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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Semester: Fall of every year, Spring of every year, Summer of every year Credits:Variable from 1 to 24 Reenrollment Information: A student may earn a maximum of 99 credits in all enrollments for this course. Restrictions: Open to doctoral students in the Environmental Studies and Applications major. Description: Doctoral dissertation research. Effective Dates: FALL 2004 - Open View all versions of this course
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3.00 Credits
Semester: Fall of every year, Spring of every year Credits:Total Credits: 3 3(0-0) Description: Religion and religions as historical phenomena. Non-textual and textual religions. Theories of the origins and functions of religion. Exemplary voices from various traditions examined in their historical and doctrinal settings. Effective Dates: SUMMER 1997 - Open
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0.00 - 3.00 Credits
Semester: Fall of every year Credits:Total Credits: 3 Lecture/Recitation/Discussion Hours: 3 3(3-0) Description: A critical survey of biblical texts, including the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament, and writings found in the Apocrypha/Deuterocanon, that combine historical and literary analysis with attention to the ancient religious context of this literature. Effective Dates: FALL 2004 - Open
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0.00 - 3.00 Credits
Semester: Fall of every year, Spring of every year Credits:Total Credits: 3 Lecture/Recitation/Discussion Hours: 3 3(3-0) Description: The mythic quest for meaning, identity, value, and transcendence as seen through religious biography and literary narrative. Myth in relation to religious symbols and life-cycle rituals. Cross-cultural perspective on religious world views and the interpretation of myth as sacred narrative. Effective Dates: FALL 1995 - Open
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0.00 - 3.00 Credits
Semester: Fall of every year Credits:Total Credits: 3 Lecture/Recitation/Discussion Hours: 3 3(3-0) Description: History, themes and issues of religions in America from precolonial times to the present. Effective Dates: FALL 2000 - Open View all versions of this course
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0.00 - 3.00 Credits
Semester: Fall of every year Credits:Total Credits: 3 Lecture/Recitation/Discussion Hours: 3 3(3-0) Description: Shamanic practice in different cultural and religious contexts. Ecstatic, cosmological, and performative dimensions. Healing, sacred knowledge, spiritual journeys, sacred space, presence in world religions, patterns of pilgrimage, theoretical debates regarding shamanism. Effective Dates: FALL 1998 - Open
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0.00 - 3.00 Credits
Semester: Fall of every year Credits:Total Credits: 3 Lecture/Recitation/Discussion Hours: 3 3(3-0) Description: Surveys the history of Western esoteric traditions in Europe, England and North America including alchemy, magic, Jewish and Christian mysticisms, and secret or semisecret groups like Freemasonry. Transdisciplinary investigation of religion, science, literature, art and history. Effective Dates: FALL 1999 - Open
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Semester: Fall of every year, Spring of every year Credits:1-4 Reenrollment Information: A student may earn a maximum of 12 credits in all enrollments for this course. Restrictions: Approval of department. Description: Special projects arranged by an individual student and a faculty member in areas supplementing regular course offerings. Effective Dates: FALL 1998 - Open View all versions of this course
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0.00 - 3.00 Credits
Semester: Spring of every year Credits:Total Credits: 3 Lecture/Recitation/Discussion Hours: 3 3(3-0) Restrictions: Not open to freshmen Description: Indigenous forms of spirituality among the Native American peoples. Materials from myth, ritual, ceremonial life, and art as ways of obtaining and sharing religious knowledge. Pervasive spiritual and cosmological themes. Effective Dates: FALL 1998 - Open View all versions of this course
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0.00 - 3.00 Credits
Semester: Fall of every year Credits:Total Credits: 3 Lecture/Recitation/Discussion Hours: 3 3(3-0) Prerequisite: Completion of Tier I Writing Requirement Recommended Background: REL 220 Restrictions: Not open to freshmen and open to undergraduate students in the Jewish Studies Specialization. Description: Jewish life, thought, and institutions. Jewish calendar. Second Temple and Rabbinic periods. Talmud and Midrash. Jewish life in Europe and America. Hasidic, Reform, Orthodox, and Conservative movements. Anti-Semitism, Zionism, and the Holocaust. Current issues. Effective Dates: FALL 2008 - Open View all versions of this course
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