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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.
To view an archive of past courses, click here.
The Following "Special Courses" are for M. Div. students only:
629-60000-01/02 Special Course — Chgo Theol Sem
629-63000-01/02 Special Course — Meadville Theol School
629-65000-01/02 Special Course — Catholic Theol Union
629-66000-01/02 Special Course — Lutheran Sch Theol
629-68000-01/02 Special Course — McCormick Theol Sem
DVSC 622 30200 |
Introduction to Historical Studies |
|||
| |
Mendes-Flohr |
M/W |
10:00-11:20 |
S106 |
| |
PQ: Open only to M.A./AMRS students. |
|||
| |
||||
DVSC 622 42000 |
Divinity School: German Reading Exam |
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| |
Staff |
ARR |
ARR |
ARR |
| |
PQ: Open only to Divinity School students |
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| |
||||
DVSC 622 45100 |
Reading Course: Special Topic |
|||
| |
Staff |
ARR |
ARR |
ARR |
| |
Petition with bibliography signed by instructor; enter section from faculty list. |
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| |
||||
DVSC 622 49900 |
Exam Preparation |
|||
| |
Staff |
ARR |
ARR |
ARR |
| |
Open only to Ph.D. students in quarter of qualifying exams; enter section from faculty list. |
|||
| |
||||
DVSC 622 50200 |
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 32500 |
Introduction to the New Testament |
|||
| |
Mitchell |
T/Th |
10:30-11:50 |
S106 |
| |
An immersion in the texts of the New
Testament with the following goals: 1. through careful reading to
come to know well some representative pieces of this literature; 2.
to gain useful knowledge of the historical, geographical, social,
religious, cultural, and political contexts of these texts and the
events they relate; 3. to learn the major literary genres represented
in the canon (“gospels,” “acts,” “letters,” and “apocalypses”) and
strategies for reading them; 4. to comprehend the various theological
visions to which these texts give expression; 5. to situate oneself
and one’s prevailing questions about this material in the history
of interpretation; 6. to raise questions for further study. |
|||
| |
||||
BIBL 603 34100 |
Intermediate Biblical Hebrew |
|||
| |
Knafl |
M/W/F |
8:00-8:50 |
S208 |
| |
|
|||
| |
||||
BIBL 603 35400 |
Intermediate Koine Greek 3 |
|||
| |
Spittler |
M/W/F |
8:00-8:50 |
S200 |
| |
Ident. NTEC 35400 |
|||
| |
||||
BIBL 603 39800 |
German Reading Class |
|||
| |
Klauck |
W |
5:00-6:30 |
S200 |
| |
In this course, German exegetical and
theological literature will be read and discussed along with some
select pieces of poetry. Ideally, only German should be used in this
class. We will, however, try to accommodate people at different levels
of knowledge and give translations and explanations in English too.
The class is intended to help students to gain greater fluency in
German and better knowledge of research done in German speaking countries. |
|||
| |
||||
BIBL 603 41800 |
Lecture: The Use of the Old Testament in the Gospel of John |
|||
| |
Klauck |
M/W |
9:00-10:50 |
S208 |
| |
Our main subject in this course will
be the Gospel of John. We will try to discover better understanding
of this sometimes enigmatic text. Our approach will be concentrated:
we will look for passages from the Old Testament and from Jewish traditions
upon which the author of the gospel of John has drawn to construct
his own narrative and to develop his theology. That is, broadly speaking,
a matter of intertextuality, but, as we will see, this phenomenon
itself has to be described and defined carefully in and of itself. |
|||
| |
||||
BIBL 603 43400 |
Science and Scripture: Jewish Phil. Exegesis in Middle Ages |
|||
| |
Robinson |
