2018-2019 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Department of Religion Studies
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Department Chair: Associate Professor William “Chip” Gruen
Associate Professor: Cooperman, Pettit, Takahashi
Assistant Professors: Nash, Parikh
Senior Lecturer: Albert
The work of the Religion Studies Department of Muhlenberg College is the academic investigation of religious traditions in their thought and practice. Faculty and students study cultural and intellectual responses to basic questions of life and meaning. Our discipline, exploring essential aspects of human experience, is inherently cross-cultural, multidisciplinary, and analytical. Its geography is global; its chronology extends from antiquity to the present. We analyze texts, beliefs, rituals, arts, communities, cultures, and their integration into coherent worldviews. Our methodologies as well as our content interact with disciplines spanning the liberal arts curriculum from the humanities to the social sciences to the sciences. For those with particular interest in Asian or Jewish Studies, programs are available. (See Asian Studies Minor and Jewish Studies, A.B. , Jewish Studies Minor for more information.)
Special Programs
Honors Program
Students who wish to complete the Honors Thesis in Religion Studies must have a 3.50 grade point average in departmental courses and a 3.30 grade point average overall. The project will normally be undertaken in either semester of the senior year. A written proposal for this project must be approved by a faculty member in Religion Studies in the semester prior to the one in which the thesis will be completed. The proposal must consist of a working thesis, a detailed description of the project, and a preliminary bibliography. In consultation with the student’s advisor, the student will also establish a three person Project Committee. The culmination of the project will be a presentation for faculty and students at the end of the semester. Religion Studies faculty will determine whether Honors will be awarded upon completion of the project and presentation. The Honors Thesis does not take the place of the Culminating Undergraduate Experience (CUE), REL 450-469 CUE: Capstone Seminars in the Study of Religion .
ProgramsMajorMinorCoursesReligion Studies- REL 100, 101 - Religion & Popular Culture
- REL 102 - Religion & Violence
- REL 104, 105 - Sex, Gender, & Religion
- REL 107 - Jews & Christians in the Twenty-first Century
- REL 115, 116 - Monotheism: Creating God
- REL 117 - Animals & the Sacred
- REL 131 - Myth, Religion, and Creation
- REL 133 - Pilgrimage: Rites of Way
- REL 135 - Religion in America
- REL 201, 202 - Theory & Method in the Study of Religion
- REL 203 - Religions of India
- REL 207 - Religions of China
- REL 208 - Religions of Japan
- REL 225 - Buddhist Traditions
- REL 227 - Islamic Traditions
- REL 229 - Jewish Traditions
- REL 233 - Christian Traditions
- REL 252 - Hebrew Bible (Old Testament)
- REL 254 - New Testament
- REL 262, 263 - Religion & Literature
- REL 264 - God, Self, & Other in Judaism & Christianity
- REL 308 - Scrolls, Scribes, and Scriptures
- REL 314 - Death and Desire in Tibetan Buddhism
- REL 353 - Gender & Sexuality in Judaism
- REL 355 - Christianity at the Crossroads: The Emergent Church in Late Antiquity
- REL 357, 358 - The Holocaust: Nazi Germany & the Jews
- REL 363 - Islam in America
- REL 365 - Gender & Sexuality in Islam
- REL 371 - Paths in Jewish Thought
- REL 450-469 - CUE: Capstone Seminars in the Study of Religion
- REL 470 - Honors Thesis in Religion Studies
- REL 960 - Religion Studies Internship
- REL 970 - Religion Studies Independent Study/Research
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