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PLEASE NOTE: This document is subject to amendment. It is intended for descriptive and informational use only. DO NOT USE IT TO REGISTER FOR CLASSES. To register, please consult the University University Time Schedules.
The Following "Special Courses" are for M.Div. students only:
629-60000-01 Special Course-Chgo Theol Sem
629-63000-01 Special Course-Meadville Theol School
629-65000-01 Special Course-Catholic Theol Union
629-66000-01 Special Course-Lutheran Sch Theol
629-68000-01 Special Course–McCormick Theol Sem
DVSC 622 30300 |
Introduction to Constructive Religious Studies |
|||
Gamwell |
T/Th | 3:00-4:20 | S106 | |
PQ: Open only to first-year A.M.R.S. and
M.A. students. |
||||
DVSC 622 45100 |
Reading Course: Special Topics in Divinity |
|||
Staff |
ARR | ARR | ARR | |
Petition with bibliography signed by instructor; enter section from faculty list. |
||||
DVSC 622 49900 |
Exam Preparation: Divinity |
|||
Staff |
ARR | ARR | ARR | |
Open only to Ph.D. students in quarter of qualifying exams; enter section from faculty list. |
||||
DVSC 622 50100 |
Research: Divinity |
|||
Staff |
ARR | ARR | ARR | |
Petition signed by instructor; enter section from faculty list. |
||||
DVSC 622 59900 |
Thesis Work: Divinity |
|||
Staff |
ARR | ARR | ARR | |
Petition signed by instructor; enter section from faculty list. |
||||
BIBL 603 30600 |
Judaic Civilization I: How to Read a Bible Story |
|||
Frymer-Kensky |
Tu/Th | 1:30-2:50 | S106 | |
| The biblical story is deceptively simple, hiding its
multiple layers of meaning behind an apparently straightforward plot.
This course is an introduction to the Bible that concentrates on understanding
contemporary ways of reading the Hebrew Bible. Different techniques
and how they illuminate the Biblical text will be presented. |
||||
BIBL 603 34000 |
Introductory Biblical Hebrew II |
|||
Staff |
M/W/F | 8:00-8:50 | S204 | |
| PQ: BIBL 33900 or consent of instructor. |
||||
BIBL 603 35300 |
Introductory Koine Greek II |
|||
Staff |
M/W/F | 8:00-8:50 | S200 | |
PQ: Open to Undergraduate Students with consent of
instructor. |
||||
BIBL 603 42801 |
Revelation: The New Testament Apocalypse |
|||
Klauck |
M/W | 9:00-10:20 | S208 | |
For many Christian readers, Revelation,
the last book of the New Testament, remains "a book with seven seals"
(cf. Rev 5:1). Others are inclined to take it in a most literal way
and use it to unlock the secrets of history and of end time. A more
sober perspective is established if we firmly place it within its
generic (i.e. prophetic, apocalyptic, and epistolary) tradition, and
take a closer look at the author and his addressees. The letters to
the seven churches in Rev 2-3 are of central importance for this project.
We will read and discuss representative sections of the text, with
a special focus regarding chapters 2-3 and chapters 12-14. |
||||
BIBL 603 44500 |
Philo of Alexandria |
|||
Martinez |
Tu/Th | 10:30-11:50 | S403 | |
| In this course we will read the Greek text of Philo’s
de opificio mundi, with other brief excerpts here and there in the
Philonic corpus. Our aim will be to use this treatise to elucidate
the character of one of the most prolific theological writers of the
first century. We will seek to understand Philo as a Greek author
and the nature and origins of his style, Philo as a proponent of middle
Platonism, and Philo as a Jew in the context of Alexandrian Judaism.
We will also examine his use of the allegorical method as an exegetical
tool, and its implications for early Christian approaches to the biblical
text. |
||||
BIBL 603 53400 |
Early Christianity in Asia Minor |
|||
Klauck |
M | 1:00-3:50 | S403 | |
Much of the growth and development of the early Christian
movement took place in Asia Minor. There we find Ephesus and the other
cities of Rev 2-3; Tarsus, the home of Paul; Bithynia, the province
where Pliny served as proconsul; Ancyra, where the famous Monumentum
Ancyranum was found, to name just a few. We will read literary texts
(for example orations by Dio Chysostom and Aelius Aristides, letters
by Pliny) and inscriptions (confession inscriptions, for example,
and the edict on the calendar from Priene), which will help to illustrate
the political, social, and religious context of the Christian communities.
