Religion Courses |
First Year Seminars The 199Y1 and 199H1 seminars are designed to provide the opportunity to work closely with an instructor in a class of no more than twenty-four students. These interactive seminars are intended to stimulate the students curiosity and provide an opportunity to get to know a member of the professorial staff in a seminar environment during the first year of study. Details here. MHB155H1 Elementary Modern Hebrew I [36L 12T] Introduction to the fundamentals of Hebrew grammar and syntax. Emphasis on the
development of oral and writing skills. MHB156H1 Elementary Modern Hebrew I [36L 12T] Continued introduction to the fundamentals of Hebrew grammar and syntax.
Emphasis on the development of oral and writing skills. MHB255H1 Intermediate Modern Hebrew [36L 12T] Intensive study of written and spoken Hebrew. MHB256H1 Intermediate Modern Hebrew [36L 12T] Continued intensive study of written and spoken Hebrew.
MHB355H1 Advanced Modern Hebrew [36L 12T] Advanced intensive study of written and spoken Hebrew. MHB356H1 Advanced Modern Hebrew [36L 12T] Continued advanced intensive study of written and spoken Hebrew. 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. RLG105Y1 Students will read ancient texts--e.g. Hindu epics, Buddhist sutras, Bible, Quran--in light of their original contexts and their later critics and adaptations. Team-taught by religion faculty, this course is a critical conversation about the persistent yet changing significance of particular religious texts in a diverse and mediated world. RLG200H1 An introduction to the discipline of the study of religion. This course surveys methods in the study of religion and the history of the discipline in order to prepare students to be majors or specialists in the study of religion. 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. Note: this course is offered alternatively with NMC185H1, to which is it equivalent. 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. RLG207Y1 This course is an introduction to the study of East Asian religious traditions, including Confucianism, Daoism, Buddhism, Shinto, shamanism and so on. The first semester will focus on premodern traditions across China, Japan and Korea, while the second term will examine specific traditions within their modern cultural contexts. Emphasis both terms will be placed on the various scholarly approaches to the study of East Asian religions. 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. Note: This course is equivalent to SOC250Y1. RLG211Y1 A survey of the psychological approaches to aspects of religion such as religious experience, doctrine, myth and symbols, ethics and human transformation. Attention will be given to phenomenological, psychoanalytic, Jungian, existentialist, and feminist approaches. RLG212H1 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. RLG213H1 Surveys interpretative traditions related to sacred texts, focusing on reading strategies that range from the literal to the figurative with attention to rationales that transform literal textual meanings and copyists manipulations of texts. May focus on various religious traditions from year to year, targeting a single canonical tradition or comparative analysis. Students will gain insight into literalist, environmentalist, secularist and erotic approaches to texts 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. 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. RLG224Y1 An introduction to the analysis of ethical problems in the context of the religious traditions of the West. Abortion, euthanasia, poverty, environmental degradation, militarism, sex, marriage, and the roles of men and women. RLG225H1 The basis of Christian ethics for a formulation of standards of inter-personal conduct and sexual relations; an analysis of changing sexual mores, familial structures and child-rearing techniques; and a critical evaluation of the development of reproductive technologies. RLG228H1 The ethics and religious symbolism of environmental change: animal domestication and experimentation, deforestation, population expansion, energy use, synthetics, waste and pollution. RLG229H1 This course introduces students to various religious approaches to death, the dead, and afterlife. Through considering different ways in which death has been thought about and dealt with, we will also explore different understandings of life and answers to what it means to be human. RLG230H1 Course examines various issues: the role of religions in public, political contexts, such as religion and secularism in democratic societies; religion, human rights, and law; religion and state power; the political nature of religious social structures, religion and the politics of gender and sexuality; interreligious conflict and alliances RLG231H1 Course explores issues at the intersection of religion and science which may include such topics as evolution and the assessment of its religious significance by different traditions, conceptions of God held by scientists (theism, pantheism, panentheism), ethical issues raised by scientific or technological developments ( cloning or embryonic stem cell research), philosophical analysis of religious and scientific discourses. 