74 UW–Madison Spring 2015 courses
Transcription
74 UW–Madison Spring 2015 courses
page 1 of 16 mini-catalog of 74 UW–Madison Spring 2015 courses which include a component about religion or spirituality Course information taken from the UW Course Guide in November 2014. Information on each class may not be complete, or may have changed. This list may have missed courses which would otherwise fit the loose criteria, and does not include many “senior thesis” and “directed study” course numbers. Please check the UW Course Guide for the most current information, including prerequisites. Click on the title of each course to be linked to its entry in the UW Course Guide. RELIG ST 101 Religion in Global Perspective Foundational and thematic approaches in the academic study of religion applied across global religious systems. Mon•Wed 11:00–11:50 am 104 VAN HISE HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Anna Gade level: Elementary • breadth: Humanities ANTHRO 104 Cultural Anthropology and Human Diversity Introduction to cultural anthropology for non-majors; comparative cross-cultural consideration of social organization, economics, politics, language, religion, ecology, gender, and cultural change. Includes 25% coverage of U.S. ethnic and racial minorities. Tue•Thu 9:55–10:45 am 6210 SEWELL SOCIAL SCIENCES credits: 3 Instructor: Hayder Al-Mohammad level: Elementary • breadth: Social Science HISTORY 115 Medieval Europe 410–1500 We will begin this class with a discussion of the relations between Romans and barbarians, the rise of Christianity and the role of Christianity in forging the new medieval civilization. We will then move on to three heirs of the Roman Empire: the Carolingian Empire, the Byzantine Empire, and the Islamic Empire. After dealing with the last major invasion of Western Europe, that of the Vikings, we will move on to the age of castles and cathe drals, sometimes called the Twelfth-Century Renaissance. One of the features of this medieval Renaissance was the expansion of Latin Europe into the Middle East during the crusades. Another feature had to do with the self-affirmation of the laity (those who were not part of the official hierarchy of the Church). This self-affirmation resulted in the appearance of the new chivalric culture and in the rise of heresy. The late Middle Ages were both dramatic and traumatic with a major epidemic known as the Black Death and the Hundred Years War. The course will conclude with a brief introduction to the Renaissance. Tue•Thu 2:30–3:45 pm 1131 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 4 Instructor: Elizabeth Lapina level: Elementary • breadth: Humanities Social Science HISTORY 119 The Making of Modern Europe 1500–1815 Tue•Thu 11:00 am–12:15 pm 1641 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 4 Instructor: Suzanne Desan level: Elementary • breadth: Humanities Social Science This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 2 of 16 HISTORY 130 An Introduction to World History Major themes in world history: empire and imperialism, environmental impacts, global trade and globalization, war, migration, gender, race, religion, nationalism, and class. This course focuses on three large questions: 1. What are the origins of human civilization? 2. How did human civilization become diverse and differentiated in the various (sub) continents of the world? 3. How can we understand the emergence of the modern world? Tue•Thu 4:00–5:15 pm 1101 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 4 Instructor: Andre Wink level: Elementary • breadth: Humanities Social Science HISTORY 200/ENVIR ST 404 Animals in World History Animals are everywhere in human history, although we do not often credit them as important historical players. In this class, nonhumans are not supporting characters, but move to center stage to highlight the multiple ways in which human history rests on the backs of animals. This class offers a broad survey of human relationships with animals across various world regions and historical time periods. Rather than a comprehensive study, we will focus on historical case studies of particular animals and species across four themes: agriculture and food; cosmol ogy and human identity; the environmental history of empire; and conservation and animal rights. We’ll explore animal symbols, from Native American totems to Bucky Badger; the work animals do as laborers in places as distinct as farms and outer space; and how certain animals pets, livestock, conservation icons come to be highly valued while others are not. Some of the questions we’ll address include: What roles do animals play in constructing human identity and social organization? How does the biology and ecology of different species shape patterns of economic development? How are animal-focused political movements redefining how we relate to nonhumans? Tue•Thu 11:00 am-12:15 pm 175 SCIENCE HALL Instructor: Elizabeth Hennessy level: Intermediate HISTORY 200 Muhammad and the Early Arab Conquests Mon 3:30–5:25 pm 5255 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING Instructor: Michael Chamberlain level: Intermediate RELIG ST 200 Goddess: The Divine Feminine in India This course examines the principle expressions of the theology and ritual worship of the Goddess in India in order to understand how the gendering of divinity affects theological speculation, religious experience, and embodied religious identity. Tue 1:20–3:15 pm 2104 CHAMBERLIN HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Elaine Fisher level: Elementary • breadth: Humanities RELIG ST 200 The Religion of Anime Gods, demons, and priests populate the storyboards of anime; apocalypse, spirit possession, and the use of supernatural powers drive many anime plots. This course uses the anime medium to explore trends in contemporary Japanese religions through formal analysis of directorial style, ethnographic study of anime producers and consumers, and examinations of anime (and some manga) produced by lay directors and religious organizations. The course covers films by directors such as Miyazaki Hayao, Takahata Isao, Kon Satoshi, and Ōtomo Katsuhiro; it also features readings in cutting-edge research on relationships between visual media and religion. Tue•Thu 4:00–5:15 pm 5231 SEWELL SOCIAL SCIENCES credits: 3 credits: 3 credits: 3 Instructor: Jolyon Thomas level: Elementary • breadth: Humanities This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 3 of 16 HISTORY/RELIG ST 212 The History of Western Christianity to 1750 A survey of Christianity from being a small, persecuted sect in the Roman Empire to becoming the dominant religion of western Europe, penetrating into the