We will also integrate archaeological data wherever accessible and
appropriate. A comparison with early Christian texts is also on the
agenda. |
||||
BIBL 603 53500 |
Seminar on Early Christian Biblical Interpretation |
|||
Mitchell |
F | 1:30-4:20 | S403 | |
This course will provide a focused opportunity to engage
and test recent scholarly works (by Frances Young, David Dawson, Elizabeth
Clark and others) that are calling for a reconsideration of the traditional
map of patristic exegesis as divided between Alexandrine allegorists
and Antiochene literalists. We shall engage this question through
a close reading in Greek of the debate between Origen of Alexandria
and Eustathius of Antioch on 1 Samuel 28 (the woman of Endor raising
Samuel from the dead to speak to Saul) in which, surprisingly, it
was Origen who called for a “literal” reading, and Eustathius
who contested him over it. |
||||
BIBL 603 53600 |
Jeremiah |
|||
Frymer-Kensky |
W | 3:00-5:50 | S200 | |
This is an advanced exegesis course on the Book of
Jeremiah. All possible techniques will be used to examine this fascinating
text. |
||||
THEO 604 30400 |
History of Christian Thought 4: History of Christian and Jewish Thought in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries |
|||
Mendes-Flohr/Tanner |
Th | 1:00-3:50 | S204 | |
A survey of major figures and movements
in European Christian and Jewish thought from the late seventeenth
through the eighteenth centuries. |
||||
THEO 604 41600 |
Jonathan Edwards |
|||
Gilpin |
T/Th | 10:30-11:50 | S204 | |
A seminar on the theology of Jonathan
Edwards (1703–1758) in relation both to its immediate context
in colonial New England and to broader trends in religion and theology
in the transatlantic world. |
||||
THEO 604 42701 |
Trends in Contemporary Christian Ethics |
|||
Schweiker |
T/Th | 9:00-10:20 | S403 | |
| This course is a survey of contemporary
trends in Christian ethics attentive to classical sources (biblical,
theological, philosophical) and also basic themes that influence Christian
reflection on the moral life. Noting such classic sources as the biblical
portrait of Jesus's ministry, Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin, and others,
the burden of the course will be to examine principal trends in thought.
These trends include, among others, so-called narrative ethics (Hauerwas),
current work on the role of Christ in the moral life (Spohn; O'Donovan),
feminist and revisionary forms of Roman Catholic ethics (Porter; Hollenbach),
liberation and womanist ethics, and social teachings on topics ranging
from economics to war and sex. The course will thereby attend not
only to fundamental conceptual and theoretical issues in contemporary
Christian ethics, but also questions in applied ethics especially
pressing in the current world situation. The course will proceed through
lecture, discussion, and presentation. Previous work in theology and/or
ethics required. |
||||
THEO 604 44500 |
Black Theology and Womanist Theology in Dialogue |
|||
Hopkins |
W | 1:00-3:50 | S204 | |
THEO 604 46700 |
Race |
|||
Hopkins |
M | 1:00-3:50 | S204 | |
THEO 604 46900 |
Reinhold Niebuhr: Theology and Ethics |
|||
Gamwell |
T/Th | 10:30-11:50 | S208 | |
| An examination of Reinhold Niebuhr’s
systematic theology, especially his arguments for the Christian understanding
of human existence and for the relation of the moral enterprise to
the reality of God. |
||||
THEO 604 50200 |
Karl Barth’s “Church Dogmatics” |
|||
Tanner |
W | 1:30-4:20 | S403 | |
Close reading of representative volumes of the Church Dogmatics. |
||||
THEO 604 50501 |
Mourning, Melancholia, & Feminism |
|||
Hollywood |
M | 10:20-12:50 | S403 | |
DVPR 605 58702 |
Topics in Contemporary European Thought |
|||
Davidson |
T | 3:00-5:50 | ARR | |
Ident. CHSS 58000/PHIL 58702 |
||||
CHRM 606 30200 |
Public Church |
|||
Brekus |
M/W | 9:00-10:20 | S400 | |
PQ: Restricted to first-year M.Div. students. |
||||
CHRM 606 30500 |
Introduction to the Study of Ministry |
|||
Boden |
W | 3:00-4:20 | S400 | |
PQ: Required of all first year M.Div.
