Religion
Courses
RE 150: Comparative Religious Ethics
RE 215: Comparative Sacred Texts
The three monotheistic traditions, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, will be studied comparatively. Topics within the course include, but are not limited to, the prehistory and history of sacred texts, their creation stories, and how such texts influence worship practices and shape understandings of authority and community, gender, and material culture.
RE 220: Religion and Film
Course explores the notion of cinema as a type of technology that has served a variety of thought-provoking roles in American history and culture, such as a medium for defining “good” and “evil,” as an audio-visual technology for shaping American politics, and as an inventor of new religious trajectories. WI
RE 250: Religion and American Politics
This course examines the role of religion in American politics. Topics covered may include, but are not limited to, the formative role of religion in American political history, the influence of religion on political behavior, legal dimensions of religion in American public life, and the proper role of religious convictions in a pluralistic democracy.