M |
1:00-3:50 |
S200 |
| |
Idents. HIJD 43401, JWSG 43401, HCHR 43401, RLIT 43400 |
|||
| |
||||
THEO 604 40800 |
Third World Theologies |
|||
| |
Hopkins |
W |
1:30-4:20 |
S208 |
| |
A critical investigation of the intellectual
claims of male and female theologians in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean,
and Latin America. What are their thematic threads? We will examine
their origins, commonalities and differences, methods, sources, and
points of tension. We will also pursue what they have to offer a larger
conversation in theology and the study of religions. |
|||
| |
||||
THEO 604 43400 |
Theological Anthropology |
|||
| |
Hopkins |
W |
9:00-11:50 |
S201 |
| |
What does it mean to be human? This course looks at social psychological, historical, and philosophical notions of “the human” and then moves to a theological interpretation of the anthropological. |
|||
| |
||||
THEO 604 44101 |
Crusade and Holy War in the Medieval World |
|||
| |
Pick |
F |
9:00-11:50 |
S200 |
| |
This course will focus on the origins
and development of the idea of holy war and crusade in the Middle
Ages. We will consider the evolution of notions of just war and holy
war in the first few class periods and then will move on to consider
recruitment techniques, the goals, ideals and ambitions of individual
crusaders, as well as the medieval and modern historiography of the
crusades. Attention will be given to Muslim, Jewish, Byzantine, as
well as Latin perspectives. |
|||
| |
||||
THEO 604 46501 |
Hartshorne and Ogden: Philosophical Theology |
|||
| |
Gamwell |
T/Th |
9:00-10:20 |
S201 |
| |
A critical examination and comparison
of Charles Hartshorne and Schubert M. Ogden, especially with respect
to their conceptions of faith, religion, and God. |
|||
| |
||||
THEO 604 48900 |
Seminar: Theological Ethics II |
|||
| |
Schweiker |
W |
1:30-4:20 |
S200 |
| |
This year-long seminar is a sequence
of interlocking inquiries on current debates surrounding human dignity
and capabilities. The series begins with the question of humanism
itself, then turns to the problem of the representation and understanding
of meanings as well as recognition of the other, and concludes with
an inquiry into human fault and evil. While there is internal coherence
to the series of seminars, students are not required to take the entire
sequence. This seminar is the second in the sequence and explores
basic texts in contemporary philosophy and theology on the theme of
the recognition of the other and the understanding of texts. Thinkers
to be read include, among others, H.-G. Gadamer, P. Ricoeur, J. Derrida,
C. Taylor, D. Tracy, and S. Hauerwas. Attention will be paid to new
hermeneutical possibilities found in feminists and theorists of globalization. |
|||
| |
||||
DVPR 605 30201 |
Indian Philosophy I |
|||
| |
Kapstein |
T/Th |
10:30-11:50 |
S201 |
| |
Ident. SALC 20901/30901, HREL 30200 |
|||
| |
||||
DVPR 605 46500 |
Hartshorne and Ogden: Philosophical Theology |
|||
| |
Gamwell |
T/Th |
9:00-10:20 |
S201 |
| |
A critical examination and comparison
of Charles Hartshorne and Schubert M. Ogden, especially with respect
to their conceptions of faith, religion, and God. |
|||
| |
||||
DVPR 605 48500 |
Evil |
|||
| |
Kapstein |
T/Th |
12:00-1:20 |
S201 |
| |
The problem of evil is, in one form or
another, a near-universal foundation of religious thought and life.
While calling into question one’s notions of the good, the presence
of evil is often also a necessary condition for the clear formation
of the concept of goodness. In the present course we will consider
aspects of the problem of evil in depth, taking account of evil as
a cultural phenomenon as document in recent anthropological literature