students. |
||||
CHRM 606 35500 |
Arts of Ministry: Worship |
|||
Staff |
F | 9:00-11:50 | S400 | |
This course explores the art of Christian
liturgy from four angles—historical, theological, pastoral,
and aesthetic. It serves as the basis for student inquiry into the
practice of worship throughout the field education experience. |
||||
CHRM 606 40600 |
The Practice of Ministry I |
|||
Piñón |
F | 1:00-3:50 | S400 | |
CHRM 606 42500 |
Senior Ministry Project Seminar |
|||
Gilpin |
F | 9:00-11:50 | S403 | |
HIJD 625 30200 |
History of Christian Thought IV: History of Christian and Jewish Thought in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries |
|||
Mendes-Flohr/Tanner |
Th | 1:00-3:50 | S204 | |
A survey of major figures and movements
in European Christian and Jewish thought from the late seventeenth
through the eighteenth centuries. |
||||
HIJD 625 34301 |
Spiritual Piety in Sixteenth Century Safed: Mystical Ethics |
|||
Fishbane |
T | 1:00-3:50 | S400 | |
This course will focus on the teachings
of Rabbi Moshe Cordovero’s treatise “Palm Tree of Deborah”
(Tomer Devorah), emphasizing issues of “imitatio dei”,
humility, and the good will. Attention will also be given to the work
of his student, R. Elijah de Vidas, especially on humility. Some of
the spiritual exercises used by these and other masters at this period
will also be studied. |
||||
HIJD 625 36600 |
Eastern and Western European Conceptions of Judaism I |
|||
Mendes-Flohr/Brinker |
Th | 9:00-11:50 | S204 | |
Ident. JWSG 36100 |
||||
HIJD 625 49000 |
Studies in Midrash: Mekhilta de-Rabbi Ishmael |
|||
Fishbane |
Th | 1:00-3:50 | S200 | |
A close examination of this Tannaitic
commentary on the Book of Exodus, giving special attention to modes
of exegesis, hermeneutical principles, forms of discourse, and theology.
Comparison with contemporary and later midrashic sources may be made,
as pertinent. |
||||
HCHR 626 30400 |
History of Christian Thought IV: History of Christian and Jewish Thought in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries |
|||
Mendes-Flohr/Tanner |
Th | 1:00-3:50 | S204 | |
A survey of major figures and movements
in European Christian and Jewish thought from the late seventeenth
through the eighteenth centuries. |
||||
HCHR 626 31201 |
Transatlantic Christianity, 1500–1900 |
|||
Gilpin |
Th | 1:00-3:50 | S208 | |
This course is a comparative history of Christianity in Europe and the Americas, since 1600, employing selected issues to examine the circulation of religious movements and ideas in the transatlantic world and to explore the connection of Christianity to wider developments in politics, science, and culture. |
||||
HCHR 626 42600 |
The American Religious Historical Canon |
|||
Brekus |
M | 1:30-4:20 | S400 | |
Ident. HIST 63702 |
||||
HCHR 604 43400 |
Jonathan Edwards |
|||
Gilpin |
T/Th | 10:30-11:50 | S204 | |
A seminar on the theology of Jonathan
Edwards (1703–1758) in relation both to its immediate context
in colonial New England and to broader trends in religion and theology
in the transatlantic world. |
||||
HCHR 626 53500 |
Seminar on Early Christian Biblical Interpretation |
|||
Mitchell |
F | 1:30-4:20 | S403 | |
This course will provide a focused opportunity
to engage and test recent scholarly works (by Frances Young, David
Dawson, Elizabeth Clark and others) that are calling for a reconsideration
of the traditional map of patristic exegesis as divided between Alexandrine
allegorists and Antiochene literalists. We shall engage this question
through a close reading in Greek of the debate between Origen of Alexandria
and Eustathius of Antioch on 1 Samuel 28 (the woman of Endor raising
Samuel from the dead to speak to Saul) in which, surprisingly, it
was Origen who called for a “literal” reading, and Eustathius
who contested him over it. |
||||
HREL 628 40800 |
