Religious Studies:
A Part of the Human Sciences
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Friedrich Max Muller (1823-1900), German
scholar of the religions of India and early historian of language
and myth, one of the founders of the science of religion.
See here
for a collection of Muller's work.
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Cornelius Petrus Tiele (1830-1902), Dutch
scholar of ancient Egyptian religions and one of the founders
of the science of religion who delivered the prestigious Gifford
Lectures in 1896-98.
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Some Essays on Religious Studies:
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"What
is the Academic Study of Religion: A Student's Perspective"
by REL graduate Tim Davis
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"Religious
Studies Offers Practical Knowledge for All majors"
by REL graduate Kathleen Penton
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"Is
Nothing Sacred?" from Lingua Franca (1996),
by Charlotte Allen (PDF)
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"What
is the Academic Study of Religion?" by Russell T.
McCutcheon and Karissa Rinas
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"Insides,
Outsides, and the Scholar of Religion" by Russell
T. McCutcheon
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"Theses
on Method" by Bruce Lincoln
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"Theses
on Professionalization" by Russell T. McCutcheon
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"Religious
Studies and 'Heaven's Gate': Making the Strange Familiar and
the Familiar Strange" by Mark W. Muesse (PDF)
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"The
Study of Religion: An Introduction and Provocation"
by Kenneth MacKendrick
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"The
Search for a No-Frills Jesus" by Charlotte Allen
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A classic ethnography on the ritual practices of
an odd people...
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"Body
Ritual Among the Nacirema" by Horace Miner (PDF)
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"What
is a Semiotic Theory of Religion" (PDF)
in CSSR,
Bulletin 70, Vol. 34, Number 4, (11/2005) by
Tim Murphy
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Why study religion? Look here
for one answer.
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Look here
for another.
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Learn
more about the Department's motto: Studying Religion in
Culture
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Religious Studies, also known as Comparative
Religion, the Science of Religion, or the academic study of
religion, is a part of the human sciences, and engages in
the analysis of cross-cultural religious phenomena. Much as
Political Science constitutes study about the political process
rather than the promotion and participation in specific party
politics, descriptive and comparative study about religion
as carried out in the publicly-funded university is therefore
to be distinguished from religious (theological) forms of
study.
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The academic study of religion first arose in late nineteenth-century
Europe and arrived in the U.S. soon after. Thriving initially
only in a handful of private colleges, by the early 1960s
the field had blossomed in public universities due to such
factors as changing immigration policies and increased interest
in the cultures of Asia. As with many other U.S. Departments
of Religious Studies, the study of religion at the University
of Alabama was originally taught by volunteers from local
churches and campus chaplains, and their classes focused almost
exclusively on the study of Christianity as viewed only from
various denominational perspectives. Up until the mid-1960s
the study of religion was mainly organized along the lines
of a Protestant seminary (with courses on Bible Interpretation,
Church History, Systematic Theology, etc.) and was therefore
seen by students and teachers alike as either an extension
of "Sunday School" or as preparation for ministry.
Seeking what was then described as "an academically sound"
Department that was no different from any other Department
on campus, the administration of the University of Alabama
created the Department of Religious Studies in 1966, sharply
distinguishing it from its previous incarnation as a confessionally-based
and volunteer-staffed Department of Religion.
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Now, nearly forty years later, the Department of Religious
Studies is among the principal arenas in the University where
students can learn of the history, diversity, and ingenuity
of human belief and behavioral systems. Prolonged and critical
exposure to differing beliefs and practices regularly takes
place in the classroom, where students study ancient and contemporary
world religions descriptively and comparatively. Students
leave our courses with a heightened sensitivity to cross-cultural
understanding and an appreciation for the complexity and novelty
of human belief systems. From debates concerning the separation
of Church and State and defining what should count as religion
in the eyes of the courts, to broad discussions on the relationship
between local traditions and the increasingly global nature
of world culture and economics, scholars of religion are called
upon to help negotiate the often complex nature of contemporary
public affairs. In an ever shrinking world, the practical
skills taught in our classes—interpretation, translation,
understanding, and analysis—play an increasingly important
role.
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Religious Studies is therefore a key component of the University
of Alabama’s Humanities Core Curriculum. Students from
across the University attend classes in the Department. Students
double-major in areas such as Anthropology, Journalism, Psychology,
or even Chemistry or Biology and Religious Studies. Its majors
not only become professional scholars of religion, but succeed
in such diverse careers as journalism, business, education,
and publishing.
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Click here
to learn more about the history of the study of religion at
the University of Alabama.
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Or open the following PDF
to read an article written by Prof. Patrick Green, the Department's
longtime Chair who recently retired.
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