lives of Europeans, fissuring into multiple churches, and spreading across the globe. Attention is given to doctrine, ritual, worship, architecture, images, and music. In its first eight hundred years, Christianity grew from a small persecuted sect in the Roman Empire to the dominant religion in western Europe. The next millennium witnessed its deep penetration into the lives of Europeans, its fissuring into multiple churches, and their spread across the globe. This course will explore Christianity as it was defined and redefined over its first 17 centuries. It will explore the ways that Christians, over time, understood the life of Christ and his teachings the ways in which his life was to serve as a model, the relationship between his preaching and formal doctrine. It will explore the rituals Christians articulated over time, the architecture they designed as sites of worship, images, music, and performances. Tue•Thu 8:00–9:15 am 1221 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 4 Instructor: Lee Wandel level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities Social Science HISTORY 225 Global Islams: History of Multiple Muslim Modernities Mon•Wed•Fri 12:00–12:55 pm L155 EDUCATION BUILDING credits: 3–4 E ASIAN/LCA/RELIG ST 235 Genres of Asian Religious Writing Writing intensive course based on the conventions in which Asian writers have expressed religious ideas. Readings introduce major Asian religious traditions and expressive genres. Mon•Wed 1:20–2:10 pm 6101 SEWELL SOCIAL SCIENCES credits: 3 Instructor: Mark Meulenbeld level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities LCA 236 Indonesia: Writing Stories The Republic of Indonesia, which gained its independence in 1949, is now an emerging global player as the fourth most populous nation and the largest Muslim majority nation in the world. Indonesia offers a rich spectrum of cultural and religious diversity. This course explores the cultural diversity through readings of short stories, films, and articles while incorporating writing and speaking tasks to improve communication skills. An introduction to the history of Indonesia briefly examines the colonial and early independence periods, the course then focuses on cultural expressions found in stories and films of the post-Suharto era (post-1998), also known as the Reform Era. Indonesian cultures have traditionally been seen as most clearly defined by ethno-linguistic loyalties, but in contemporary times the powerful forces are cutting across these alliances, reshaping Indonesian cultures based on education and access to new communication technology that creates a globalized nation that reshapes the roles of women and the voices of religious communities. Tue•Thu 11:00 am–12:15 pm level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities 378 VAN HISE HALL JEWISH 230 Representing Holocaust in Poland: Ethical Issues credits: 3 Instructor: Ellen Rafferty level: Elementary Tue•Thu 4:00–5:15 pm 494 VAN HISE HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Halina Filipowicz level: Elementary • breadth: Literature This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 4 of 16 ENGL 241 Literature and Culture I: to the Eighteenth Century What is a person, a home, a nation, a world? What we now call “English literature” begins with these questions, imagining a cosmos filled with gods and heroes, liars and thieves, angels and demons, dragons and dungeons, whores and witches, drunken stupor and religious ecstasy. Authors crafted answers to these questions using technologies of writing from parchment to the printing press, and genres old and new, from epic and romance to drama and the sonnet. Mon•Wed 9:55–10:45 am 19 INGRAHAM HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Lisa Cooper level: Intermediate • breadth: Literature ENGL 242 Literature and Culture II: from the Eighteenth Century to the Present This course considers a period of unparalleled tumult: a time of vast world empires and startling new technologies, revolutions that radically redefined self and community, two cataclysmic world wars, the emergence of ideas of human rights, and the first truly global feelings of interconnectedness. How has literature captured and contributed to these dramatic upheavals? Some writers worldwide have struggled to invent new forms, new words, and new genres to do justice to a world in crisis, while others have reached back in time, seeking continuity with the past. We will explore enduring traditions of poetry and drama and think about experiments in the new, globally popular genre of the novel. Since the mid-eighteenth century, “prose” has denoted less a mode of writing, and more an acquired taste for freedom from form. Think of a writing assignment without rules: how it entails both infinite freedom and the lack of direction that such infinity entails. All the authors we will read in this class, despite their different choices of genre and style, and despite the diversity of their prejudices, come out of a sensibility we could think of broadly as prosaic. Because of this, we will discuss the readings not as finished products but as meaningful outcomes of processes of aesthetic deliberation. We will imagine the authors asking: “What structure to adopt, what frame to impose, what rules to flaunt, how much freedom to forfeit to find the form to speak through the words? To make the case for unconditional love in a novel, should I suspend my plot line or tighten the grip of suspense? If the heroine of my story is to have her cake and eat too, should she be more of a doer than a talker, or should she be mostly a thinker? Will my poem best express rage, or shame, or insight through order or disorder? As a postcolonial or immigrant writer, should my English be unmarked or accented, dissonant or all the way “rotten?” From Romantic poetry, to the novel of manners, to Gothic fiction—from the literature of colonialism to high modernism to the postcolonial diaspora—we’ll examine the works of writers drawn in by the impossible promise of prose: the potential for certainty and uncertainty, the mixture of decision and indecision. And we’ll reflect on their effects on us as readers. Tue•Thu 9:55–10:45 am 1520 MICROBIAL SCIENCES credits: 3 Instructor: Nirvana Tanouhki level: Intermediate • breadth: Literature ENGL 245 Growing Up Global: Youth, Happiness, and the Postcolonial Bildungsroman How does one grow up to find happiness? The bildungsroman, or plot of “coming to age,” is a genre of the Western novel that arose in the late eighteenth century to answer precisely that question by using stories of young protagonists’ development to examine what leads to happiness. In this