Course Catalog 2021-2022 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Religion
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Corey Barnes, Associate Professor, Department Chair
Joyce K. Babyak, Associate Professor
Emilia Bachrach, Assistant Professor
Cynthia R. Chapman, Johnston Frank Professor
Cheryl Cottine, Assistant Professor
Andrew Macomber, Assistant Professor
Mohammad Mahallati, Presidential Scholar in Islamic Studies, Professor
Shari Rabin, Associate Professor
Visit the department webpage for up-to-date information on department faculty, visiting lecturers, and special events.
The Religion Department’s curriculum trains students in globally engaged critical interaction with enduring topics in religious studies. Students explore religious meaning and values, history and cultures, systems of thought and practice, approaches to self and world, and the power dynamics at play in the interaction of the above. Employing various religious studies methodologies, our courses challenge students to think both critically and charitably and equip students with the skills necessary to understand and communicate effectively across differences, in diverse settings, and to various audiences.
The Religion Department offers courses at all curricular levels. Our First-Year Seminars and 100-level courses introduce students to multidisciplinary approaches within religious studies through specific themes, regions, or traditions. Our intermediate (200-level) courses have no prerequisites and offer focused treatments of the complicated and intersecting realities of religion as a lived and historically enduring phenomenon. Advanced seminars (300-level) provide immersive engagements with narrowly-defined topics of broad significance, cultivating depth of knowledge and skills. Our capstone courses (400-level) further refine this knowledge and these skills through faculty-mentored and peer-supported individual projects.
The Religion Department curriculum embodies the balanced breadth and depth of a multidisciplinary liberal arts education. The flexible pathways through the Religion major and minor complement well a variety of other disciplinary pursuits. The transferable skills and knowledge gained through the Religion major and minor prepare students for a range of career and educational pursuits, from law to medicine to environmental advocacy to publishing industries.
See information about Research, Internships, Study Away and Experiential Learning (RISE).
Transfer of Credit
Students wishing to transfer credit toward the Religion major are advised to provide the department with as much information about the transferred course as possible (including the syllabus, papers, and exams). The department will not normally count more than two full courses of transfer credit toward the major and does not normally accept transferred courses to satisfy distribution requirements in the major. Students should seek preapproval from the Chair for coursework they intend to take elsewhere and transfer to Oberlin.
Explore Winter Term projects and opportunities.
Majors and Minors
Courses- RELG 100 - Introduction to Jewish Studies: Sacred Spaces and Promised Lands
- RELG 101 - Introduction to Religion: Religion as a World Phenomenon
- RELG 102 - Introduction to Religion: Roots of Religion in the Mediterranean World
- RELG 103 - Religion and Violence
- RELG 109 - Jerusalem: Negotiating Sacred Space
- RELG 111 - Faith and the Ballot Box
- RELG 135 - Introduction to Religion: Devotion and Performance in South Asia
- RELG 137 - Introduction to Religion: Buddhism in East Asia
- RELG 153 - Introduction to Religion: Purity and Pollution
- RELG 202 - The Nature of Suffering: The Book of Job and its History of Interpretation
- RELG 203 - The Garden of Eden in Literature, Art, and Film
- RELG 205 - Hebrew Bible in its Ancient Near Eastern Context
- RELG 208 - New Testament and Christian Origins
- RELG 209 - The Bible in American Politics
- RELG 215 - A History of Sin
- RELG 216 - Apocalyptic
- RELG 217 - An Empire of Martyrs: Christianity in the Mediterranean World
- RELG 218 - Authority and Dissent in Medieval Christianity
- RELG 225 - Religion, Power, and Knowledge I: the Early Modern West
- RELG 226 - Religion, Power, and Knowledge II: Secular Modernity
- RELG 229 - Religious Rituals in East Asia
- RELG 231 - Introduction to Hindu Traditions
- RELG 232 - Religion and Culture in Indian Epics
- RELG 233 - Haunted Archipelago: Ghosts, Spirits, and the Occult in Japanese Religion
- RELG 234 - The Religious Thought of Mohandas Gandhi and His Critics
- RELG 237 - Gender and Sexuality in Indian Religions
- RELG 240 - Religious Objects in East Asian Religions
- RELG 241 - Literature and Ethics: British Novels
- RELG 242 - Literature and Ethics: American Novels
- RELG 243 - Catholic Popes and their Social Teaching
- RELG 244 - Ethics in Early China
- RELG 245 - Religion and Ethics
- RELG 248 - Religion, Ethics, Environment
- RELG 249 - Medical Ethics
- RELG 249OC - Medical Ethics
- RELG 250 - Introduction to Judaism
- RELG 251 - Modern Jewish Thought
- RELG 252 - Jewish Mysticism
- RELG 253 - Pilgrimage, Travel, and Judaism
- RELG 255 - Gender(s) and Jewish Law
- RELG 257 - Judaism in the U.S.: State, Synagogue, and Beyond
- RELG 270 - Islam
- RELG 272 - Introduction to the Qur’an
- RELG 274 - Friendship: Perspectives from Religion, Politics, Economics, and Art
- RELG 275 - Religion and Politics in the Modern Muslim World
- RELG 276 - The Ethics of Conflict Resolution and Peace-Making in Christianity and Islam
- RELG 282 - Survey of American Christianity
- RELG 283 - American Religious Traditions
- RELG 286 - Religion in the Contemporary Americas
- RELG 304 - Biblical Women in Text and Tradition
- RELG 306 - Biblical Biographies Told and Retold
- RELG 323 - Globalization and East Asian Religions
- RELG 330 - Religion, Gender, and Sexuality in India
- RELG 335 - Buddhism, Healing, and the Body in East Asia
- RELG 340 - Seminar in Ethical Issues in Death and Dying
- RELG 343 - Religion in Public Life
- RELG 347 - Seminar: Virtue, Religion, and the Good Life
- RELG 348 - Comparative Religious Ethics
- RELG 358 - Religious Outsiders and the American State
- RELG 373 - Islamic Mystic Traditions and Literature
- RELG 390 - Forgiveness in the Islamic and Christian Traditions
- RELG 401 - Capstone Research Methods
- RELG 402 - Capstone Colloquium
- RELG 405 - Capstone Seminar in Religious Studies
- RELG 995F - Private Reading - Full
- RELG 995H - Private Reading - Half
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