Religion, Study of

Courses

For course descriptions not found in the 2008-2009 General Catalog, please contact the department for more information.

RELI 1. Introduction to Religion (4)   An introduction to key topics in the study of religion through a comparative reading of religious texts and/or artifacts. The intent is to develop basic strategies of interpretation for undertaking a critical, disciplined study of religion.

RELI 110A. The Modern Study of Religion: Religion in Modernity (4)    This class examines the history of the term “religion,” focusing upon the development of religion’s contemporary significance within the Reformation and Enlightenment, and questioning what it means to be “modern.” Topics change yearly. Special attention to contemporary culture and politics.

RELI 110B. The Modern Study of Religion: Social and Cultural Theories of Religion (4)    An introduction to basic srategies of interpretation in the study of religion, including issues of category formation, theory, and method. Special attention paid to prominent voices of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, including Marx, Freud, Durkheim, Eliade, etc.

RELI 111. Texts and Contexts: The Holy Book in Christianity and Judaism (4)     This class examines the development of sacred scripture in Judaism and Christianity. Topics include the variety and use of texts in religious communities; the process of canonization; the formation and transformation of textual communities. Prerequisites: upper-division standing or department stamp.

RELI 112. Texts and Contexts: The Holy Book in Islam (4)     An overview of the history and thematic issues in the study of Quran. It will focus on historical events, issues, and various interpretive practices in the development of Quran as a sacred text. Prerequisite: upper-division standing or department stamp.

RELI 113. Texts and Contexts: Textual Communities in South Asia (4)    This class considers important texts belonging to one or more of the following South Asian Traditions: Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, or Sikhism. It introduces students to the ways in which religious identities are formed and contested within a pluralistic society.

RELI 130. Religion, Science, and Magic (4)    Religion, science, and magic provide scholars with a set of analytic categories for the comparative study of cultural forms and modes of thinking. What are the ideological underpinnings and political implications of these categories? This class addresses this question using comparative avenues involving literary sources. Prerequisites: upper-division standing or consent of instructor.

RELI 131. Topics in Religion and Sexuality (4)    How does religioisity as a significant cultural component help mold gender and sexuality identities? The class offers topical investigations into this question. Prerequisites: upper-division standing or consent of instructor.

RELI 132. Topics in Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy (4)    Religious dogmas often develop in dialogue with alternative viewpoints that ultimately are rejected by heterodox by the dominant group. This class presents case studies in the interpretation of such ideological and sociological pairings using scriptural, literary, and analytic sources. Prerequisites: upper-division standing or consent of instructor.

RELI 134. Topics in American Religion (4)    Topical studies in the history of religion in American society, ranging from the Puritans to the New Age. Prerequisites: upper-division standing or consent of instructor.

RELI 140. Death and Religion (4)    This interdisciplinary course uses literary sources to explore the relationship between death and religion on a historical and global scale; the relationship between political religious rituals and symbolism of rebirth; examination of carnival, death pollution, and symbolism of gender. Prerequisites: upper-division standing or consent of instructor.

RELI 141. Public Sphere and Religion (4)    This interdisciplinary course will explore the historical and theoretical relationship between public sphere and religion, particularly focusing on the manifestation of religious power, public ritual, and sacred theatricality in everyday spaces of life. Prerequisites: upper-division standing or consent of instructor.

RELI 142. Secularization and Religion (4)    Surveys the relationship between religion and modernity, in particular the problematic of the secularization theory; covers cases such as Catholic liberation theology and Islamic fundamentalism, with particular focus on the “deprivatization of modern religion.” Prerequisites: upper-division standing or consent of instructor.

RELI 188. Special Topics in Religion (4)    Students in this lecture will investigate important problems in the study of religion or the history of particular religions. May be repeated for credit up to three times when topics vary. Prerequisite: upper-division standing.

RELI 189. Seminar in Religion (4)    This seminar requires the intensive analysis of critical problems in the study of religion or the history of particular religions. May be repeated for credit up to three times when topics vary. Prerequisites: upper-division standing; RELI 110A or 110B or consent of instructor.

RELI 196H. Honors Thesis Research (4)    Honors thesis research for students accepted into the Honors Program. Research is conducted under the supervision of a program faculty member. Prerequisite: program approval into the Honors Program.