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. RLG236H1 A study of women in the religious traditions of South and East Asia, including historical developments, topical issues, and contemporary womens movements. RLG237H1 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. For details of this years offering, consult the Departments current undergraduate handbook. 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. RLG243H1 An examination of religions in their contemporary diasporic and transnational modes. Issues addressed include the role of religions in sustaining identities across national boundaries, the enmeshment of religious minorities in political practices of governance, the impact of cultural forces such as commodification or gender upon religious representations and transformations, and the intersection of religion with other kinds of authoritative knowledge, such as medicine or law, in diasporic conditions. RLG245Y1 An historical introduction to the religious traditions that flourished along the Silk Road, including Zoroastrianism, Manichaeism, Nestorian Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism and Islam. Drawing on a variety of sources (textual, archaeological, works of art), the course will focus on the spread and development of these traditions through the medieval period. Issues include cross-cultural exchange, religious syncretism, ethnic identity formation and so on. Emphasis will also be placed on religious and political events in modern Central Asia. RLG246H1 A comparative study of the development of ethical perspectives in Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, concluding with a discussion of contemporary moral issues RLG248H1 An examination of the variety of ways in which religious traditions construct sanctity, articulate categories of exceptionalism, and how exceptional persons function within social systems. Consideration of gender and social status in definitions of sanctity. Focus varies from year to year, and may focus either on constructions of sanctity in one religious tradition, or comparatively, comparing and contrasting ideas of sainthood and martyrdom in Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism and/or Buddhism. RLG249H1 While dreaming seems to be a universal experience, dreams have been understood in a variety of ways in different historical, cultural, and religious contexts. This course introduces students to different approaches to dreams, visions and apparitions, drawing from the fields of psychology, anthropology, history, and religious studies. Topics will include the social life of dreams and visions, the politics of discernment, faith and skepticism, and narrative and visual representations of dreams. Special attention will be given to the question of when, how, and under what circumstances an experience is deemed religious. RLG251H1 An introduction to the role of women in Muslim societies in past and present. Topics include the status of women in the Quran and Islamic law, veiling, social change, and Islamic feminism. RLG260Y1 An introduction to Sanskrit for beginners. An overview of basic grammar and development of vocabulary, with readings of simple texts. RLG261Y1 An introduction to Tibetan for beginners. An overview of basic grammar and development of vocabulary, with readings of simple texts. RLG280Y1 An alternative version of the content covered by RLG100Y1, for students in second year or higher who cannot or do not wish to take a furtHER 100-level course. Students attend the RLG100Y1 lectures and tutorials but are expected to produce more substantial and more sophisticated written work, and are required to submit an extra written assignment. RLG285Y1 Students will read ancient texts--e.g. Hindu epics, Buddhist sutras, Bible, Quran--in light of their original contexts and their later critics and adaptations. Team-taught by religion faculty, this course is a critical conversation about the persistent yet changing significance of particular religious texts in a diverse and mediated world. RLG290Y1 Topics vary from year to year Please check Department handbook. RLG299Y1 Credit course for supervised participation in faculty research project. Details here. 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 The existence of evil poses a problem to theistic beliefs and raises the question as to whether a belief in a deity is incompatible with the existence of evil and human (or other) suffering. This course examines the variety of ways in which religions have dealt with the existence of evil. 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. RLG307H1 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. RLG308H1 The course focuses on the role of religion in the genesis and development of cities, as well as the ways urbanization and immigration have transformed religious organizations and identities. Various methodologies, including ethnography, social and cultural history, and textual analysis will be considered. In some years, course projects will focus on mapping the changing significance and presence of particular religions in Toronto. Check with the department for the next scheduled focus for this course. RLG309Y1 The relationship and interaction between religious and ethical norms, social and political ideals, and systems of law.The course concerns the ongoing dialectic between religious and other values, the application