Mythologies of Tranvestism and Transsexuality |
|||
Doniger |
M/W | 10:00-11:20 | S204 | |
Studies in selected Greek and Hindu myths, Shakespeare’s
Twelfth Night and As You Like It, Virginia Woolf’s
Orlando, David Henry Hwang’s M. Butterfly,
Roland Barthes’ S/Z, Marjorie Garber’s Vested
Interests, Wendy Doniger’s Splitting the Difference
and Bedtrick, and selected operas (Marriage of Figaro, Rosenkavalier,
Arabella) and films (such as Queen Christina, Some Like It Hot,
I Was a Male War Bride, Tootsie, Mrs. Doubtfire, All of Me, The Crying
Game, and Boys Don’t Cry). |
||||
HREL 628 41900 |
Storytelling in India |
|||
Doniger |
T/Th | 1:30-3:00 | S204 | |
Readings selected from the following:
Tales of Sex and Violence (O’Flaherty); Panchatantra (Olivelle);
Kathasaritsagara/Ocean of Story (Arshia Sattar); Dreams, Illusion
and Other Realities (O’Flaherty); Kim (Kipling); Midnight’s
Children and Haroun (Salman Rushdie) Yogavasistha (Chapple); Mondays
on the Dark Side of the Moon (Kirin Narayan); Essays (A.K. Ramanujan);
Folktales of India (Ramanujan). |
||||
HREL 628 42100 |
Religion and Society in Pre-Christian Europe |
|||
Lincoln |
T/Th | 10:30-11:50 | S200 | |
RLIT 635 30000 |
Introduction to Religion and Literature |
|||
Yu |
M/W | 9:30-10:50 | S200 | |
PQ: Divinity students have priority to register; students
of other units per consent of instructor. |
||||
RLIT 635 31600 |
Medieval Epic |
|||
Murrin |
T/Th | 10:30-11:50 | ARR | |
We will study a wide variety of heroic
literature, including Beowulf, The Volsunga Saga, The Song of Roland,
The Purgatorio, and the Alliterative Morte D’Arthur. A paper
will be required, and there may be an oral examination. |
||||
RLIT 635 32700 |
The Novel: Theory and Texts |
|||
Rosengarten |
T/Th | 9:00-10:20 | S200 | |
A survey of the genre in its manifestation in the modern period, focused on monuments in its development (Cervantes, Richardson, Flaubert, Joyce) and examining the intrinisic and incipient thematic and social engagements of these specific texts with religion. The central topic will be the self-conscious recourse to fictionality in narrative. We will think about this via a range of specific questions, including: the role of retrospection in narrative viewpoint, and its association with ideas about providential design; character development, with relation to both the concept of virtue and to issues of gender; the ongoing problematic moral status of the novel in the legal and religious institutions of Spain, England, France, and Ireland (and, by extension in the case of Joyce, the United States); and the vexed question of formalism and the genre. A concluding section will consider the phenomena of the novel's geographic dispersion in the last fifty years, with representative readings. |
||||
RLIT 635 35900 |
Seminar: Introduction to Comparative Literature I |
|||
Murrin |
ARR | ARR | ARR | |
This course is for English/Comparative
Literature Ph.D. students and Religion and Literature Ph.D. students
in the Divinity School. |
||||
RLIT 635 49100 |
Journey to the West I |
|||
Yu |
T | 1:30-4:30 | S200 | |
PQ: CHIN students expected to consult
original text in paper; students from other units need no Chinese
language; undergraduates may enroll under undergraduate number, no
prior knowledge of Chinese. |
||||
RETH 638 42701 |
Trends in Contemporary Christian Ethics |
|||
Schweiker |
T/Th | 9:00-10:20 | S403 | |
This course is a survey of contemporary
trends in Christian ethics attentive to classical sources (biblical,
theological, philosophical) and also basic themes that influence Christian
reflection on the moral life. Noting such classic sources as the biblical
portrait of Jesus's ministry, Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin, and others,
the burden of the course will be to examine principal trends in thought.
