Sponsors Type
Academic
Country
United States
 Contact Info
Phone
(404) 727-7598
Fax
(404) 727-7597
Email
religion@emory.edu
Address
S214 Callaway Center, 537 Kilgo Circle
Last modified on 2024-12-04 07:14:24
Description
Welcome to the Department of Religion Religion shapes the lives of individuals in ways that relate in many different ways to culture, law, health, politics, and art. These influences are not always mutual, visible, and at times even desirable. During the early decades of Emory University at Oxford, research and teaching of Religion focused primarily on the study of theology. Currently, our department is a place where scholars of all ages and ranks raise a host of different questions about the central role of religion in everyday life. GOALS FOR RELIGION STUDY The Department of Religion has set forth six major goals that shape its teaching and scholarly work. THE RELIGION MAJOR IS DESIGNED TO ENABLE STUDENTS: - To gain exposure to multiple religious traditions and cultures in their specific geographical, historical, and/or contemporary contexts. - To gain in-depth knowledge of at least one religious tradition. - To investigate multiple sources of religious life, including texts, practices, beliefs, and material and visual culture. - To explore religious life and culture through various approaches: historical, philosophical, theological, ethical, sociological, exegetical, ethnographic, political, psychological, and others. - To understand "religion" as an analytical concept that has been subject to multiple definitional debates and has played a key role in the development of the social sciences and humanities. - To study how communities create systems of value in order to reflect critically on the challenges of modern citizens and consumers and to imagine opportunities for creative cultural and political engagement. In order to accomplish these objectives, the Department of Religion offers general students, majors, and minors a curriculum of studies at introductory and advanced levels in the history of religious traditions and the relations between religions, societies, ideas, values, attitudes and artistic expressions. This curriculum includes a broad, cross-cultural, and interdisciplinary array of courses inquiring into Christian, Jewish, Hindu, Buddhist, and Muslim religious traditions. In addition, thematic courses take up common human issues and explore them from the perspectives of diverse religious traditions. Students are given opportunities to study religion abroad.
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