class, we will familiarize ourselves with early influential models of the bildungsroman, then look to non-Western narratives of youth as a possible source of different cultural conceptions of the connection between youth and happy living. First, we will analyze works of fiction considered seminal of the Western bildungsroman, by authors from the Anglo-American tradition (Germany, Britain, and the United States), to grasp the meanings and expectations that Western culture has attached to youth as a formative period of an individual’s life. With this in mind, we will turn to narratives of youth from the postcolonial world, mainly from Africa, by writers from Egypt, Nigeria, Sudan, Senegal, Zimbabwe, and South Africa. These This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 5 of 16 works we will tentatively call “postcolonial bildungsromane.” We will examine the artistic choices in postcolonial bildungsromane and reflect on whatever might strike us, individually or jointly, as a significant similarity or difference to the Western model. In short, we will be engaging in a cross-cultural exploration of the connection between youth and happiness, and the variety of ways in which literature negotiates aesthetically between often conflicting values like freedom (of choice) and responsibility, or potentially contradictory ideals like adventurousness and practicality. Our cultural interpretation and reinterpretations of youth will lead us to evaluate conceptions of the happy life, good citizenship, and participatory membership in a democratic society. Along the way, if less directly, we will periodically turn to broader questions, like: What is the value of reading into the stories told around us (and in this case, about us)? What is the value in thinking of ourselves and our culture in comparison to others or another? Tue•Thu 1:00–2:15 pm 2637 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 3 Instructor: Nirvana Tanoukhi level: Intermediate • breadth: Literature Examines how ideology and new policies influenced cultural life in the Third Reich. Topics include propaganda and entertainment films, music, literature and theater, visual arts and architecture, youth education, and consumer culture specifically in its appeal to women. Was Nazi Germany the incarnation of evil in the modern world? Did its culture consist only of propaganda? Why did the Nazi leadership consider art and culture so central to its political goals? Such perceptions arose after World War II, colored by a Cold War tendency to see similarities between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, as well as by the hasty, controversial program of denazification conducted under Allied occupation. In the past 25 years scholars have taken a serious look at Nazi culture and revealed a much more complex set of factors at work in all areas of cultural life. Tue•Thu 4:00–5:15 pm credits: 3 114 VAN HISE HALL HISTORY 279 Literature in Translation: Dante’s Divine Comedy Afro-Atlantic History: 1808 to the Present Tue•Thu 1:00–2:15 pm credits: 3 Instructor: Jelena Todorovic level: Intermediate • breadth: Literature LCA 266 Introduction to the Middle East An interdisciplinary introduction to the diverse cultures, geography, history, modern states, politics, societies, and economies of the Middle East. Since the Middle East is predominantly Muslim, there will be a special emphasis on Islam as a religion and Muslim peoples. Tue•Thu 2:30–3:45 pm 5208 SEWELL SOCIAL SCIENCES Nazi Culture Instructor: Jost Hermand, Marc Silberman level: Elementary • breadth: Humanities LITTRANS/MEDIEVAL/RELIG ST 253 19 INGRAHAM HALL GERMAN 272 credits: 3 The purpose of this course is to increase the student’s knowledge of the issues and problems that have most impacted peoples of the African diaspora in the years since the Haitian Revolution. As such, the focus will be thematic rather than chronological. The primary emphasis will be on the history of political, social, intellectual movements. Topics will include slave resistance, black nationalism, socialism, and anti-colonialism. Other topics to be covered include: the meaning of freedom, the construction of black masculinities, diasporic religious expressions, art and literature, and race and medicine. Tue•Thu 9:30–10:45 am 2650 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 3–4 Instructor: James Sweet level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities Instructor: Uli Schamiloglu level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities Social Science This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 6 of 16 HEBR ST/JEWISH 302 Introduction to Hebrew Literature Continuation of HEBR ST/JEWISH 301. Mon•Wed 4:00–5:15 pm 487 VAN HISE HALL credits: 3 level: Advanced • breadth: Literature ANTHRO 310 Archaeologies of Religion credits: 3 Women and Change in Africa and Middle East Religions of the World A class graded on a credit/no credit basis which addresses various international, cross-cultural, and language topics of interest to the residents of the International Learning Community. credits: 1 Instructor: Joseph Elder level: Intermediate JEWISH/LITTRANS 318 Modern Jewish Literature Pre-modern Jewish society’s breakdown, immigration, the challenges of integration and exclusion, and the establishment of new communities serve as a backdrop for the analysis and comparison of Jewish literary texts written in Hebrew, Yiddish, German, Russian, and English. Mon•Wed 1:00–2:15 pm Instructor: Philip Hollander level: Intermediate • breadth: Literature credits: 3 Instructor: David Ward GEN&WS 320 INTL ST 310 594 VAN HISE HALL Develops awareness and knowledge of cultural influences on business. Focuses on various attitudes toward work, time, material possession, business, and the relationship of these attitudes to different social, religious, philosophical, and educational backgrounds of business people from cultures around the world. 