RELI 197. Directed Advanced Readings (4)    A faculty member will direct a student in advanced readings on a topic not generally included in the Program for the Study of Religion’s curriculum. Students must make arrangements with the program and individual faculty. May be repeated for credit up to three times for credit. Prerequisites: upper-diviison standing; RELI 110A or 110B; overall GPA of 2.5.

RELI 199. Independent Research Study for Undergraduates    Independent research in religion under the supervision of a faculty member affiliated with the Program for the Study of Religion. This course may be repeated three times with program approval. (P/NP grades only.) Prerequisites: upper-division standing, with 2.5 GPA (overall); program stamp.

Approved Elective Courses

The following lower- and upper-division courses are offered on a regular basis, although not every course is available every year. Please contact the program coordinator for approved courses in any given quarter or visit the program’s Web site, http://religion.ucsd.edu. Students may petition other courses, including independent study and Education Abroad Program courses when appropriate.

Lower-Division

ANTH 1. Introduction to Culture

HUM 1. The Foundations of Western Civilization: Israel and Greece

HUM 2. Rome, Christianity, and the Middle Ages

MMW 2. The Great Classical Traditions

MMW 3. The Medieval Heritage

PHIL 14. Introduction to Philosophy: Metaphysics

PHIL 31. History of Philosophy: Ancient Philosophy

RELI 1. Introduction to Religion

SOC 1A, B. The Study of Society

Upper-Division
Methodological

ANSC 120. Anthropology of Religion

ANSC 167. Rituals and Celebrations

SOCA 100. Classical Sociological Theory

SOCC 156. Sociology of Religion

General Comparative

ANSC 104. Anthropology of Fantasy

ANSC 160. Nature, Culture, and Environmentalism

HISC 162. History of Science and Religion

LTWL 100. Mythology

VIS 117I. Western and Non-Western Rituals and Ceremonies

Religion in Historical Context

ANAR 142. The Rise and Fall of Ancient Israel

ANAR 143. Archaeology, Anthropology, and the Bible

ANAR 154. Aztecs and their Ancestor

ANRG 189. The Anthropology of the End of the World

ANSC 130. Hinduism

ANSC 137. Chinese Popular Religion

ETHN 161. Black Politics and Protest Since 1941

ETHN 188. African Americans, Religion, and the City

HIAF 110. History of Africa to 1880

HIEA 126. The Silk Road in Chinese and Japanese History

HIEA 168. Topics in Classical and Medieval Chinese History

HIEA 121. Medieval Chinese Culture and Society

HIEU 101. Greece in the Classical Age

HIEU 105. The Early Christian Church

HIEU 113. Rule, Conflict, and Dissent in the Middle Ages

HIEU 132. Germany from Luther to Bismark

HIEU 140. Mystics, Popes, and Peasants: Early Modern Catholicism and Society

HIEU 147. Women and Gender in Early Modern Europe

HIEU 158. Why Hitler? How Auschwitz?

HIEU 159. Three Centuries of Zionism, 1648–1948

HIEU 163. Special Topics in Medieval History

HIEU 171. Special Topics in Twentieth-Century Europe

HINE 102. The Jews in Their Homeland in Antiquity

HINE 103. The Jewish Diaspora in Antiquity

HINE 106. The Bible and the Near East: The Writings

HINE 107. Ancient Egypt: History and Culture

HINE 108. The Middle East Before Islam

HINE 114. The History of the Islamic Middle East

HINE 115. Islamic Civilization

HINE 161. Seminar in the Hebrew Bible

HINE 170. Special Topics in Jewish History

HINE 181. Problems in the Study of the Hebrew Manuscripts

HINE 186. Special Topics in Middle Eastern History

HITO 102. East Asian Religious Traditions

HITO 104. Jews and Judaism in the Ancient and Medieval Worlds

HITO 105. Jews and Judaism in the Modern World

HITO 106. How Jewish Women Lived in Modern Times

HITO 115S. Myth, History, and Archaeology

HIUS 155A/B. Religion and Law in American Society

JUDA 110. Introduction to Judaism

LTWL 131A. The New Testament

LTWL 131B. Paul and the Invention of Christianity

LTWL 131C. Reinventing Jesus

LTWL 131D. The Fourth Gospel

LTWL 131E. The History of Heresy

LTWL 131F. Christianity and the Roman Empire

LTWL 131G. Against the Christians

LTWL 139. Gnosticism: The Religious Underground from Late Antiquity to the New Age

