RLG Religion CoursesRLG100Y RLG100Y1 An introductory study of the ideas, attitudes, practices, and contemporary situation of
the Judaic, Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Confucian, Taoist, and Shinto religious
traditions. RLG101Y1 Theories about the variety and nature of religious experience, personal and collective. How religious life is expressed in such forms as myth, narrative and ritual, systems of belief and value, morality and social institutions. RLG201Y1 The meaning of religious symbolism fundamental to the myths, rites, and images of prehistoric and tribal peoples, using a comparative approach to the history of religions as developed by Mircea Eliade. RLG202Y RLG202Y1 An introduction to the religious tradition of the Jews, from its ancient roots to its modern crises. Focus on great ideas, thinkers, books, movements, sects, and events in the historical development of Judaism through its four main periods - biblical, rabbinic, medieval, and modern. RLG203Y1 An introduction to the Christian religious tradition as it has developed from the 1st century C.E. to the present and has been expressed in teachings, institutions, social attitudes, and the arts. RLG204Y1 The faith and practice of Islam: historical emergence, doctrinal development, and
interaction with various world cultures. RLG205Y1 A historical and thematic introduction to the Hindu religious tradition as embedded in the socio-cultural structures of India. RLG206Y1 The teachings of the Buddha and the development, spread, and diversification of the Buddhist tradition from southern to northeastern Asia. RLG207H1 (formerly RLG364H) 26L, 13T RLG209H1 (formerly RLG365H) 26L, 13T RLG210Y1 Religion from the sociological viewpoint; religion as the source of meaning, community
and power; conversion and commitment; religious organization, movements, and authority;
the relation of religion to the individual, sexuality and gender; conflict and change;
religion and secularization. Emphasis on classical thinkers (Durkheim, Marx, Weber) and
contemporary applications. RLG211Y1 A survey of the various psychological approaches to aspects of religion such as
religious experience, doctrine, myth, ritual, community, ethics and human transformation.
The historical place of introspective, psychoanalytic, humanistic and transpersonal
methods in the psychology of religion. RLG212Y1 Anthropological study of the supernatural in small-scale non-literate societies. A
cross-cultural examination of systems of belief and ritual focusing on the relationship
between spiritual beings and the cosmos as well as the rights and obligations which arise
therefrom. Among the topics covered are: myth and ritual; shamanism and healing; magic,
witchcraft and sorcery; divination; ancestor worship. RLG220H1 This course deals with how the momentous experience of the Holocaust, the systematic state-sponsored murder of six million Jews as well as many others, has forced thinkers, both religious and secular, to rethink the human condition. RLG221H RLG221H1 A brief survey of the Jewish biblical and rabbinic traditions; the extension of these teachings and methods of interpretation into the modern period; common and divergent Jewish positions on pressing moral issues today. RLG222H1 Reason, experience (the natural law tradition) and revelation as the bases for moral judgment; faith and morality; freedom of conscience and the Churchs claim to be a moral teacher; relevance to contemporary Catholic moral theology. RLG223H1 The development of Protestant ethics since the Reformation. Gospel and law, love and justice, realism and perfectionism, moral norms and moral context, the personal, political, and economic orders. RLG228H1 The ethics and religious symbolism of environmental change: animal domestication and experimentation, deforestation, population expansion, energy use, synthetics, waste and pollution. RLG230Y1 The ways in which selected texts from a variety of cultures and times are linked both to specific religious traditions as well as to broader notions of what it means to be religious. Concepts to be treated may include identity, suffering, duty, class, individuality, community, tradition, innovation, loss, consolation, memory, time, beauty, creation, nature, feminism, and colonialism. RLG231Y1 The impact of the physical and social sciences on religion and religious thought. A
comparative philosophical study of scientific and theological ways of analysis and of the
status of scientific and religious assertions. Areas of cooperation and of conflict
between the two cultures. RLG232H1 The role of film as a mediator of thought and experience concerning religious worldviews. The ways in which movies relate to humanitys quest to understand itself and its place in the universe are considered in this regard, along with the challenge which modernity presents to this task. Of central concern is the capacity of film to address religious issues through visual symbolic forms. RLG233H1 Continued investigation into the relations between religion and film. Distinguished from RLG232H by the instructor. RLG237Y1 The social and legal status of women in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The historical and contemporary situation of women in these traditions. RLG239H1 Some topic of central interest to students of religion, treated on a once-only basis by a professor visiting from another university. For details of this years offering, consult the Departments current undergraduate handbook. RLG240Y1 The history and surviving documents of Judaism and Christianity, and of religious movements underlying and associated with them from about 200 BCE to about 70 CE. RLG241Y1 An introduction to New Testament literature, examined within the historical context of the first two centuries. No familiarity with Christianity or the New Testament is expected. RLG274H1 The religions and philosophies of China, including ancient religion and mythology, the
