Requirements
Religion Major
The major consists of nine courses.
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
Required Courses | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý1101 | Introduction to the Study of Religion | 1 |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý3390 | Theories about Religion | 1 |
Select one course on texts and traditions in each of the following four geographic areas a,b | ||
Middle East and North Africa | 1 | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý1150 | Introduction to the Religions of the Middle East | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2208 | Islam | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2232 | Approaches to the Qur'an | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2237 | Judaism Under Islam | |
REL 3333 Islam and Science | ||
South and Southeast Asia | 1 | |
REL 2219 Religion and Fiction in South Asia | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2220 | Hindu Literatures | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2221 | Religious Cultures of India | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2222 | Early Buddhism | |
REL 2223 Mahayana Buddhism | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2280 | Goddesses, Gurus, and Rulers: Gender and Power in Indian Religions | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2288 | Religion and Politics in South Asia | |
REL 2808 Islam in Asia | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý3209 | Religion on the Move: Migration, Globalization, and the Transformation of Tradition | |
Ancient Mediterranean | 1 | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2213 | Fictions, Fakes, and Forgeries: How Narratives Shaped the Religions of the Ancient | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2214 | A History of Anti-Semitism | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2215 | The Hebrew Bible in Its World | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2216 | The New Testament in Its World | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2230 | Human Sacrifice | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2235 | Gender and Sexuality in Early Christianity | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2239 | Judaism in the Age of Empires | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý3325 | Deadly Words: Language and Power in the Religions of Antiquity | |
Modern Europe and North America | 1 | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2201 | Black Women, Politics, Music, and the Divine | |
REL 2250 Modern Christian Thought | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2251 | Christianity | |
REL 2252 Marxism and Religion | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2257 | Christian Sexual Ethics | |
REL 2253 Gender, Body, and Religion | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2271 | Spirit Come Down: Religion, Race, and Gender in America | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2500 | New Religious Movements in the United States | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2520 | Popular Religion in the Americas | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2530 | Jesus in the Modern Imagination | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2540 | The History of American Christianity | |
REL 3310 Religious Toleration and Human Rights | ||
Select two courses on thematic approaches a,b | 2 | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2207 | Modern Jewish Identities | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2212 | Religion and Science: Couples Therapy | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2214 | A History of Anti-Semitism | |
REL 2219 Religion and Fiction in South Asia | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2220 | Hindu Literatures | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2221 | Religious Cultures of India | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2230 | Human Sacrifice | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2235 | Gender and Sexuality in Early Christianity | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2236 | Religion, Nature, and the Environment | |
REL 2252 Marxism and Religion | ||
REL 2253 Gender, Body, and Religion | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2257 | Christian Sexual Ethics | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2280 | Goddesses, Gurus, and Rulers: Gender and Power in Indian Religions | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2288 | Religion and Politics in South Asia | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý2500 | New Religious Movements in the United States | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý3209 | Religion on the Move: Migration, Globalization, and the Transformation of Tradition | |
REL 3310 Religious Toleration and Human Rights | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý3325 | Deadly Words: Language and Power in the Religions of Antiquity | |
REL 3333 Islam and Science | ||
Select an elective course in religion at any level c | 1 | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý1013 | God and Money | |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý1014 | Heretics: Dissent and Debate in the History of Religion | |
REL 1027 Astral Religion | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý1142 | Philosophy of Religion |
a | One course, on either texts and traditions or thematic approaches must be at the 3000 level.Ìý |
b | A thematic course can, with the permission of the department chair, replace a course on a geographic area. |
c | Students may select from any of the courses listed above, except for ¸é·¡³¢Ìý1101 Introduction to the Study of Religion and ¸é·¡³¢Ìý3390 Theories about Religion, or one of the four courses listed below.Ìý |
Please consult the department for more information about additional courses that might satisfy these requirements. For a comprehensive list of all courses offered in the last four academic years, please .Ìý |
Religion Minor
A minor consists of five courses.
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
Required Courses | ||
¸é·¡³¢Ìý1101 | Introduction to the Study of Religion | 1 |
¸é·¡³¢Ìý3390 | Theories about Religion | 1 |
Select any three Religion courses | 3 |
Additional Information and Department Policies
- No more than one first-year writing seminar may be counted toward the major.
- Typically, up to three courses taken at another college or university may count toward the major with departmental approval. One credit taken at another college or university may count toward the minor with departmental approval.Ìý
- With departmental approval, an independent study (intermediate, advanced, or honors) can be used to satisfy the elective course requirement for the major.
- In order to enroll in ¸é·¡³¢Ìý3390 Theories about Religion, a major normally is expected to have taken four of the nine required courses.
- Courses that count toward the major or minor must be taken for regular letter grades (not Credit/D/Fail).
- Each religion course required for the major or minor must be passed with a grade of C- or higher.
- Majors and minors may not double-count courses with another department or program.
Honors in Religion
Students contemplating honors candidacy should possess a record of distinction in departmental courses, including those that support the project, a clearly articulated and well-focused research proposal, and a high measure of motivation and scholarly maturity. At the start of the first semester of their senior year, honors candidates enroll in REL 4050 with a faculty member who has agreed to supervise the project. If the proposal, due toward the end of the first semester, is accepted, the student goes on to enroll in REL 4051 for the second semester in order to complete the project.
Information for Incoming Students
Because the Religion Department at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾ does not require students to take ¸é·¡³¢Ìý1101 Introduction to the Study of Religion in order to enroll in its intermediate or upper level courses, there is more than one entry point into the department's curriculum.
¸é·¡³¢Ìý1101 Introduction to the Study of Religion, is comparative in approach and lays out the theoretical contours of the field. Since it is an excellent preparation for intermediate and advanced level courses in the department, potential majors should enroll in it as early as possible. Students are introduced to a theme or topic in at least two religious traditions and to various methodologies and specialized vocabularies employed in the field.
The Religion Department has begun to offer an additional 1000-level course every year. This year, that course will be in the spring semester. Finally, first-year students are welcome to enroll in our 2000-level courses. The Religion Department at ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾ is one of the few departments that regularly offers courses at the 2000-level in which students closely examine a particular topic or area (e.g. Christianity, Buddhism, Bible, Islam) in any one semester, and many students do begin with a 2000-level course.
This is an excerpt from the official ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø±¬ÍøÕ¾ College Catalogue and Academic Handbook.