of religious ideas to social orders, and questions of religious and human rights. RLG310Y1 Historical and critical-philosophical examination of the development of atheism in Western intellectual circles. Consideration of 18th, 19th and 20th century critiques of religion derived from theories of knowledge that privilege science; radical social and political thought; and analysis of the soul and its symbol-systems. Authors include Hume, Marx, Bakunin, Nietzsche, and Freud. RLG314H1 Examination of gender as a category in the understanding of religious roles, symbols, rituals, deities, and social relations. Survey of varieties of concepts of gender in recent feminist thought, and application of these concepts to religious life and experience. Examples will be drawn from a variety of religious traditions and groups, contemporary and historical. 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. RLG319H1 This course examines the origins, growth, and texture of traditions that developed in early Judaism and Christianity around selected biblical figures. With an eye to the function played and authority held by these traditions, the course will focus variously on Adam and Eve, Enoch, Abraham, Miriam, Levi, David, and Solomon. RLG320H1 Judaism and Christianity in the period from 70 C.E. to 200 C.E. 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. RLG322H1 Literary, historical, and rhetorical analyses of selected early Christian gospels. The gospels to be treated will vary, but each year will include a selection from the four canonical gospels and extra-canonical gospels (the Gospel of Thomas, the Gospel of Philip, the Gospel of Peter, the Gospel of Truth, infancy gospels, and fragments of Jewish-Christian gospels) 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. RLG326H1 Analysis of selected documents of Second Temple Judaism in their historical contexts, as part of the generative matrix for both the early Jesus movement and the emergence of rabbinic Judaism. RLG327H1 Magic, religion, astrology, alchemy, theurgy, miracle, divinationall of these phenomena characterize the context and practice of ancient Christianity. This course examines the constitution of these categories, the role and character of these phenomena in the Graeco-Roman world, and the interaction with and integration of these phenomena by ancient Christianity. RLG328H1 This course examines historical processes, negotiations, and strategies involved in the consolidation of discourses and practices of orthodoxy and heresy in Christianity from the second through fifth centuries. Topics include: intellectual, therapeutic, and social models of orthodoxy; methods of discipline; historical events and contexts; the political and social contexts of theological conflict; and the gendered production of the orthodox subject. RLG329H1 The development of Christian identity, examined from a psycho-social, ethical, and theological perspective, and as revealed in autobiographies, diaries and letters. 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. RLG331H1 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. RLG332H1 How and why have modern Christians revealed their inner lives via diaries, autobiographies, memoirs, and letters? Reading autobiographical writings and theoretical approaches, we consider how Christians have negotiated self-aggrandizement and self-security, revelation in the wake of scientific worldviews, and the influences of race, gender, nationality, celebrity, and class on their storytelling RLG333H1 This course focuses on modern Christianity as an instigator of conflict and a resource for its resolution. Exploring conflict among Christians and between Christians and non-Christians, topics may include missions and colonialism; gender and sexuality; anti-Semitism; pacifism and just war; Catholic-Protestant tensions; cultural diversity and syncretism; and church-state relations RLG337H1 This course considers the history and theory of Western witchcraft, magic, and heresy in the mediaeval and early modern periods. Consideration of relevant anthropological theory, the relationship between constructions of witchcraft, the Enlightenment and the rise of science, and the role of gender in definitions of witchcraft. RLG338Y1 The role of technology within various projections of global economic development, examined from a Christian ethical perspective. Ethical responses to problems that threaten the future of humanity: poverty, resource depletion, environmental degradation, arms build-up, and biotechnical revolution. RLG339Y1 A cross-cultural study of how religious traditions around the globe are transformed by changes in transnational population movements. Course may choose to isolate one religious tradition in any given year, a particular geographical region, or one aspect of multiple traditions. 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. RLG341H1 An inquiry into the theme of exile and return in Judaism, often called the leading idea of Jewish religious consciousness. Starting from Egyptian slavery and the Babylonian exile, and culminating in the ideas of modern Zionism, the course will examine a cross-section of Jewish thinkers--ancient, medieval, and modern. RLG342Y1 The development and range of modern Jewish religious thought from Spinoza, Mendelssohn and Krochmal, to Cohen, Rosenzweig and Buber. Responses to the challenges of modernity and fundamental alternatives in modern Judaism. RLG343H1 A historical study of the Kabbala and the mystical tradition in Judaism, with emphasis on the ideas of Jewish mystical thinkers and movements. 