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REL100.001
Introduction to Religious Studies

 

Professor
Dr. Tim Murphy
tmurphy@bama.ua.edu

Office: 209 Manly Hall
Office Phone: 348-8513
Office Hour: TBA
Course: MTWR 12:30-4:30
Location: Manly 207

 

About Online Readings

Some course readings are placed in a "secure" folder; you can only access these PDF files (Portable Document Format, that can be opened with the free Adobe Reader) by clicking each link and then entering your Bama User Name and Password. If you have difficulty accessing these readings, contact the instructor by email.

If you have forgotten your Bama ID, but know your Campus Wide ID (CWID), then go here.

 

Description

What causes religion? What is it? How should it be studied? This course will examine some of the answers given to these questions in the field of Religious Studies. We will look at two different kinds of Afro-Caribbean religions, namely, Vodou in Haiti and Rastafarianism in Jamaica, as data for answers to these questions. Since it is our goal to do more than merely acquire information, we will also examine some of the classic theories which have claimed to explain or interpret religion. Besides comparing religious materials, we will compare these theoretical paradigms. It is hoped that by this procedure students will learn how to understand religious and cultural processes, not simply learn a bunch of facts.

 

Studying religion in the University

The study of religion in the university is conducted along the same lines and for the same purposes as are all other forms of disciplined, methodical inquiry. The core premise of the academic study of religion is that religion, whatever else it may be, is a human activity, and is one element of the larger cultural creations of human beings. Within the context of the university, scholars of religion hold themselves to the same principles of reasoned argument from evidence as do all other scholars. We do not seek to teach people how to be religious, but to study religion as a human phenomenon which is commensurate with all other human phenomena. Our task is descriptive and analytical, not normative. We seek to explicate and understand a religious position, not interpret one religious position in terms of another.


Syllabus

Interim Syllabus (TBA)


Books (required)

Pals, Daniel.
Eight Theories of Religion (paperback)
Oxford University Press
ISBN: 0195165705

Barrett, Sr., Leonard E.
The Rastafarians
(1997, 20th Anniv Edition)
Beacon Press
ISBN 0807010391

Desmangles, Leslie G.
The Faces of the Gods: Vodou and Roman Catholicism in Haiti

Univ of NC Press
ISBN 0807843938


Online Readings

"Religious Studies Survey"

Instructions for Religious Studies Survey (PDF)


Classroom Presentation Materials

Unit I
History of Haiti (PDF)
Ritual Cycle of Vodou (PDF)
African Cross (PDF)
Cosmic Iwas (PDF)

 

Unit II
Tylor on Myth (PDF)

Durkheim on Religion (PDF)

Durkheim & Totemism (PDF)

Freud: Religion and the Unconscious (PDF)

Freuds Two Stories of Religion (PDF)

Karl Marx: Religion as the "Optiate of the Masses" (PDF)

Ideology & Optiates Marx's Theory of Religion (PDF)

 

Unit III
Rasta 1 (PDF)

Rasta 2 (PDF)

Rasta 3 (PDF)

Rasta 'n' Reggae (PDF)

Rasta sects (PDF)

 

Unit IV

Geertz 1 (PDF)

Geertz 2 (PDF)

Eliade 1 (PDF)

Eliade 2 (PDF)

 

Marx 2 & Review of Explanatory Theories (PDF)