wider movements for justice and ecology. Prerequisite: One course in Christianity or consent of instructor. 6 credits cr., HU, FallA. Patrick

RELG 327. Genesis This course will address two central concerns through an in-depth study of the book of Genesis: hermeneutics—the problems and possibilities of textual interpretation, and theology—the ways in which religious communities and individuals reflect on the meaning of sacred events. This important biblical book raises an extraordinary range of issues, including cosmogony, the nature of humankind, faith, familial relationships, politics, sex and violence. Materials will be drawn from both classical and modern commentaries, including Bill Moyer's series on PBS. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 328. Contemporary Jewish Thought This seminar introduces students to contemporary (Post-World War II) Jewish theology. We will explore the creative and diverse ways in which modern Jewish thinkers have combined elements of modernity (e.g. the emphasis on autonomy and freedom) with traditional Jewish beliefs about God, revelation, and redemption. The course will include representative selections from rationalists and mystics, feminists, traditionalists and post-modernists. Prior study of religion and/or philosophy will be helpful. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 344. Lived Religion in America The practices of popular, or local, or lived religion in American culture often blur the distinction between the sacred and profane and elude religious studies frameworks based on the narrative, theological, or institutional foundations of "official" religion. This course explores American religion primarily through the lens of the practices of lived religion with respect to ritual, the body, the life cycle, the market, leisure, and popular culture. Consideration of a wide range of topics, including ritual healing, Christmas, cremation, and Elvis, will nourish an ongoing discussion about how to make sense of lived religion. 6 credits cr., HU, SpringM. McNally

RELG 355. Buddhist Ethics An inquiry into the nature of "the good," "the virtuous," and "the meritorious" in Buddhism. Drawing on both traditional texts and modern studies, we will examine Buddhist evocations of the ideal attainment, taxonomies of positive and negative mental states, descriptive and prescriptive theories of karma, expositions of proper monastic and lay conduct, and analyses of the complex relation between knowledge and action. Examples will be taken from four major Buddhist traditions: Theravada, Indian Mahayana, Tantra, and Zen. Study of classical views will be supplemented by explorations of the ways in which Buddhist ethics may be understood in relation to ethical theories developed in the West, and to such "contemporary" concerns as bio-ethics, the environment, nationalism, and gender and sexuality. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 356. Buddhism, Belief and Religious Authority The Buddhist tradition is frequently touted, by both traditional and modern advocates, as grounded in reason as opposed to faith. Yet many, if not most, Buddhists also adamantly insist on the necessity of accepting past and future lives, while others proclaim the need for generating faith in a qualified religious guide. In this seminar, we examine a variety of Buddhist sources on the question of the limits and capacities of reason in Buddhism, asking whether and how faith and religious authority may participate in the adoption of Buddhist beliefs. Prerequisite: one course in Buddhism or consent of instructor. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 360. Muslims and Modernity Cross-listed with HIST 360. Through readings in primary sources in translation, we will discuss the major intellectual and cultural movements that have influenced Muslim thinkers in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Topics include modernism, nationalism, "Islamic socialism," and fundamentalism. Some prior knowledge of Islamic religion or history is assumed 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, SpringS. Bashir, A. Khalid

RELG 370. Mysticism Readings in Western and Eastern mystical and spiritual traditions. Some theoretical consideration of religious experiences will be examined, followed by an in-depth examination of first-hand accounts in the form of essays, journals, and autobiographies. 6 credits cr., HU, Not offered in 2002-2003.

RELG 371. The Poetics of Enlightenment Our focus will be on the various poetic modes through which Buddhists have attempted to express the supposedly ineffable experience of enlightenment, as well as the manifold paths leading to it. Examples will be drawn from major Asian Buddhist cultures, as well as from the works of modern Western Buddhists. Fiction and drama may be included, but the major emphasis will be on poetry, seen in its historical context and in relation to traditional and contemporary literary theories, as well as to discussions of the relation between mysticism and language. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, WinterR. Jackson

RELG 372. Medicine, Healing, and Spirituality This course will analyze how western allopathic medicine and Asian Buddhist traditions approach the concepts of illness and health and the relationship of body and mind. An "Integrated Model of Affliction and Healing" will facilitate cross-cultural understanding and discussion. We will develop knowledge and skills through a directed field research project involving in-depth interviews on a person's healing process. 6 credits cr., HU,RAD, SpringP. Arai

RELG 399. Senior Research Seminar This seminar will acquaint students with research tools in various fields of religious studies, provide an opportunity to present and discuss research work in progress, hone writing skills, and improve oral presentation techniques. Prerequisite: Religion 300 and acceptance of proposal for senior integrative exercise and instructor's permission. 6 credits cr., S/CR/NC, ND, WinterA. Patrick

RELG 400. Integrative Exercise 3 credits cr., S/NC, ND, SpringStaff