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. RLG350H1 This course examines Muhammads life as reflected in the biographies and historical writings of the Muslims. Students will be introduced to the critical methods used by scholars to investigate Muhammads life. Issues include: relationship between Muhammads life and Quran teachings and the veneration of Muhammad. 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 Survey of major intellectual trends in the Islamic tradition, particularly those identified with Middle Eastern Muslim thinkers, from the early 19th century to the present. Topics include reformism, modernism, hermeneutics, feminism, Islamism, and liberal and progressive trends in contemporary Muslim thought. Readings in English translation. RLG354H1 This course complicates the notion of a monolithic Islam through looking at different forms of religious life found in Egypt, including Sufism, state Islam, reformist Islam, and Islamist movements. RLG355H1 Combines theoretical reflections on what an anthropology of Islam might entail with ethnographic readings on the practice of Islam in communities around the world. RLG356H1 Despite having an estimated Muslim population of 20 million, the place of Islam within the Peoples Republic of China is not widely understood. This course will examine the history of Islam in China from its introduction in the seventh century through the modern period. Emphasis will be placed on the variety of practices within Chinas contemporary Muslim communities. Specific attention will be paid to official state policy toward the Hui and Uygur ethnic minorities, including laws governing pilgrimage, the veil, the formation of Islamic organizations, the reformation of writing systems and so on. 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 A historical study of the Rama tradition incorporating text, orality, performance, and political theatre. 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. JPR364H1 This course examines the evolving role of religions in contemporary public, political contexts. Themes include: democracy and secularism; religion, human rights, law and justice; party politics, identity-formation and citizenship; gender and sexuality; interreligious conflict. (Given by the Departments of Political Science and Religion) RLG364H1 A historically-informed look at Hinduisms engagement with contemporary media: books, television, film, and cyberspace. RLG365H1 The development of modern Hindu religious thought in the contexts of colonialism, dialogue with the West and the secular Indian state. RLG366H1 A study of six classical schools of Hindu philosophy, focusing on the key issues of the Self, the Real, karma and ethics. RLG367H1 A study of the multi-religious context of modern India, focusing particularly on minority traditions such as Sikhism, Islam, Jainism, Zoroastrianism and others. RLG368H1 The course surveys the textual sources of the practices of Yoga and Ayurveda. It critically evaluates the assumption of an unbroken continuity of tradition of these practices from antiquity onwards and comes to consider what they have come to constitute as a result of modernity and globalization. RLG369H1 A study of the great Sanskrit epic, the Mahabharata. RLG370Y1 Intermediate level language course focusing on both spoken and literary forms of Tibetan. RLG372H1 A survey of the various schools of Tibetan Buddhism, focusing on differences in both theory and practice, with readings of Tibetan texts in translation and ethnographic studies of Buddhist practice in Tibet. RLG373H1 This course will examine Buddhist meditation, its history, and basic concepts through a critical analysis of primary and secondary readings. Students will be asked to explore the tensions between knowledge and experience, belief and ritual, theory and practice as it unfolds in different representations of Buddhist meditation. A brief survey of some of the more important traditions of Buddhist meditation will be accompanied by an in-depth look at the specific contexts from which they arose. JPR374Y1 This course examines the role of a variety of religious forms and spiritual practices in the politics of postcolonial societies, tracing their genealogies from the colonial period to the present. Cases taken principally from Africa and Asia. (Given by the Departments of Political Science and Religion) RLG375H1 An introduction to philosophical thought in various Buddhist traditions. RLG376H1 This course considers Buddhist notions of death, the afterlife, and rebirth. Topics include Buddhist cosmology and karmic causality, exemplary models of death and birth, and ritual studies of mortuary rites and birth practices. Readings will combine Buddhist primary texts in translation and secondary scholarship in religious studies and anthropology. RLG377H1 By looking into the Three Baskets of the Pali canon, distinguishing the voices of its various medieval commentators, handling the illuminated folios of palm leaf manuscripts and comparing contemporary vernacular