RELIGST 4: What Didn't Make the Bible (CLASSICS 9N, HISTORY 112C, JEWISHST 4)
Over two billion people alive today consider the Bible to be sacred scripture. But how did the books that made it into the bible get there in the first place? Who decided what was to be part of the bible and what wasn't? How would history look differently if a given book didn't make the final cut and another one did? Hundreds of ancient Jewish and Christian texts are not included in the Bible. "What Didn't Make the Bible" focuses on these excluded writings. We will explore the Dead Sea Scrolls, Gnostic gospels, hear of a five-year-old Jesus throwing temper tantrums while killing (and later resurrecting) his classmates, peruse ancient romance novels, explore the adventures of fallen angels who sired giants (and taught humans about cosmetics), tour heaven and hell, encounter the garden of Eden story told from the perspective of the snake, and learn how the world will end. The course assumes no prior knowledge of Judaism, Christianity, the bible, or ancient history. It is designed for stu
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Over two billion people alive today consider the Bible to be sacred scripture. But how did the books that made it into the bible get there in the first place? Who decided what was to be part of the bible and what wasn't? How would history look differently if a given book didn't make the final cut and another one did? Hundreds of ancient Jewish and Christian texts are not included in the Bible. "What Didn't Make the Bible" focuses on these excluded writings. We will explore the Dead Sea Scrolls, Gnostic gospels, hear of a five-year-old Jesus throwing temper tantrums while killing (and later resurrecting) his classmates, peruse ancient romance novels, explore the adventures of fallen angels who sired giants (and taught humans about cosmetics), tour heaven and hell, encounter the garden of Eden story told from the perspective of the snake, and learn how the world will end. The course assumes no prior knowledge of Judaism, Christianity, the bible, or ancient history. It is designed for students who are part of faith traditions that consider the bible to be sacred, as well as those who are not. The only prerequisite is an interest in exploring books, groups, and ideas that eventually lost the battles of history and to keep asking the question "why." In critically examining these ancient narratives and the communities that wrote them, you will investigate how religions canonize a scriptural tradition, better appreciate the diversity of early Judaism and Christianity, understand the historical context of these religions, and explore the politics behind what did and did not make it into the bible.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 4
| UG Reqs: WAY-A-II, WAY-SI
Instructors:
Penn, M. (PI)
RELIGST 8N: Gardens and Sacred Space in Japan
This seminar will explore gardens and sacred spaces in Japan. We will study the development of Japanese garden design from the earliest records to contemporary Japan. We will especially focus on the religious, aesthetic, and social dimensions of gardens and sacred spaces. This seminar features a field trip to a Japanese garden in the area, in order to study how Japanese garden design was adapted in North America. Note: This course will be offered in East Asia Library, Room 212.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 3
| UG Reqs: WAY-A-II, WAY-SI
Instructors:
Mross, M. (PI)
RELIGST 12N: Perspectives on the Good Life
The question is how to approach and evaluate different perspectives on the good life, especially when those perspectives are beautifully, and elusively, presented to us as texts. We will consider both classic and modern writers, from the West and from China; some are explicitly religious, some explicitly secular; some literary, some philosophical. Most of the class will revolve around our talk with each other, interpreting and questioning relatively short texts. The works we will read - by Dante, Dickenson, Zhuangzi, Shklar, and others - are not intended to be representative of traditions, of eras, or of disciplines. They do, however, present a range of viewpoint and of style that will help frame and re-frame our views on the good life. They will illustrate and question the role that great texts can play in a modern 'art of living.' Perhaps most important, they will develop and reward the skills of careful reading, attentive listening, and thoughtful discussion. (Note: preparation and participation in discussion are the primary course requirement. Enrollment at 3 units requires a short final paper; a more substantial paper is required for the 4-unit option.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 3-4
| UG Reqs: GER:DB-Hum
Instructors:
Yearley, L. (PI)
RELIGST 19Q: Does Religion Divide Us? Legal, Political, and Cultural Perspectives from Across the World
Questions surrounding religion, especially when considered in relation to law, politics, and culture have always been of contentious nature. In this course, we will dissect this nature and explore the roots and reasons of such contention. We will pay special attention to the difficulty of defining religion legally, as well as to the meanings and practices of secularism and religious freedom. During the course, we will think critically about these issues in countries across the world with a comparative, interdisciplinary approach. Course readings will include academic writings by religion scholars, political scientists, historians, anthropologists, sociologists, philosophers, and others as well as documents concerning legal cases. Assignments including participation in group projects/presentations and annotation of select readings will encourage students to establish their own understanding of the course material and deliberate with their peers as we discuss the contemporary debates and cases throughout the course.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 3
| UG Reqs: WAY-EDP, WAY-SI
Instructors:
Yazici, I. (PI)
RELIGST 35X: Introduction to African American Studies: Black Religion, Culture, and Experience to the Civil War