These trends include, among others, so-called narrative ethics (Hauerwas),
current work on the role of Christ in the moral life (Spohn; O'Donovan),
feminist and revisionary forms of Roman Catholic ethics (Porter; Hollenbach),
liberation and womanist ethics, and social teachings on topics ranging
from economics to war and sex. The course will thereby attend not
only to fundamental conceptual and theoretical issues in contemporary
Christian ethics, but also questions in applied ethics especially
pressing in the current world situation. The course will proceed through
lecture, discussion, and presentation. Previous work in theology and/or
ethics required. |
||||
RETH 638 46900 |
Reinhold Niebuhr: Theology and Ethics |
|||
Gamwell |
T/Th | 10:30-11:50 | S208 | |
An examination of Reinhold Niebuhr’s
systematic theology, especially his arguments for the Christian understanding
of human existence and for the relation of the moral enterprise to
the reality of God. |
||||
RETH 638 50200 |
Political Realism |
|||
Elshtain |
T | 1:30-3:50 | S208 | |
An exploration of the realist tradition
in politics and its ethical implications. Readings include Thucydides,
Hobbes, Machiavelli, Waltz, Arendt, and R. Niebuhr. |
||||
RETH 638 51301 |
Law-Philosophy Seminar |
|||
Nussbaum/Sunstein |
ARR | ARR | ARR | |
This is a seminar/workshop most of whose participants are faculty from seven area institutions. It admits approximately ten students by permission of the instructors. Its aim is to study, each year, a topic that arises in both philosophy and law and to ask how bringing the two fields together may yield mutual illumination. There are twelve meetings throughout the year, always on Mondays from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. Half of the sessions are led by local faculty, half by visiting speakers. The leader assigns readings for the session (which may be by that person, by other contemporaries, or by major historical figures), and the sessions consists of a brief introduction by the leader, followed by structured questioning by the two faculty coordinators, followed by general discussion. Students write either two 4- to 6-page papers per quarter, or a 20- to 25-page seminar paper at the end of the year. The course satisfies the Law School Writing Requirement. The schedule of meetings will be announced by mid-September, and prospective students should submit their credentials to both instructors by September 20. Past themes have included: practical reason; equality; privacy; autonomy; global justice; pluralism and toleration; war; sexuality and family. The theme for 2004-5 will be race. Likely speakers include: Kwane
Anthony Appiah, Lawrence Blum, Lani Guinier, Sally Haslanger, Randy
Kennedy, Michelle Moody-Adams, Patricia Williams (outside visitors);
Danielle Allen, Cathy Cohen, Bob Gooding-Williams, Bernard Harcourt,
Tracey Meares, David Strauss, Ken Warren (locals). |
||||
RETH 638 51700 |
Contemporary Virtue Ethics |
|||
Nussbaum |
T | 3:00-5:20 | S204 | |
This class with study the revival of the
ethics of virtue in contemporary moral philosophy, considering, among
others, Iris Murdoch, John McDowell, Philippa Foot, Nancy Sherman,
Henry Richardson, Annette Baier, Rosalind Hursthouse, and Bernard
Williams. Is virtue ethics a single movement, with a single set of
philosophical motivations and normative commitments, or a more complicated
plurality of positions and motivations? What is the relationship of
virtue ethics to the idea of ethical theory? To the aspiration to
put reason in charge of human life? Is virtue ethics inherently conservative,
deferring to socially formed passions and patterns of conduct, or
is (some form of) it capable of radical criticism of entrenched social
norms, e.g. of class and gender? We will be alluding to the Greeks
throughout, so some background in ancient Greek ethics is highly desirable.
|
||||
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