fiction, the course introduces the historical and contemporary Buddhist literatures of Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Nepal. RLG379H1 What is Daoism? In this course we will examine the history of Daoist practice in medieval East Asia, paying close attention to the way scholars of Daoism have defined their subject in relation to Buddhism and the indigenous traditions of China, Japan, and Korea. Topics may include Daoist ritual, priesthood, textual practices, cosmology, meditation and alchemy. Emphasis will be placed on contemporary Daoist practice in Taiwan and North America. RLG380H1 A comparative examination of Christian (Latin and Orthodox), Buddhist, Confucian, Taoist, Hindu and Islamic mystical traditions. RLG384H1 The contemporary phenomenon of religious pluralism: its historical emergence, social context and intellectual justifications. Achievements, techniques and outstanding issues in inter-religious dialogue. RLG388H1 RLG389H1 DR=HUM; BR=TBA RLG398H0 RLG399Y0 An instructor-supervised group project in an off-campus setting. Details here. RLG400Y1 RLG401H1 RLG402H1 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. RLG404H1 An integrative capstone seminar that emphasizes iterative development of a research project, locating a research specialization within its broader disciplinary audience, and communicating the process and results of a research project to non-specialists within the study of religion RLG405H1 An capstone seminar that emphasizes integration of the study of religion with contemporary public life in the development of a research project, locating a research specialization in relation to non-academic contexts, and communicating the process and results of a research project to non-academic audiences. RLG410Y1 RLG411H1 RLG412H1 RLG419H1 Themes considered include what notion of religion is necessary for secular governance, and how secularity relates to particular discourses of citizenship and practices of political rule. Case studies include the effects of colonial rule on religious life; Jewish emancipation in Europe; and religious freedom in France and North America RLG420H1 An advanced study of selected Enlightenment thinkers with a focus on their interpretations of religion. The work of Immanuel Kant will form a focus point, but others will be discussed as well. Issues include the rational critique of traditional religion, the relations among religion, ethics and politics, and the pursuit of universal approaches to religion. RLG421H1 Provides an in-depth study of selected theorists in the psychology of religion, such as Freud, Ricoeur, Lacan, and Kristeva. Approaches the topic both in terms of interpretive models applied to individual and cultural religious forms, such as symbols, rituals, and personal experiences, and in terms. Of religious subjectivity as related to self-knowledge and ethical development. RLG423H1 This course will examine the 19th century origins of anthropology in the study of the bible and other primitive religions. It will focus on influential works by Frazer, Tylor, Robertson-Smith, Mueller, Bachofen and Freud. RLG425H1 A study of how principles of textual interpretation and theories of language have been central to modern philosophy of religion. Beginning with Spinoza, we examine the development of modern hermeneutical theory of religion in Kant and Schleiermacher, and conclude with 20th century hermeneutical theories of Gadamer, Ricoeur, and Derrida. RLG426H1 For upper-year students, from any discipline. In a 40-hour community service placement, discover first-hand religions significance in Toronto and examine how religion manifests in public spaces, institutions, and interactions, while critically reflecting on the experience of working with professionals and their clients in settings where religious diversity is at play. RLG430H1 RLG431H1 RLG432Y1 This seminar deals with the question of how a religion like Judaism or Christianity, based on revelation and its norms, can acknowledge and incorporate norms discovered by human reason, without reducing reason to revelation or revelation to reason. RLG433H1 An introduction to The Guide of the Perplexed by Moses Maimonides, and to some of the basic themes in Jewish philosophical theology and religion. Among topics to be considered through close textual study of the Guide: divine attributes; biblical interpretation; creation versus eternity; prophecy; providence, theodicy, and evil; wisdom and human perfection. Also to be examined are leading modern interpreters of Maimonides. RLG434H1 Close study of major themes, texts, and thinkers in modern Jewish thought. Focus put on the historical development of modern Judaism, with special emphasis on the Jewish religious and philosophical responses to the challenges of modernity. Among modern Jewish thinkers to be considered: Spinoza, Cohen, Rosenzweig, Buber, Scholem, Strauss, and Fackenheim. RLG435H1 The philosophic thought of Leo Strauss approached through his writings on modern Judaism. Primarily addressed will be the mutual relations between philosophy, theology, and politics. Among other topics to be dealt with: origins of modern Judaism, Zionism, liberal democracy, and biblical criticism; meaning of Jerusalem and Athens; cognitive value in the Hebrew Bible. RLG437H1 This course