Admission requirements
None
Description
Religion is everywhere, but it is nowhere the same. This course offers an introductory survey of religion as a human cultural endeavour, from prehistory to the present and from a global perspective. We know that religion exists in a dazzling variety of forms, and that it fulfills an equally wide range of functions. This has always been the case and is unlikely to change in the future. This course will discuss the backgrounds to this wide variety of symbolic behaviour and will yield the students the necessary tools to understand religious pluralism, the way the evolution of religion has been conditioned by the physical environment as well as by social, technological and intellectual developments. This epic journey starts with questions of the origins of religion in human evolution and will continue up to the present, with an eye to likely scenarios for the future development of a core phenomen in all known human cultures.
For students of the bachelor Religiewetenschappen, part of the course Religion in the World are the classes about “Studievaardigheden”, organised by the EAV. Students who follow or have followed the classes about academic skills in another bachelorprogramme, could apply for an exemption for the classes “Studievaardigheden” by using this form
Course objectives
Students will learn about the typology of religions, the variety of known religions on a global scale and the main lines of development of religions in human history. They will learn to analyze interpretive strategies on a longue durée scale and will acquire basic knowledge of the variety of religion in human culture. They will learn to reflect on such questions critically and to write about them in a concise way.
Timetable
Timetable Religiewetenschappen
Timetable Minor Religion in a changing world
Mode of instruction
Lecture
Course Load
Total: 140 hours = 5 ec
Amount of lectures: 2 hours per week x 13 weeks = 26 hours
Only for students Religiewetenschappen: attend classes EAV: 3 X 2 = 6 uur
Preparation for weekly sessions: 12 x 2 hours = 24 hours
Four essay questions: 4 x 5 hours = 20 hours
Literature + final exam: 69 hours
Exam Review: 1 hour
Assessment method
Four essay questions (500 words each) throughout the course (40 %)
Written examination with essay questions (60 %)
Weighing
The final mark for the course is established by determining the weighted average
Resit
Resit will consist of the same parts as the first opportunity.
Exam review
When and where the exam review will take place will be disclosed together with the publication of the exam results at the latest.
Blackboard
Blackboard
Blackboard is used as a repository for practical information and for the content of the teaching sessions,as well as for the sending in of the essays through Turnitin. It may also be used for communication.
Reading list
A. Norenzayan, Big Gods: How Religion Transformed Cooperation and Conflict, Princeton 2013 (students need to acquire a copy of this book) + a selection of articles
Registration
Students are required to register through uSis
Registration Studeren à la carte and Contractonderwijs
Registration Studeren à la carte
Registration Contractonderwijs