LTWL 142. Islam: The Origin and Spread of a World Religion

Religion and Society

ANSC 100. Special Topics in Socio-Cultural Anthropology (when topic covers religion)

ANSC 132. Modernity in Brazil

ANSC 133. Peoples and Cultures of the Middle East

ANSC 136. Traditional Chinese Society

ETHN 110. Cultural World Views of Native Americans

ETHN 189. Special Topics in Ethnic Studies (when topic covers religion)

HIAF 124. Islam in Contemporary African Societies

HIEA 119. Religion and Popular Culture in East Asia (SOCB 162R)

HIEA 120. Classical Chinese Philosophy and Culture

HIEA 135. History of Thought and Religion in China: Buddhism

HIEA 137. Women and Family in Chinese History

HIEU 110. The Rise of Europe

HIEU 111. Europe in the Middle Ages

HIEU 125. Reformation Europe

HIEU 163. Topics in Medieval History

HINE 118. The Middle East in the Twentieth Century

HINE 122. Politicalization of Religion in Middle East

HINE 166. Nationalism in the Middle East

HISC 101B. Medieval Science in the Latin West, ca. 500-1500

JUDA 111. Topics in Judaism

LTWL 141. Islam and Modernity

POLI 110A. Citizens and Saints: Political Thought from Plato to Augustine

POLI 110B. Sovereign Subjects in the Modern State: Machiavelli to Rousseau

POLI 110C. Revolution and Reaction: Political Thought from Kant to Nietzsche

POLI 121. Government and Politics of the Middle East

POLI 121B. Politics of Israel

SOCB 160. Sociology of Culture

SOCB 162R. Religion and Popular Culture in East Asia (HIEA 119)

SOCC 154. Religious Institutions in America

SOCC 157. Religion in Contemporary Society

SOCD 158. Islam in the Modern World

SOCD 177. International Terrorism

SOCD 188A. Community and Social Change in Africa

SOCD 188B. Chinese Society

SOCD 188F. Modern Jewish Societies and Israeli Society

SOCD 189. Special Topics in Comparative-Historical Sociology: Chinese Society in Transition

Religion and Literature

HINE 160. Special Topics in the Bible and Ancient Near East

JUDA 100. Introduction to the Hebrew Bible

LTEN 118. Milton

LTEN 125B. First-Generation Romantic Poets: Wordsworth, Rousseau, and Burke

LTEN 147. Metamorphoses of the Symbol: Mountains From Moses to Muir

LTEN 149. Themes: New Testament and English and American Literature

LTEU 105. Medieval Studies: Dante

LTGK 120. New Testament Greek

LTNE 100. The Bible and Western Literature

LTNE 101. The Bible: The Narrative Books

LTNE 102. The Bible: The Prophetic Books

LTWL 106. The Classical Tradition: Myths of Ancient Greeks and Romans

LTWL 129. Wisdom: A Literature of Authority

LTWL 135. The Buddhist Imaginary

LTWL 138. Critical Religion Studies

LTWL 145. South Asian Religious Literature: Selected Topics

LTWL 172. Special Topics in Literature

Religion and Philosophy

HICS 168. The Extraterrestrial Life Question

LTWL 101. What Socrates Knew

PHIL 104. The Rationalists

PHIL 130. Metaphysics

PHIL 131. Topics in Metaphysics

PHIL 185. Philosophy of Religion

Religion and the Arts

VIS 117A. Narrative Structures

VIS 120A. Greek Art

VIS 120B. Roman Art

VIS 120C. Late Antique Art

VIS 121B. Castles, Cathedrals, and Cities

VIS 121D. The Illuminated Manuscript in the Middle Ages

VIS 122AN. Renaissance Art

VIS 122D. Michelangelo

VIS 123AN. Between Spirit and Flesh: Northern Art of the Early Renaissance

VIS 124BN. Art & the Enlightenment

VIS 126BN. The Art and Civilization of the Ancient Maya

VIS 128B. Topics in Early Modern Art History (when topic covers religion)