examines changing patterns of authority and hierarchy in early Christian communities. Students will explore various roles and offices of authority in canonical and extra-canonical texts in relation to cultural, political, and theological constructions of body, gender, holiness, and orthodoxy as these contribute to developing models of authority. The goal of the course is to familiarize students with the constellation of ideas that participate in developing Christian notions of religious authority. RLG440H1 The relationship between religion and healing in the North American context through analysis of the religious roots of the biomedical model, as well as religious influences on alternative modes of healing. RLG442H1 This course considers the varieties of religious practice in North America from anthropological and historical perspectives. Of particular interest are the ways religions have mutually influenced each other in the context of nineteenth and twentieth century North America. RLG449H1 Investigation of the history of solutions to the Synoptic Problem from the eighteenth century to the present paying special attention to the revival of the Griesbach hypothesis and recent advances in the Two-Document hypothesis. RLG451H1 Examination of the parables in the gospels and other early Christian writers, and major trends in the modern analyses of the parables. Special attention will be paid to the social and economic world presupposed by the parables. RLG452H1 Examination of the accounts of the passion and death of Jesus in their original historical and literary contexts. RLG453H1 Sets the study of early Christianity and Second Temple Judaism into relation with postcolonial historiography. Topics include hybridity, armed resistance, the intersection of gender and colonization, diaspora, acculturation, and the production of subaltern forms of knowledge. Comparative material and theories of comparison are also treated. RLG454H1 The social setting of the early Jesus movement in Roman Palestine and the cities of the Eastern Empire. Topics will include: rank and legal status; patronalia and clientalia; marriage and divorce; forms of association outside the family; slavery and manumission; loyalty to the empire and forms of resistance. RLG455H1 A study of the construction of deviance or heresy within the literature of first and second century Christianity: tasks include a survey of sociological theory in its application to deviance in the ancient world and close readings of selected texts from first and second century Christian and pre-Christian communities.. RLG456H1 This course is an introduction to the rich literature that has grown around the study of the Quran in the Arabic tradition. In addition to readings in the Quran students will read selections from works in ma'ani and majaz and major tafsir works. Selections include: al-Tabari, al-Tha'labi, al-Zamakhshari, al-Qurtubi and al-Razi. The course will culminate in a study of al-Itqan of al-Suyuti. RLG457H1 This course is designed to orient students to the field of contemporary Quranic studies through reading and discussion of the text itself and of significant European-language scholarship about the Quran as well as through examination of the principal bibliographical tools for this subject area. JPR457H1 What is the philosophical relationship between modern democracy and the secular? How can critical political thought respond to attempts to re-found politics along religious or theo-political lines? What would a project of rethinking the secular all the way down entail? This seminar in theory will explore these questions through an examination of dilemmas of sovereignty, community, justice and violence as developed in continental political philosophy - Schmitt, Benjamin, Lefort, Agamben, Derrida, Nancy, Zizek, Badiou. RLG458H1 Biblical or para-biblical literature continued to be produced by Jewish and Christian writers long after the establishment of the canons of the Jewish and Christian Bibles. This course introduces the student to some of the more important pieces of Old Testament pseudepigrapha and New Testament apocrypha and their modern scholarly study. RLG459H1 Considers the disciplinary power of modernity through case-studies on the codification of Islamic law and practice. Contrasting modernitys discipline with Islams own disciplinary power. Readings include works by Saba Mahmood, Charles Hirschkind, Jakob Skovgaard-Petersen, Brinkley Messick, Michel Foucault and Talal Asad. RLG460H1 This course explores how this conception is the result of a historical process by examining documentable transformations in the reception of the Ramayana. Our focus will be on the shift in the classification of the Ramayana from the inaugural work of Sanskrit literary culture (adi-kavya) in Sanskrit aesthetics to a work of tradition (smrti) in theological commentaries, the differences between the Ramayanas ideal of divine kingship and medieval theistic approaches to Ramas identification with Visnu, the rise of Rama worship, and the use of Ramas divinity in contemporary political discourse. RLG461H1 Critical reading, analysis and interpretation of Ismaili historical and doctrinal works of the Persianate tradition as developed by authors such as Nasir-i Khusraw, Nasir al-Din Tusi, Nizari Quhistani and others. The