and as an issue in metaphysics and axiology, as examined by a selection
of philosophers from Augustine to Ricoeur. Recent work on evil in
Asian philosophies will be introduced as well. |
|||
| |
||||
DVPR 605 48900 |
Readings in Buddhist Philosophical Texts |
|||
| |
Kapstein |
ARR |
ARR |
ARR |
| |
|
|||
| |
||||
DVPR 605 49200 |
Saint Augustine and Philosophy |
|||
| |
Marion |
W |
1:00-3:50 |
S106 |
| |
PQ: Some knowledge of Augustine and some
reading knowledge of Latin. |
|||
| |
||||
DVPR 605 49300 |
Love as a Philosophic Question |
|||
| |
Marion |
Tu |
1:00-3:50 |
S106 |
| |
Ident. SCTH 49730, THEO 49902 |
|||
| |
||||
DVPR 605 51400 |
Consciousness in Indian Buddhist Philosophy |
|||
| |
Arnold |
Th |
12:00-2:50 |
S403 |
| |
This seminar will consider the development,
among Buddhist epistemologists, of the doctrine of svasamvitti
(“apperception” or “self-reflexive cognition”). Some attention will
be given to comparative questions concerning Western philosophical
ideas that might usefully be invoked in understanding the Buddhist
doctrine, but the course will chiefly consist in the close reading
of seminal Indian texts on the subject (beginning with the Pramanasamuccaya
of Dignaga). |
|||
| |
||||
CHRM 606 30300 |
The Public Church and Its Ministry |
|||
| |
Culp |
T/Th |
1:30-2:50 |
S400 |
| |
|
|||
| |
||||
CHRM 606 30600 |
Colloquium: Introduction to the Study of Ministry |
|||
| |
Musselman |
F |
1:00-2:20 |
S403 |
| |
PQ: First year M. Divs only — DO NOT REGISTER FOR THIS COURSE |
|||
| |
||||
CHRM 606 35500 |
Arts of Ministry: Worship |
|||
| |
Boden/Tanner |
F |
9:00-11:50 |
S400 |
| |
|
|||
| |
||||
CHRM 606 40700 |
The Practice of Ministry II |
|||
| |
Pinon |
F |
1:00-3:50 |
S400 |
| |
DO NOT REGISTER FOR THIS COURSE |
|||
| |
||||
CHRM 606 42500 |
Senior Ministry Project Seminar |
|||
| |
Gamwell |
ARR |
ARR |
ARR |
| |
Open only to third year ministry students. |
|||
| |
||||
HIJD 625 43401 |
Science and Scripture: Jewish Phil. Exegesis in Middle Ages |
|||
| |
Robinson |
M |
1:00-3:50 |
S200 |
| |
Ident. HCHR 43401, JWSG 43401, BIBL 43400, RLIT 43400 |
|||
| |
||||
HIJD 625 50601 |
Simmel and Weber on Modernity and Religion |
|||
| |
Mendes-Flohr/Riesebrodt |
Th |
1:30-4:20 |
S200 |
| |
Ident. AASR 50600/SOCI 50053 |
|||
| |
||||
HIJD 625 50700 |
Medieval Hebrew Texts |
|||
| |
Robinson |
Th |
1:00-3:50 |
MEM Library |
| |
PQ: Good reading knowledge of Hebrew |
|||
| |
||||
HCHR 626 41200 |
Religion in Modern America, 1865-1935 |
|||
| |
Gilpin |
T |
1:30-4:20 |
S403 |
| |
This course is the third in a series
that examines American religious history from the colonial period
to the twentieth century. For the period 1865 to 1935, the emphasis
will fall on the nature of modernity and the roles of religious faith
and practice within modern American society. |
|||
| |
||||
HCHR 626 42101 |
Evangelicanism in America |
|||
| |
Brekus |
M |
1:30-4:20 |
S403 |
| |
This course examines the history of American
evangelicanism from its rise in the eighteenth century to the present.
Besides discussing evangelical leaders such as Jonathan Edwards, Phoebe
Palmer, Dwight Moody, and Billy Graham, we will explore popular evangelical
beliefs and practices. Topics include conversion, prayer, revivalism,
apocalypticism, controversies over science, gender, the rise of Fundamentalism,
and the emergence of the Religious Right. |
|||
| |
||||
HCHR 626 42102 |
Children in American Religious History |
|||
| |
Brekus |
W |
1:30-4:20 |
S403 |
| |
This course explores the history of children
and childhood in America through a religious lens. We will read major
books about the history of American childhood as well as catechisms,
sermons for children, children’s books, and childrearing literature.