1180 GRAINGER HALL level: Intermediate • breadth: Social Science Thu 5:00–6:00 pm Intercultural Communication in Business Tue•Thu 2:30–3:45 pm Tue•Thu 1:00–2:15 pm 5128 SEWELL SOCIAL SCIENCES GEN BUS/INTL BUS 320 credits: 3–4 The course looks at current topics relating to women in Africa and the Middle East, ranging from political and economic participation, to culture, family, and religion, as well as sexuality and women’s bodies. The course is focused around questions of authority and power and situates each of the topics in a broader historical context. Africa and the Middle East are changing rapidly, with both exciting consequences for women, but also amidst some unprecedented challenges, ranging from terrorism to Ebola. The course provides a context for understanding how the challenges of the day have affected women in particular, but also it provides some all too rare glimpses into the ways in which women are tackling these same challenges. Many of the readings are by women from these regions and video segments also give voice to some of the most interesting women of our time from these regions. The course adopts a multidisciplinary approach, drawing on writings from sociology, anthropology, history, geography, economics, political science and other related fields. The course is attentive to topical concerns affecting women, from climate change to health challenges, as well as women’s political representation, political Islam, civil conflict, and new forms of entrepreneurship and economic empowerment. It looks at ways in which women are changing not only the face of modern institutions This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 7 of 16 like legislatures, but also customary law and traditions, including practices of inheritance, child marriage, and female genital cutting. Tue•Thu 1:00–2:15 pm credits: 3 1313 STERLING HALL Instructor: Aili Tripp level: Intermediate • breadth: Social Science HIST SCI/HISTORY 324 Science in the Enlightenment Development and triumph of Newton’s gravitational law; the conceptual revolution in chemistry; earth history and the move from religious to natural cosmologies. Thu 9:55–10:45 am credits: 3 122 INGRAHAM HALL Instructor: Thomas Broman level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities HEBR ST/JEWISH/LITTRANS/RELIG ST 332 HISTORY 351 Seventeenth-Century Europe This course is about Europe in the seventeenth century— probably the most important century in the making of the modern world. It was during the 1600s that Galileo and Newton founded modern science; that Descartes began modern philosophy; that Hugo Grotius initiated international law; and that Thomas Hobbes and John Locke started modern political theory. In the same century, strong centralized European states entered into worldwide international competition for wealth and power, accelerating the pace of colonization in America and Asia. To gain an edge against other powers in war, European governments invested in research in military technology, and the seventeenth century was consequently an age of military revolution, enabling Europeans from then on to defeat most non-European peoples relatively easily in battle. The course will examine the main social, economic, intellectual, religious, cultural and political developments that occurred in the seventeenth century. Mon•Wed•Fri 1:20–2:10 pm Prophets of the Bible 1641 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING An introduction to the thought, literature, and history of the prophets of ancient Israel (in English). credits: 3–4 Instructor: Johann Sommerville level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities Tue•Thu 11:00 am-12:15 pm 1101 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 4 level: Intermediate • breadth: Literature FOLKLORE/LITTRANS/MEDIEVAL/RELIG ST 342 (IN TRANSLATION); SCAND ST 429 Mythology of Scandinavia First: an introduction to the pagan religion of Scandinavia, with readings in some of the primary sources (eddaic and skaldic poetry, Snorri Sturluson’s Prose Edda, etc.) Second: broadens the definition of mythology to embrace concepts applicable to more recent literature and literary criticism. Tue•Thu 2:30–3:45 pm 104 VAN HISE HALL JEWISH 356 Zionism in Thought, Culture, and Literature: From Inception to the State Representations of Zionism from biblical and medieval times to the rise of Jewish nationalism. Discussion of ideological models with special attention to the Arab issue and to the significance of Zionism in America. Mon•Wed•Fri 11:00–11:50 am credits: 3 223 INGRAHAM HALL Instructor: Rachel Brenner level: Intermediate, Advanced • breadth: Humanities credits: 3–4 Instructor: Scott Mellor level: Advanced • breadth: Literature This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 8 of 16 HISTORY 361 The Emergence of Modern Britain: England 1485–1660 This course will explore a decisive period in the making of modern Britain, and of the western world today. Though the social, economic and intellectual aspects of the period will not be neglected, the main focus of the course will be on political and constitutional change. The course will begin with a broad introduction to early-modern Britain. Then we will examine how the turbulent period of the Wars of the Roses was ended, and how the Tudor monarchy broke the independence of the “over-mighty magnates” of late-medieval England. The Tudors succeeded in introducing far greater unity and centralization than had existed earlier, and this will be the main theme of the first half of the course. Topics discussed will include the Reformation, the so-called “Tudor Revolution in Government,” the bitter factional politics of the court of Henry VIII, the Marian Reaction and the “mid-Tudor crisis,” and the re-establishment of royal power in the reign of Elizabeth—when an unprecedented flowering of English culture took place, and when English sea-power staved off conquest by Catholic Spain. The succession of James, King of Scots to the English throne in 1603, united the Scottish and English monarchies but the new Stuart dynasty was soon faced with grave problems. The second half of the course will examine the ways in which financial, constitutional and religious issues combined to lead to civil war and to the execution of the King and the introduction of a republic in England in 1649. We will also see how the advent of a military despotism and the proliferation of radical ideas led the English to reintroduce monarchy in 1660. Instructor: Johann Sommerville level: Advanced • breadth: Social Science Introduction to Buddhism The basic thought, practices and history of Buddhism, including selflessness and relativity, practices of meditation, merit-making and compassion from both local and translocal perspectives. Includes discussion of Buddhism as a contemporary, North American religion. Mon•Wed 12:05–12:55 pm 3650 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 3 Instructor: Anne Hansen level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities ANTHRO/JEWISH/RELIG ST 372 Jews of Central and Eastern Europe Course will focus on main characteristics of Central and Eastern European Jews (Ashkenazim) in their cultural- historical development. Mon•Wed 2:30–3:45 pm 22 INGRAHAM HALL credits: 3–4 level: Intermediate, Advanced • breadth: Social Science GEN&WS 372 Visualizing Bodies Focuses on the intersections of the visual images of bodies, ethics, and politics from global