primary authors studied will change yearly. RLG462H1 An academic legend recounts that if you ask a Newar whether he is Hindu or Buddhist the answer is yes. The course deals with the problem of how to study religions which coexist and compete with each other creating shifting coordinates of religious identification from the perspective of one specific Nepalese community. RLG463H1 Starting from the basic Buddhist doctrines of karmic retribution and conditioned co-arising the course will explore how the idea of causation, the conceptualization of movement and their implications for models explaining the temporal character of the impermanent have shaped the course of Buddhist thought across schools and throughout various phases of Buddhist intellectual history in South Asia. RLG464H1 This course examines histories of Buddhism authored inside and outside Asia, considering how various models of historiography affect our knowledge of Buddhism and Buddhist cultures. Readings will include translations of indigenous Buddhist histories, recent histories of Buddhism that have shaped the field of Buddhist Studies, and theoretical studies of historiography RLG466H1 Issues common to the establishment and development of the Buddhist tradition(s) in China, Korea, and Japan. The reactions to Buddhism by the societies in which it was being implanted. Transformation of Buddhist teachings, practice, iconography, institutions, etc. as they were assimilated by the host countries. RLG467H1 The galactic polity, the funeral casino, intercultural mimesis, accretism and Sanskritization have been crucial terms in attempts to understand how Theravada Buddhism works. We will assess the significance and usefulness of these models by confronting first-hand data with groundbreaking monographs in the study of Buddhism in South and Southeast Asia. RLG468H1 Major developments in the history of Japanese religious traditions from the earliest known times (ca. 6th cent. C.E.) to the beginning of the modern era. This course will focus on the relations between the religious dimension of Japanese society and its social-political-economic dimensions. RLG469Y1 Advanced readings in Tibetan Buddhist literature. Tibetan language skills required. RLG470H1 A study of Tantric Buddhism in Tibet. The course will address ritual and scholastic practices in the history of Tibetan Tantra, also looking at problems of translation and interpretation in the study of those traditions. Readings will include secondary scholarship in Buddhist and Tibetan Studies and possibly primary sources in Tibetan. RLG471H1 Advanced study in specialized topics on Hinduism. RLG472H1 Religion and aesthetics are sometimes constructed as separate categories, but in South Asia religion is not often conceptually distinct from an autonomous sphere of aesthetic reflection. In conversation with recent sociological, anthropological, and philosophical writings, we will explore this issue through careful study of a variety of Sanskrit sources: the epics, Abhinavaguptas commentary on the Natya Sastra, Vaisnava, Saiva, and Jaina appropriations of Sanskrit aesthetics and courtly poetry, and the works of Rabindranath Tagore. Students are encouraged to work with sources in the primary languages, although materials will also be provided in translation RLG473H1 A survey of Vedantic thought beginning with the classical commentaries on the Brahmasutras (such as those of Sankara, Ramanuja etc.) and ending with neo-Vedanta in the writings of Dayananda Saraswati, Sri Aurobindo and Radhakrishnan RLG482H1 Frequently today in discussions in bioethics dealing with life and death, even secular thinkers invoke the concept of the sanctity of human life. Yet that concept is clearly religious in origin. What do the three great monotheistic traditions have to say about this concept and its ethical significance? RLG483H1 The writings of Simon Weil will be studied within the context of political theory and contemporary Christian philosophy. The basis for Weils critique of the technological society will be examined. RLG484H1 This course examines how religious concerns within various religious traditions interface with contemporary environmental issues. Particular attention is paid to the challenge posed to the human and religious values of these traditions by the present ecological crisis and some salient ethical and religious responses to this challenge RLG486H1 Major twentieth-century critiques of the technological society through an examination of the philosophical and theological writings of George Grant, Jacques Ellul and Simone Weil. Their seminal critiques will be contrasted with the ethical analyses of Ursula Franklin, Albert Borgmann, Hans Jonas, and Zygmunt Bauman. RLG487H1 This course explores the work of these two seminal contemporary Christian thinkers, Gustave Guitiérrez, founder of the liberation theology, and U.S. geologian Thomas Berry, a cultural historian and prime architect of the new cosmology. The two thinkers highlight the conflict and convergence of social justice and ecological invitations within Christianity. RLG490Y1 RLG491Y1 RLG492H1 RLG493H1 RLG494H1 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. Deadline for submitting applications to Department including supervisors approval is the first week of classes of the session. |