Requirements include a class presentation and a major research paper. |
|||
| |
||||
HCHR 626 43401 |
Science and Scripture: Jewish Phil. Exegesis in Middle Ages |
|||
| |
Robinson |
M |
1:00-3:50 |
S200 |
| |
Idents. BIBL 43400, HIJD 43401, JWSG 43401, RLIT 43400 |
|||
| |
||||
HCHR 626 44101 |
Crusade and Holy War in the Medieval World |
|||
| |
Pick |
F |
9:00-11:50 |
S200 |
| |
This course will focus on the origins
and development of the idea of holy war and crusade in the Middle
Ages. We will consider the evolution of notions of just war and holy
war in the first few class periods and then will move on to consider
recruitment techniques, the goals, ideals and ambitions of individual
crusaders, as well as the medieval and modern historiography of the
crusades. Attention will be given to Muslim, Jewish, Byzantine, as
well as Latin perspectives. |
|||
| |
||||
ISLM 620 40100 |
Islamic Love Poetry |
|||
| |
Sells |
M |
1:30-4:20 |
MEM Library |
| |
PQ: Arabic, Persian or Farsi, Turkish
or Urdu, or consent of the instructor |
|||
| |
||||
ISLM 626 44000 |
Crusade and Holy War in the Medieval World |
|||
| |
Pick |
F |
9:00-11:50 |
S200 |
| |
This course will focus on the origins
and development of the idea of holy war and crusade in the Middle
Ages. We will consider the evolution of notions of just war and holy
war in the first few class periods and then will move on to consider
recruitment techniques, the goals, ideals and ambitions of individual
crusaders, as well as the medieval and modern historiography of the
crusades. Attention will be given to Muslim, Jewish, Byzantine, as
well as Latin perspectives. |
|||
| |
||||
HREL 628 35400 |
Hinduism: A Chronicle |
|||
| |
Doniger |
T/Th |
1:30-2:50 |
S208 |
| |
A survey of the history of Hinduism,
setting texts in historical contexts. Hinduism is usually taught as
a cluster of timeless concepts: karma, dharma, reincarnation, renunciation,
and so forth, contained within Sanskrit texts produced by dead Brahmin
males. But like all religions, Hinduism is grounded in history, and
in a broader social imagination. This course will take the relatively
novel approach of situating each major idea in the context of the
historical events to which it responded: the Rig Veda in the Indo-European
migrations, the Upanishads in the social crisis of the first great
cities on the Ganges, and so forth, up to the present day BJP revisionist
tactics. The reading will begin with two good survey texts and then
focus closely on a few texts, some Sanskrit and some from vernacular
literatures, from several different historical periods. |
|||
| |
||||
HREL 628 30200 |
Indian Philosophy I |
|||
| |
Kapstein |
T/Th |
10:30-11:50 |
S201 |
| |
Ident. SALC 20901/30901, DVPR 30201 |
|||
| |
||||
HREL 628 36000 |
2nd Year Sanskrit |
|||
| |
Doniger |
M/W |
1:30-2:50 |
S207 |
| |
PQ: One year of Sanskrit |
|||
| |
||||
HREL 628 42301 |
On Religious and Civil Wars |
|||
| |
Lincoln |
T/Th |
9:00-10:20 |
S208 |
| |
Ident. ANTH 42405, NEHC___ |
|||
| |
||||
HREL 628 48501 |
Evil |
|||
| |
Kapstein |
T/Th |
12:00-1:20 |
S201 |
| |
The problem of evil is, in one form or
another, a near-universal foundation of religious thought and life.
While calling into question one’s notions of the good, the presence
of evil is often also a necessary condition for the clear formation
of the concept of goodness. In the present course we will consider
aspects of the problem of evil in depth, taking account of evil as
a cultural phenomenon as document in recent anthropological literature
and as an issue in metaphysics and axiology, as examined by a selection
of philosophers from Augustine to Ricoeur. Recent work on evil in
Asian philosophies will be introduced as well. |
|||
| |
||||
RLIT 635 39000 |
Poetic Cinema |
|||
| |
Bird |
ARR |
ARR |
ARR |
| |
Films are frequently denoted as "poetic”
or “lyrical” in a vague sort of way. It has been applied equally to
religious cinema and to the experimental avant-garde. Our task will
be to interrogate this concept and try to define what it actually
is denoting. Films and critical texts will mainly be drawn from Soviet
and French cinema of the 1920s-1930s and 1960s-1990s. Directors include
Dovzhenko, Renoir, Cocteau, Resnais, Maya Deren, Tarkovsky, Pasolini,
Jarman, and Sokurov. In addition to sampling these directors’ own
writings, we shall examine theories of poetic cinema by major critics
from the Russian formalists to Andre Bazin and beyond. |
|||
| |
||||
RLIT 635 43400 |
Science and Scripture: Jewish Phil. Exegesis in Middle Ages |
|||
| |
Robinson |
M |
1:00-3:50 |
S200 |
| |