and feminist perspectives. Students will learn critical approaches to visual media in feminist disability studies to analyze the images of bodies focusing on race, gender, disability, religion, sexuality, and other markers of difference. Tue•Thu 9:30–10:45 am Mon•Wed•Fri 11:00–11:50 am 4028 VILAS HALL E ASIAN/LCA/RELIG ST 364 credits: 3–4 1339 STERLING HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Eunjung Kim level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 9 of 16 COM ARTS/RELIG ST 374 ART HIST 413 The Rhetoric of Religion Rhetorical character of religious controversy and sectarian persuasion in Western religion. Tue•Thu 9:30–10:45 am 4028 VILAS HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Kenneth Lythgoe level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities RELIG ST 400 Christianity: Themes and Variations An exploration of central themes in Christianity (such as Christ, the Church, Prayer, Sin) as they vary yet remained constant across a variety of contexts, historically and globally. Includes discussion with local Christians from a variety of perspectives. Tue 1:20–3:15 pm 394 VAN HISE HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Corrie Norman level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities HEBR ST/JEWISH 402 Topics in Modern Hebrew/Israeli Literature and Culture II Continuation of HEBR ST/JEWISH 401. Instructor: Rachel Brenner level: Advanced • breadth: Literature credits: 3 Tue•Thu 1:00–2:15 pm L150 CONRAD A. ELVEHJEM BUILDING Survey of Old Norse-Icelandic Literature credits: 3 ENGL 422 Eddic and skaldic poetry; homilies and saints’ lives, kings’ sagas, sagas of the Icelanders; mythical-heroic sagas and romances; rimur. Instructor: Kirsten Wolf level: Advanced • breadth: Literature The tenth century CE marked a period of drastic change in the Islamic world, as the unified Islamic caliphate splintered into three rival dynasties: the Sunni Iraqi Abbasids, Spanish Umayyads, and the Shi’ite Fatimids in Egypt. In their quest to dominate the Islamic world and control the Mediterranean, each dynasty openly competed and responded to the others in architectural projects, ceremonial practices and courtly arts. At the same time, the monolithic model of courtly patronage of the arts was replaced gradually by one in which the urban classes increasingly shaped the art market, resulting in new visual forms. This course considers this turning point in the history of Islamic culture through the lens of art and architectural patronage. By exploring the architectural and urban projects of the three dynasties, we will examine competing visions of power, sources of legitimacy and the development of Cairo, Baghdad/Samarra, and Cordoba as capital cities. We will also consider the role of portable arts, addressing the role of exchange and gift-giving in the Mediterranean context and the problems of attribution in this highly mobile environment. Course themes include the role of sectarian identity (Shi’ite vs. Sunni); the incorporation of Christian and Jewish culture; the relation between the court and urban populations; and the meaning of ornament and style in Islamic art. Instructor: Jennifer Pruitt level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities MEDIEVAL/SCAND ST 409 Tue•Thu 11:00 am–12:15 pm Art and Architecture in the Age of the Caliphs credits: 3 Pleasure and Danger: Seneca What does Seneca, a Roman politician have to do with today’s selfies and blog posts? Why would a wealthy man whose business decisions caused a revolution in Roman Britain argue very persuasively that pleasure comes from living a simple life? How did Seneca’s plays (which either explored or celebrated cannibalism, incest, infanticide, matricide, parricide, and other taboos) influence Shakespearean drama? Why did the early Church fathers This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 10 of 16 think of Seneca as a Christian, associating him with Saint Paul? Why would Emperor Nero order Seneca, his teacher and prime minister, to kill himself? Why would a renaissance priest think Seneca’s manual on rhetoric (with exercises like: Law calls for a rapist to die or marry, according to the wishes of the victim; a man raped two women in the same night, one wishes him dead, the other wants to marry him; what should happen?) to be an appropriate textbook for middle school boys? Find the answers when you explore the pleasures and dangers of Senecan literature. We will explore sexuality, sensuality, morality, philosophy, and education, through selected reading of Seneca, English renaissance writers, and contemporary writers. Along the way, we also will explore modern and contemporary genres that emerged from Seneca’s own writing, such as the familiar letter, the essay, the blog post, and the monologue. Mon•Wed•Fri 1:20–2:10 pm L185 EDUCATION BUILDING credits: 3 Instructor: Ronald Harris level: Intermediate • breadth: Literature ENGL/MEDIEVAL 423 Medieval Marvels and Monstrosities We will explore what it is that we have feared, and why it is that we so enjoy, and even desire, to confront evil. From green men, to werewolves, to dragons, medieval literature was filled with monstrous beings who challenged the division between human and non-human, and between society and the mysterious world that existed outside it. Like monsters, marvels occupied a space beyond the boundaries of the normal human world. One reincarnated being with excessive strength might be seen as a ferocious heathen zombie, while another reincarnated being who lives in the trees might be worshipped as a Christian saint. With readings drawn from a wide variety of medieval genres and contexts, including Old and Middle English as well as Scandinavian literature, topics will include race, gender, animals, and the nature of belief. No previous experience with medieval literature is required. Tue•Thu 11:00 am-12:15 pm 104 RUSSELL LABORATORIES credits: 3 ENGL/MEDIEVAL 427 Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales: The Shock of the Old Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales is one of the best literary bridges we have between our medieval past and our modern present. Once you actually get into it, Chaucer’s poetry proves to be some of the funniest, raunchiest, most socially scathing and radically experimental poetry ever written in English. You would be surprised. You will be surprised. Through this course you will build a working knowledge of selections of Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales, and develop an understanding of Middle English culture and language through a careful reading and discussion that allows us to take our time with each work. The