three traditions of Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism (including their philosophical
dimensions), and Chinese popular religion. RLG275H1 The religions of Japan (Shinto, Buddhism, Confucianism) and the religions of Korea
(Confucianism, Buddhism, Shamanism). RLG280Y1 An alternative version of the content covered by RLG 100Y,
for students in second year or higher who cannot or do not wish to take a further
100-level course. Students attend the RLG 100Y lectures
and tutorials but are expected to produce more substantial and more sophisticated written
work, and are required to submit an extra written assignment. RLG299Y1 Credit course for supervised participation in faculty research project. See page 42 for details. RLG301H1 Systematic analysis of Freuds main writings on religion, studied within the
context of central concepts and issues in psychoanalysis such as: the Oedipus Complex, the
meaning and function of symbols, the formation of the ego and the superego, and the
relations between the individual and culture. RLG302H1 Jungs analysis of the development of the personality through its life cycle, and
of the central place which religion holds within the process of maturation. The
unconscious, the collective unconscious, dreams, myths, symbols, and archetypes;
implications for religious thought, therapy, education, and definitions of community. RLG303H1 Problems of negative life experience and their relations to issues of meaning and
personality development. Includes discussion of internal conflict and suffering in the
experience of melancholia and the divided self, and the existential experiences of evil
and suffering. Examines myth, symbol, and forms of religious discourse as responses to
such crises. RLG304H1 Theories of the self that involve the constitutive role of language in its various
forms. Problems of socially-conditioned worldviews and sense of self as related to
discourse. Myth, symbol, metaphor, and literary arts as vehicles for personality
development and self-transformation along religious lines. RLG307Y1 Sociological examination of religion in contemporary Canadian society: religions of
English and French Canada; religious organization and demography; relation of religion to
ethnicity, social questions and politics; secularization and privatization. RLG309Y1 The relationships between religious and ethical norms, social and political ideals, and
systems of law. The roots of Western legal concepts such as authority, duty, rights, and
punishment in biblical and natural law tradition, and their counterparts in positive law
theory. Church and State conflict in a philosophy of law context. RLG310H1 (formerly RLG310Y) 26S RLG311H1 A study of the responses of selected world religious traditions to the emergence of
global ecological concerns. Key concepts and tenets of the traditions and their relevance
for an examination of the environmental crisis. RLG313Y1 Augustine, Thomas Aquinas, Martin Luther, Karl Barth, Schubert Ogden and Karl Rahner on
the relationship between religious belief and critical thought, including the question of
God. RLG315H1 Analysis of rituals of transition form one social status to another (e.g., childbirth,
initiation, weddings) from theoretical, historical and ethnographic perspectives.
Particular attention is paid to the multi-religious North American environment, and to the
importance of rites of passage in the construction of gendered identities. RLG316H1 An examination of the theories of religion developed by late 19th and 20th century
anthropologists such as Taylor, Frazer, Durkheim, Freud, Van Gennep, Levi-Strauss, Douglas
and Turner. Their ideas about systems of ritual and belief in small-scale, non-literate,
kinship-based societies. RLG317H1 Religious violence and nonviolence as they emerge in the tension between strict
adherence to tradition and individual actions of charismatic figures. The place of
violence and nonviolence in selected faith traditions. RLG318H1 Special Topics I TBA RLG319H1 Special Topics II TBA RLG320H1 Judaism and Christianity in the period from 70 C.E. to 200.CE. The course focuses on
the relationship between the two religious groups, stressing the importance of the setting
within the Roman Empire. RLG321H1 An introduction to the first and second century Christian writings. A survey of the
surviving works and their historical contexts, close analysis of selected texts and an
examination of what these sources tell us about the early Christian communities. RLG323H1 An examination of the historical Jesus based on a critical study of the
earliest accounts of Jesus, with intensive study of the Gospels to determine what can be
said about Jesus activities and teachings. RLG324H1 An examination of Pauls life and thought as seen in the early Christian
literature written by him (the seven undisputed letters), about him (the Acts of the
Apostles, the Acts of Paul) and in his name (the six disputed NT letters). RLG325H1 This course treats the major elements of the apocalyptic literary corpus and
accompanying visionary experiences in ancient Judaism and Christianity. Contemporary
theories on the function and origin of apocalyptic literature. RLG330H1 A study of some of the most important and influential attempts by Christians to
reconcile their experience and understanding of evil with their purported experience and
understanding of God. Selections from biblical writers, Augustine of Hippo, Thomas
Aquinas, John Calvin, Karl Barth, and Gustavo Gutierrez. RLG331Y1 The formation and development of distinctively Eastern traditions of Christianity. The history and major writers of Eastern Christianity up to the fall of Constantinople in 1453. The development of the national Eastern Churches up through the modern period, and their particular contributions to the Eastern Christian tradition. RLG332Y1 (formerly RLG246Y) 52L, 26T RLG334H1 Thoroughly cross-cultural study of how Christians across the world constructed the