Ident. BIBL 43400, HIJD 43401, JWSG 43401, HCHR 43401 |
|||
| |
||||
RLIT 635 51800 |
Seminar: Topics in Religion and Literature |
|||
| |
Rosengarten |
F |
9:00-11:50 |
S100 |
| |
A proseminar for Ph.D. students in the
field of religion and literature, to assist in formulating and refining |
|||
| |
||||
RLIT 635 59700 |
Renaissance Intellectual Texts, Petrarch to Descartes |
|||
| |
Strier |
T |
4:30-7:20 p.m. |
ARR |
| |
This course will read and discuss some
of the non-literary texts that were fundamental to Renaissance, Reformation
and immediately post-Reformation Europe. It will study works by Petrarch,
Bruni, Machiavelli, Castiglione, Erasmus, More, Luther, Swingli, Loyola,
Calvin, St. Teresa, Montaigne, Galileo and Descartes. Since none of
these works were written in English, all will be read in translation,
but students will be encouraged to read any works they can in the
original. Each student will be expected to make a at least one class
presentation, to keep a reading diary, and to do an analytical or
historical paper. |
|||
| |
||||
RETH 638 48900 |
Seminar: Theological Ethics II |
|||
| |
Schweiker |
W |
1:30-4:20 |
S200 |
| |
This year-long seminar is a sequence
of interlocking inquiries on current debates surrounding human dignity
and capabilities. The series begins with the question of humanism
itself, then turns to the problem of the representation and understanding
of meanings as well as recognition of the other, and concludes with
an inquiry into human fault and evil. While there is internal coherence
to the series of seminars, students are not required to take the entire
sequence. This seminar is the second in the sequence and explores
basic texts in contemporary philosophy and theology on the theme of
the recognition of the other and the understanding of texts. Thinkers
to be read include, among others, H.-G. Gadamer, P. Ricoeur, J. Derrida,
C. Taylor, D. Tracy, and S. Hauerwas. Attention will be paid to new
hermeneutical possibilities found in feminists and theorists of globalization. |
|||
| |
||||
RETH 638 50201 |
Religion and the Political Order I: Augustine to Calvin |
|||
| |
Elshtain |
M |
1:30-4:20 |
S208 |
| |
Ident. PLSC 50201 |
|||
| |
||||
RETH 638 52000 |
Augustine’s City of God |
|||
| |
Elshtain |
T |
1:30-4:20 |
MEM Library |
| |
||||
RETH 638 51302 |
Law-Philosophy Seminar |
|||
| |
Nussbaum |
M |
4:00-6:00 |
Law School |
| |
This is a seminar/workshop most of whose
participants are faculty from various 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
the 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 to 6 PM. 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 session 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 4-6 page papers per quarter, or a 20-25 seminar paper
at the end of the year. The course satisfies the Law School Writing
Requirement. The schedule of meetings will be announced in 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 2006-7 will be Disability. Speakers
to be invited include: Eva Kittay, Anita Silvers, Jeff McMahan, Ann
Davis, Sam Bagenstos, Ruth Colker, Michael Stein, Elizabeth Emens
(outside visitors); Adam Samaha, Richard Posner, Daniel Brudney, Martha
Nussbaum, Iris Young (locals). |
|||
| |
||||
AASR 607 36000 |
Fieldwork Methodology in the Social Sciences |
|||
| |
Zeghal |
F |
10:30-1:20 |
MEM Library |
| |
|
|||
| |
||||
AASR 607 40900 |
Islam and Democracy I |
|||
| |
Zeghal |
M/W |
1:30-2:50 |
S201 |
| |
This course will focus on the representations of the Islamic polity and the cultural, historical and sociological explanations for the so-called “democratic deficit” in the Muslim world. We will examine and evaluate the anthropological, sociological, and political science literature that develops this “deficit” paradigm by looking at precise cases from Arab and non-Arab Muslim societies. We will confront this literature with the paradigms developed for Western democracies in order to understand the basic assumptions used in some of the works dealing with Islam and politics. More particularly, we will deal with theories of kinship, state, and state-society relations that have often been at the foundations of the explanation for the absence of democracy. Parts I and II can be taken separately. |
|||
| |
||||
AASR 607 42600 |
Conversion and Commitment |
|||
| |
Riesebrodt |
T |
3:00-5:50 |
S200 |
| |
Ident. SOCI 50010 |
|||
| |
||||
AASR 607 50600 |
Simmel and Weber on Modernity and Religion |
|||
| |
Mendes-Flohr/Riesebrodt |
Th |
1:30-4:20 |
S200 |
| |
Ident. HIJD 50601/SOCI 50053 |
|||
| |
||||
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