textual, cultural and political issues important to Chaucer will be revealed, as will his medieval wit, humor, and literary avant-gardism, along with a few seriously NSFW passages. An introduction to the most famous and influential medieval English poet through his best-known work and its playful and profound responses to some of the most pressing literary, social, political, and spiritual issues of his time. Readings will be in the original Middle English; no prior experience with the language is required. Tue•Thu 9:30–10:45 am 1152 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING credits: 3 Instructor: Martin Foys level: Intermediate • breadth: Literature AMER IND/ANTHRO/FOLKLORE 431 American Indian Folklore An introduction to the genres of American Indian Folklore. Special attention is given to creation stories, trickster tales, and the relationship between folklore and historical memory. Mon•Wed 2:30–3:45 pm 120 INGRAHAM HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Theresa Schenck level: Intermediate, Advanced Instructor: Jordan Zweck level: Intermediate, Advanced • breadth: Literature This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 11 of 16 ENGL/RELIG ST 434 FOLKLORE 451 Milton The Supernatural in the Modern World Mon 6:00–8:30 pm 2637 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 3 Instructor: David Loewenstein level: Intermediate • breadth: Literature Mon•Wed•Fri 9:55–10:45 am HISTORY/RELIG ST 439 Islamic History from the Origin of Islam to the Ottoman Empire Political action and organization in medieval Islam (ca 600–1500), with focus on selected states. Mon•Wed•Fri 1:20–2:10 pm 1111 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 3–4 Instructor: Michael Chamberlain level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities MEDIEVAL/RELIG ST 440 Francis of Assisi: Literature and the Arts Focus on accounts of St. Francis’s life as written by medieval authors (e.g., Bonaventure of Bagnoregio, Thomas of Celano, the Franciscan Brother Leo) as well as works written by Francis himself. Examination of the relevance of Francis’s teachings to contemporary reflections regarding relationships with the Other, the environment, and animals. Discussion of issues related to religion, politics, bio-politics, and environmental studies. Mon•Wed•Fri 12:05–12:55 pm 4308 SEWELL SOCIAL SCIENCES Instructor: Ernesto Livorni level: Intermediate • breadth: Literature Explores evidence of belief in the supernatural in the modern world as it appears in the context of folk religion, folk medicine, legends, folk drama, ritual and custom, and media accounts and presentations. credits: 3 224 INGRAHAM HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Ruth Olson level: Intermediate, Advanced HISTORY/LCA 458 History of Southeast Asia Since 1800 This course explores the modern history of Southeast Asia, a region remarkable for upheaval that has shaped and been shaped by the modern world order. Instead of narratives about individual nations, the course analyzes major changes across the whole Southeast Asia region throughout the modern period including the conquest of traditional kingdoms, colonial subjugation, the impact of World War II, national revolutions, and the emergence of new nations. To lend substance to these broad topics, lectures will explore global themes with case studies of individual countries, from 1800 through the present. As the most intensely colonized region in the world, Southeast Asia offers an ideal arena for exploring the transformative impact of European empires upon indigenous societies worldwide. Through such study we can see imperialism as a Promethean fire that shaped the modern world, producing both independent nations and an interdependent global economy. With all the world’s major religions, an extraordinary ethnic diversity, a past with both ancient empires and colonial conquest, and a present of war and revolution, democracy and dictatorship, Southeast Asia has inspired a fascinating literature by famous scholars whose sum is nothing less than an inquiry into the making of the modern world. Tue•Thu 2:30–3:45 pm 4028 VILAS HALL credits: 3–4 Instructor: Alfred McCoy level: Intermediate • breadth: Social Science This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 12 of 16 HISTORY 475 European Social History: 1914 to the Present In twentieth century Europe politics and society became intertwined as never before. Not only did war and political conflict shape daily life throughout the century; but social and economic issues, from mass unemployment and commercialization to gender relations and urban transformation, also called forth state action. The study of social history in the past century therefore demands close attention to the scope and nature of political power, and to the ideologies that envisioned how power was to be distributed, and how societies were to be remade. What were the major ideologies of twentieth century Europe? How did they imagine the societies over which they laid claim? To what social conflicts and trends did they respond? How did identities based on class, nation, gender, race, religion, generation, and locale relate to ideological reflection, society, and political practice? Mon•Wed 2:30–3:45 pm 1217 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING Thu 1:20–3:15 pm 5255 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 3–4 Instructor: Rudy Koshar level: Intermediate • breadth: Social Science credits: 3 Instructor: Kathryn Ciancia level: Advanced HISTORY/LEGAL ST 510 AFRICAN 500 Language and Society in Africa Language use in African societies; multilingualism; language in politics, religion, socialization. Tue 1:20–3:15 pm 394 VAN HISE HALL mans, Russians, Poles, British, French, Jews, and Armenians, while at the same time questioning these national and ethnic categories. The course is divided into three parts. Part I focuses on mass migrations from the mid-nineteenth century to World War I. How did states promote or discourage population movement and how did ordinary people develop networks to deal with the challenges of migration? In Part II, we’ll look at the period between 1914 and 1948 when millions of people were forced from their homelands into new environments. What did it mean to be a refugee and how did narratives of diaspora emerge in the United States and elsewhere? Part III takes us from World War II to the present day. How did the Cold War, decolonization, and today’s “borderless” world affect people’s experiences and perceptions of global mobility? The class encourages students to explore multiple perspectives and disciplines with a particular focus on how migration intersected with