Beginning in 16th century West Africa and ending in the 19th century United States, this course will survey the religious, cultural, and experiential histories of African-descended people in the Atlantic world. From the early histories of the slave trade to the violence of American racial hierarchies, we will delve into the cosmologies, practices, rituals, aesthetics, and other cultural expressions of free and enslaved Africans and their descendants in the Americas, with a particular emphasis on the United States. What did Africa mean to those displaced from their ancestral homelands? How did African descended people perceive, navigate, and resist their racialization? How did they reshape the Americas through their intellect, creativity, and culture? Prioritizing the voices, thought, and sensory registers of the persons involved in these historical processes, this course will explore African Americans' experiences - from the spectacular to the quotidian - as windows into the human experience.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 5
| UG Reqs: WAY-EDP, WAY-SI
Instructors:
Wells-Oghoghomeh, A. (PI)
RELIGST 56: Exploring Chinese Religions
An overview of major themes and historical developments in 5000 years of Chinese religion. In this course, we will try as much as possible to appreciate Chinese religion from the Chinese perspective, paying particular attention to original texts in translation, artifacts and videos, all in an attempt to discern the logic of Chinese religion and the role it has played in the course of Chinese history. To a greater extent perhaps than any other civilization, Chinese have left behind a continuous body of written documents and other artifacts relating to religion stretching over thousands of years, providing a wealth of material for studying the place of religion in history and society.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 4
| UG Reqs: WAY-A-II, WAY-EDP
Instructors:
Kieschnick, J. (PI)
RELIGST 123: The Hindu Epics and the Ethics of Dharma (CLASSICS 125)
The two great Hindu Epics, the Mahabharata and Ramayana, offer a sustained reflection on the nature of virtuous living in the face of insoluble ethical dilemmas. Their treatment of the concept of dharma, understood simultaneously as ethical action and the universal order that upholds the cosmos, lies at the heart of both Gandhian non-violent resistance and communalist interreligious conflict. This course will focus on a reading of selections from the Epics in English translation, supplemented with a consideration of how the texts have been interpreted in South Asian literary history and contemporary politics and public life in India.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 4-5
| UG Reqs: WAY-ER, WAY-A-II
Instructors:
Fisher, E. (PI)
RELIGST 155: What Makes a "Cult?" Studying Religion on the Margins (AMSTUD 155R)
From the earliest articulations of the category of religion in the modern era, terms like "cult," "witchcraft," and "fetishism" have been used to define the parameters of "true" religion. Though these terms are often taken at face value as they circulate in mainstream discourses, their meanings have fluctuated in response to historical shifts within various communities across time. Focusing primarily on the American context from the colonial period through the present, in this course, we will study religion through the phenomena that have come to be labeled as "not religion." How do we define cults, witchcraft, and other marginalized religious phenomena in the absence of hierarchical concepts of religion? In short, what makes a "cult?" Moreover, how do notions of religion and the religious change when (re)constructed from the margins? We will use the concept of the "cult," broadly conceived, and similar derogations to interrogate moments and traditions from the Salem Witch Trials to cu
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From the earliest articulations of the category of religion in the modern era, terms like "cult," "witchcraft," and "fetishism" have been used to define the parameters of "true" religion. Though these terms are often taken at face value as they circulate in mainstream discourses, their meanings have fluctuated in response to historical shifts within various communities across time. Focusing primarily on the American context from the colonial period through the present, in this course, we will study religion through the phenomena that have come to be labeled as "not religion." How do we define cults, witchcraft, and other marginalized religious phenomena in the absence of hierarchical concepts of religion? In short, what makes a "cult?" Moreover, how do notions of religion and the religious change when (re)constructed from the margins? We will use the concept of the "cult," broadly conceived, and similar derogations to interrogate moments and traditions from the Salem Witch Trials to curanderismo. Through these interrogations, we will explore questions of the relationship between religion and the state, the racialized and gendered dynamics of religious naming, and the representation of religions outside of the mainstream. By making "the familiar strange and the strange familiar," we will endeavor to better understand the broad implications of contentious religious categories and the forces that render some religions marginal.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 4
| UG Reqs: WAY-EDP
Instructors:
Sanchez, J. (PI)
;
Wells-Oghoghomeh, A. (PI)
RELIGST 158: Spiritualism and the Occult
This course will examine the popular mystical practices of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when millions of people in Europe and America described themselves as spiritualists and shared a recognizable set of practices. These served as a platform for spiritual immediacy guided by the central questions: What is the relationship between seen and unseen? How can the living communicate with the dead? What technologies apply to our inner lives? This course considers the historical emergence of spiritualism, spiritualism and art, spiritualism and technology, and mysticism and women to explore how the invisible became a central metaphor for the ambition to expand and remake the real.
Terms: Aut
| Units: 4
| UG Reqs: WAY-SI, WAY-A-II
Instructors:
Willburn, S. (PI)
RELIGST 199: Individual Work
Prerequisite: consent of instructor and department. May be repeated for credit.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr
| Units: 1-15
| Repeatable
for credit
(up to 99 units total)
Instructors:
Abbasi, R. (PI)
;
Bigelow, A. (PI)
;
Fisher, E. (PI)
...
more instructors for RELIGST 199 »
Instructors:
Abbasi, R. (PI)
;
Bigelow, A. (PI)
;
Fisher, E. (PI)
;
Fonrobert, C. (PI)
;
Gentry, J. (PI)
;
Harrison, P. (PI)
;
Kieschnick, J. (PI)
;
Lum, K. (PI)
;
Martin, L. (PI)
;
Mayse, E. (PI)
;
Mross, M. (PI)
;
Penn, M. (PI)
;
Pitkin, B. (PI)
;
Sockness, B. (PI)
;
Wells-Oghoghomeh, A. (PI)
;
Willburn, S. (PI)
;
Yearley, L. (PI)
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