extraordinary variety of their religious life during the period when Christianity became
by far the most widespread, the most diverse, and the most populous religion in world
history. Emphasis on selected cultures on all continents. RLG335H1 Analysis of how Christians (i.e., one-third of the worlds population) have
engaged large themes since the First World War: liturgy, migration, creedal change, the
Holy Spirit, religious privatization and public life, denominations, war, inculturation,
scripture, secularity, disintegration of empires, world capitalism, encounter with Islam,
Hinduism, Buddhism, indigenous religions, Judaism. RLG336H1 Papal and episcopal documents dealing with social issues from Leo XIII (late 19th century) to John Paul II. Origins and development of Catholic social teaching; recent changes occasioned by anti-colonial and anti-imperialist struggles. RLG340Y1 A study of four great figures during critical moments in Jewish history, each of whom
represents a turning point: Jeremiah (biblical era), Rabbi Akiva (rabbinic era), Moses
Maimonides (medieval era), Franz Rosenzweig (modern era). Belief in God; Torah as law,
teaching, tradition, revelation, eternity of Israel, meaning of Jewish suffering, problem
of radical evil, history and messianism. RLG342Y RLG342Y1 (formerly RLG244Y) 52L, 26T RLG344Y1 The religious and cultural roots of antisemitism and its manifestations in Western
civilization: anti-Jewish aspects of pagan antiquity, the adversus Judaeos tradition in
classical Christian theology; racist antisemitism in Europe (the Aryan myth); the rise of
political antisemitism; the Nazi phenomenon, antisemitism in Canada and the United States. RLG345H1 The environment and human society studied as systems of organization built for
self-preservation. Such topics as vegetarianism and the humane treatment of animals,
suicide and euthanasia, sustainability and recycling, explored from the perspective of
Judaism. RLG346H1 The meaning of holy time and holy place, the physics and metaphysics of time and space
within Judaism. Topics include the garden of Eden, the temple, the netherworld, the land
of Israel, and exile; the sabbath and the week; the human experience of aging as
fulfillment and failing. RLG351H1 The revelatory process and the textual formation of the Quran, its pre-eminent
orality and its principal themes and linguistic forms; the classical exegetical tradition
and some contemporary approaches to its interpretation. RLG352H1 Aspects of the relationship of Islam with other religions and cultures. Topics treated
may include attention to both the medieval and the modern periods as well as to
contemporary challenges faced by Muslim populations in Europe and North America. RLG360H1 Hindu responses to Western influences (imperial and post-imperial) on Indian religious
life in the modern age. Hindu fundamentalism, communalist politics, secularization,
lowcaste alienation, feminist activism in India. RLG361H1 Readings in Vedic, Pauranic, Tantric and folk myths; traditional Hindu understandings
of myth; recent theories of interpretation, e.g. those of Levi-Strauss, Eliade, Ricoeur,
applied to Hindu myths. RLG362H1 Hindu ideas of self, world and ultimate reality. Hindu ways of interpreting sacred
texts. Readings from the Upanishads and later Vedanta texts. RLG363H1 Hindu ritual in its Vedic, Pauranic, Tantric, and popular forms; the meaning that
ritual conveys to its participants and the relation of ritual to Hindu mythology and to
social context. RLG371H1 The schools of Buddhism in East Asia, with focus on two principal ones: Chan
(Zen) and Pure Land. Readings in translation from their basic sutras. RLG380H1 A comparative examination of Christian (Latin and Orthodox), Buddhist, Confucian, Taoist, Hindu and Islamic mystical traditions. RLG381Y1 The role and social context of prophets and prophetic movements in the religions
originating in the Middle East. Illustrations from the literature and experience of
Judaism, Christianity, Zoroastrianism and Islam. RLG384H1 The contemporary phenomenon of religious pluralism: its historical emergence, social
context and intellectual justifications. Achievements, techniques and outstanding issues
in inter-religious dialogue. RLG398H0/399Y0 An instructor-supervised group project in an off-campus setting. See page 42 for details. RLG430Y1/431H1/432H1 Intensive programs of study including site visits and lectures in areas of religious
significance abroad. Preparatory work expected, together with paper or assignments upon
return. RLG440Y1 Advanced Topics: Religions West I TBA RLG445H Religion West II: Maimonides and His RLG445H1 Advanced Topics: Religions West II TBA RLG446H1 Advanced Topics: Religions West III TBA RLG447H1 Advanced Topics: Religions West IV TBA RLG450H1 Advanced Topics: Religions East I TBA RLG455H1 Advanced Topics: Religions East II TBA RLG460H1 Advanced Topics: Christian Origins I TBA RLG465H1 Advanced Topics: Christian Origins II TBA RLG470H1 Advanced Topics: Religion, Ethics and Society I TBA RLG475H1 Advanced Topics: Religion, Ethics and Society II TBA RLG480H1 Advanced Topics: Modern Religious Thought I TBA RLG485H Advanced Topics: Modern Religious Thought II TBA RLG490Y1 Individual Studies TBA RLG491H1/492H1/493H1/494Y1 Student-initiated projects supervised by members of the Department. The student must obtain both a supervisors agreement and the Departments approval in order to register. The maximum number of Individual Studies one may take is two full course equivalents. |
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