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ACADEMIC PROGRAMS

107

Birmingham-Southern College Catalog 2015-2016

Religion

Bachelor of Arts

Amy C. Cottrill

Religion is a fundamental part of the human experience and an

inextricable dimension of thought, belief, ethics, politics, society, culture,

and the arts. The discipline of religious studies asks how different cultures

have put together the worlds in which they live. Areas of inquiry include

the history of local and global religious traditions, spiritual dimensions

of human experience, religious dimensions of culture, and the place

of religion in society. Ultimately, the study of religion helps students

to understand the complex processes by which individuals and groups

create meaning for themselves and imbue those meanings with power.

Religious studies is inherently intercultural and interdisciplinary, and

creativity and connection are encouraged. The department of religion offers

courses on topics such as ecological spirituality, the cultural context of

the Hebrew Bible, Buddhist meditation, the history of Christian thought,

religion and gender, religion and film, and religion and politics. The

department also offers opportunities to study Hebrew and Sanskrit and

organizes Exploration term study-travel projects to England, India, and the

forests of northern Alabama. All of these offerings share a common focus

on inquiring into the religious worlds that humans create.

Religion students are frequently motivated by concerns about social

justice, curiosity about both familiar and unfamiliar cultures, an interest

in religious experience and practice, and a general desire to understand

people more fully. Because the academic study of religion teaches such

valuable and transferrable skills as critical and creative thinking, effective

and purposeful communication, and rigorous research, religion majors

and minors are prepared upon graduation to pursue a variety of vocations:

graduate work in religious studies or theology, social work, public health,

law, medicine, business, and more.

Upon completion of the religion major, students will be able to

demonstrate a significant familiarity with at least one religious

tradition, recognize its diverse manifestations in particular cultural

contexts, and engage in informed discussion of its history and

practices

interpret “textual religion” and apply the methodologies (linguistic,

literary, sociological, historical, rhetorical, or ideological) that relate

to the critical interpretation of sacred texts and religious writings