international politics and perceptions of gender, race, ethnicity, and social class. credits: 3–4 Instructor: Katrina Thompson level: Intermediate, Advanced • breadth: Humanities HISTORY 500/891 Migrants, Refugees, and Border-Crossers in Modern Europe This class explores the transnational histories of migration, diaspora, and refugees from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day, with a particular focus on movements to, from, and within Europe. We will discuss theoretical approaches and a range of case studies about diverse groups around the globe, including Italians, Ger- Legal Pluralism Historical and anthropological perspectives on non-state “law,” or systems of rules generated by normative orders that lay beyond the state; case studies include the mafia, Tokyo tuna traders’ court, orthodox Jewish diamond merchants, California gold miners’ courts, and Inuit song dueling. Tue•Thu 9:30–10:45 am 6116 SEWELL SOCIAL SCIENCES credits: 3 Instructor: Mitra Sharafi level: Advanced • breadth: Social Science HEBR ST/JEWISH 514 Biblical Texts, Poetry Continuation of HEBR ST/JEWISH 513. Tue•Thu 8:25–9:40 am 1051 VAN HISE HALL credits: 3 level: Advanced • breadth: Literature This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 13 of 16 ART HIST 515/815 HIST SCI/HISTORY/MED HIST/MEDIEVAL/S&A PHM 562 Cross-Cultural Encounters in Islamic Art Byzantine Medicine and Pharmacy Thu 4:15–6:15 pm L166 CONRAD A. ELVEHJEM BUILDING credits: 3 Instructor: Jennifer Pruitt level: Intermediate, Advanced • breadth: Humanities Byzantine and Islamic medicine and drug lore from Oribasius to the beginnings of the Italian Renaissance (c. 350 to c. 1400 A.D.). Tue•Thu 2:30–3:45 pm credits: 3 2002 RENNEBOHM HALL Instructor: John Scarborough level: Intermediate, Advanced • breadth: Humanities CURRIC/HISTORY/JEWISH 515 Holocaust: History, Memory, and Education HISTORY 600 This course explores the ways in which Holocaust history, memory, and education are mutually entangled, politically charged, and morally complex. Using primarily American sites of memory, students will critically analyze a variety of representations of the Shoah, in literature, films, memoirs, monuments, museums, and classrooms. This course is intended to introduce students to the central historical developments of law in the European Middle Ages. Materials for the course will span from the dissolution of the Roman Empire and the last gasps of imperial codification in the fifth and sixth centuries until the late appearance of the great medieval legal traditions, i.e., the common law of England and the Roman-canonical tradition of the European continent. Our primary focus will be on law as an aspect of human community. Hence, we will be concerned with rules of laws (e.g. whether you could marry your first cousin in thirteenth-century France, or the required number of days you had to wait before attacking your enemy in his home in ninth-century Britain), but also with the broader social implications of such laws. We will be concerned primarily with what made these laws intelligible in their own age. By implication, we might occasionally learn something important about ourselves as well. Mon•Wed•Fri 9:55–10:45 am Fri 12:00–3:00 pm 223 INGRAHAM HALL; 215 TEACHER ED credits: 3 Instructor: Rachel Brenner level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities Social Science CLASSICS/HISTORY/RELIG ST 517 Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean Ancient religions in their political, social and cultural contexts; topics include ritual, literary and artistic representations, religious persecutions, and/or modern approaches to the study of ancient religions. Chronological and geographical focus will vary between Greece, Rome, Judaea, and Egypt. Tue•Thu 9:55–10:45 am 1106 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING Instructor: Jeffrey Beneker level: Intermediate • breadth: Humanities credits: 3 Law and Society in Medieval Europe Mon 11:00 am-12:55 pm 5257 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 3 Instructor: Karl Shoemaker level: Advanced • breadth: Humanities Social Science HISTORY 600 Religion and the Enlightenment The intellectual movement termed “the Enlightenment” has often been associated with secularism and an assault on traditional religion. Responding to a century of religious warfare and confessional strife, European thinkers in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries drew on new concepts of authority, nature, knowledge, and the self to This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 14 of 16 reassess religion and its place in society. While some put forth secular alternatives, other Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish thinkers adopted Enlightenment critiques and insights to update and renew their religious traditions. This course introduces students both to some key writings from the period and to recent scholarly work from a vital and fascinating field of historical research. After familiarizing ourselves with some classic accounts of the Enlightenment, we will consider how current scholarship is opening up fresh perspectives and telling new stories about the place of religion in the “age of reason.” Among other things, we will read work on demonology and exorcism, miracles, biblical scholarship, religious toleration, and church-state relations. Tue 8:50–10:45 am 5255 MOSSE HUMANITIES BUILDING credits: 3 Instructor: Eric Carlsson level: Advanced • breadth: Humanities Social Science Tue 9:00 am–12:00 pm 1080 GRAINGER HALL Religion in Critical Perspective Readings in the analysis of religion as a human phenomenon from various perspectives, such as: skeptical and sympathetic views toward religion; theories of religion’s origins and functions; and examinations of religious awe. Fri 9:00–11:00 am credits: 3 Instructor: Ulrich Rosenhagen level: Advanced POLI SCI 631 Arab-Israeli Conflict This class will provide an in-depth understanding of the Arab-Israeli conflict and it evolution over time. Our goal is to develop an appreciation of the complexities and dynamism of this conflict through an examination of its origins, the actors involved, and the key historical and political factors that have shaped it. T 1:20–3:15 pm credits: 3–4 Instructor: Nadav Shelef level: Advanced • breadth: Social Science LCA 640 Proseminar in Central Asian History Introduction to the historiography of the Golden Horde and the Tatar, Kazak, and Uzbek nations; impact on Russia; Russian colonialism in Central Asia; innovative approaches to social and economic history. Wed 2:30–5:00 pm 574 VAN HISE HALL ED POL/HISTORY 622 credits: 3 Instructor: Adam Nelson level: Advanced • breadth: Humanities Social Science 6109 SEWELL SOCIAL SCIENCES RELIG ST 600 4314 SEWELL SOCIAL SCIENCES intellectual history of diverse educational experiments, including experiments related to socialism, abolitionism, anarchism, and religious fundamentalism. credits: 3 Instructor: Uli Schamiloglu level: Advanced • breadth: Humanities History of Radical and Experimental Education in the United States and E ASIAN 662 United Kingdom History of Chinese Thought, Part 2 Examines the comparative history of radical and experimental education in the United States and United Kingdom since 1800. It focuses on the social, cultural, and The second half of a two-course sequence promoting a familiarity with the fundamentals of Chinese thought, philosophical and religious. The focus is on the dynastic This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 15 of 16 period, from Qin Han through Qing, emphasizing the cross-fertilization between traditions and the role of commentary. Mon•Wed 4:00–5:15 pm Thu 7:45–10:45 am credits: 3 1351 VAN HISE HALL Instructor: Mark Meulenbeld level: Advanced credits: 3 ENGL 806 Blake and Visuality Classical Hebrew Linguistics: Historical and Descriptive The phonology, morphology, and syntax of biblical Hebrew, viewed from historical and descriptive linguistic perspectives. Mon•Wed 11:00 am-12:15 pm credits: 3 Instructor: Jeremy Hutton LAW 740 Constitutional Law II Rights of citizens against state and federal governments; the nature of due process and the equal protection of the law; the protection of freedom from invidious discrimination; the Civil Rights Acts; freedoms of expression, association, and religion. Mon•Wed 10:30–11:50 am or Tue•Thu 2:40–4:00 pm 2211 LAW BUILDING 3260 LAW BUILDING L177 EDUCATION BUILDING Instructor: Amy Stambach HEBR ST 723 1051 VAN HISE HALL national rivalries. Problems of nation-building, popular participation, and human resource development; educational planning and international cooperation. credits: 2–4 Instructor: Asifa Quraishi-Landes, Ann Althouse ED POL 750 African Education: Past, Present and Future Survey of indigenous and introduced forms of African education, formal and informal, in comparative format. The impact of Islam and Christianity on traditional educational styles. The struggle for modernity and cultural autonomy within the context of imperialism and inter- Perhaps the best way to describe this seminar is to say that it will offer an introductory, graduate-level immersion in the poetry and visual media that Blake developed to convey his fourfold understanding of the world and its beings. That world includes the materiality of romantic era print culture: Blake was a professional engraver who illustrated most of his poems and he experimented in tempera, watercolor and other color printing media and his vision of possibility and revolution, which never really settled into a single pattern. You will enter magical places that defy simple geographical description, and verse forms that are by turns simple and surprising. Blake’s poems, places, and the beings that create or inhabit them have many dimensions. They all embody Blake’s view of the failures (and future possibilities) created by institutional, religious and individual repressions. We will approach this body of work by beginning with Blake’s early, not yet quite prophetic, poems and then move into his great works, which he called prophecies but which we might also read as wary of prophecy. In Blake we encounter a poet whose puns are visual as well as verbal, whose mythological creatures move and declaim in extraordinary ways, and an artist-poet whose visions, in the mind, and mostly on paper, constitute a radical invitation to reading them. In every seminar session we will think collectively about how Blake’s visuality belongs to the textual arguments he creates. All work for this seminar will be doubly bound to texts and images. Blake’s art and poetics are steeped in the world and historical moment he inhabited: London, the promise, then disappointment of the French Revolution, slavery, hope for the new Americas, and the task of imagining new worlds. Tue 10:00 am–12:30 pm 6171 HELEN C. WHITE HALL Instructor: Theresa Kelley credits: 3 This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu page 16 of 16 ELPA 840 LAW 940 Public School Law Legal aspects of public K-12 education. Legal structure; employee rights; employee discipline; curriculum; students’ rights; student discipline, special education; torts; contracts, religion. Impact of federal and state constitutions, statutes, and court decisions on education. Wed 6:00–8:30 pm Instructor: Julie Mead credits: 3 Law and Contemporary Problems: Introduction to Islamic Law Tue 9:50–11:50 am 5229 LAW BUILDING credits: 3 Instructor: Asifa Quraishi-Landes POLI SCI 948 Religion and Politics AFRICAN 901 Imagining Islam This seminar asks how Islam is represented in literature and other arts. How have people in Africa and the Middle East depicted, discussed, and written systems of belief? Why is there such a fervent interest in Islam now? What is the relationship between “Islamic literature” on one hand and, on the other, literature about the religion? Finally, how do educational institutions such as this university become actively involved in representing Islam and Muslims around the world? To respond to these questions, we will investigate sources from Africa, the Middle East, and the African diaspora. The focus will be on the modern era but readings will include a sampling of medieval Islamic discourse as well. Authors, directors, and theorists to include Talal Asad, Mariama Bâ, Tahar Ben Jelloun, Abdulrazak Gurnah, Abdel-Hakim Kassem, Saba Mahmood, and Ousmane Sembène. What is the relationship between religion and politics? This course examines the meanings of, and interactions between, religion and politics in comparative politics and international relations. At the center of the course are questions about the impact religion has on wide range of politically relevant outcomes and the mechanisms through which religion shapes those outcomes. The course provides an overview of the main theoretical, conceptual, and empirical studies of religion and politics. The course pays particular attention to the interaction of religion and democracy, and the relationship between religion and conflict. Thu 1:20–3:15 pm 422 NORTH HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Nadav Shelef level: Advanced Wed 3:30–5:30 pm 219 VAN HISE HALL credits: 3 Instructor: Samuel England This list was produced by the UW Lubar Institute for the Study of the Abrahamic Religions lubar.wisc.edu
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