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H-AmRel Syllabi

Syllabi in American Religious History
INDIVIDUAL COURSES

 
 
Religious Life in the United States (Religion 166)
Prof. Terry Matthews
Wake Forest University
http://www.wfu.edu/~matthetl/perspectives/index.html
"This course is designed to give the student a feel for the rich diversity of religious experience in the United States. It also will serve as a a resource for helping the student appreciate the impact religion has had on our nation's history and culture, and how various faith traditions have been shaped, in turn, by their encounter with America."


 

Religion in American History (History 401)
Prof. Paul Harris
Moorhead State University
http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~amrel/links/401.html
"The Senior Seminar is designed as a capstone experience for History and Social Studies majors, bringing together critical thinking, research, and communication skills for a major thesis project. In conjunction with that project, you will also learn about major themes in U.S. religious history through readings and discussion."

 

 

Religion in American History (History 435)
Prof. Gregory Holmes Singleton
Northeastern Illinois University
http://www.neiu.edu/~ghsingle/435.htm
"Through a consideration of representative scholarship, we will explore the complex and fascinating world at the intersection of religion and public life in American history. We will particularly probe the "mainstream" and the "periphery" in the public aspects of religious life in the United States in order to a) determine if these two general categories have any useful meaning and b) if so, what that might tell us about public life in the United States ge nerally."

 

 

American Religious History (HS 361)
Prof. Jeffrey B. Webb
Huntington College
http://www.huntington.edu/history/HS361/syllabus.htm
"This course examines the origins and development of Christianity in America from the colonial period to the present. Featured topics include the Continental and English roots of Puritanism and Anabaptism, the formation and history of the Christian commonwealths of New England, the causes and consequences of the Great Awakening, the influence of Jonathan Edwards, the relation between Christianity and the founding of the American republic, the nature of 19th century Evangelicalism and the formation of American denominations, the emergence of theological liberalism and the Social Gospel, the course of the fundamentalist / modernist controversy, and the situation of Protestant Christianity in the late 20th cen tury. Students will write several papers, including a paper based on original research, and exams are of the essay variety."


 

Religious Experience in America (History 43.11CD / American Studies 62CD)
Prof. Donald F. M. Gerardi
Brooklyn College
http://academic.brooklyn.cuny.edu/history/dfg/amrl/arx-main.htm
"This course explores the wide range of religious responses Americans have made to the changing conditions of life in this country, the connections between religion and dominant American values, and the rel igious forms of dissent from mainstream American culture."


 

U.S. Religious History, 1500-1900 (History 353)
Prof. Paul harvey
University of Colorado
http://web.uccs.edu/~history/fall2000websites/hist353/353syllabus.htm


 

Religion in America (History 380F)
Prof. Phyllis Amenda
Binghamton University (SUNY)
http://bingweb.binghamton.edu/~pamenda/index.htm
"Religious movements do not exist in a cultural vacuum. All religious expression is shaped by political, economic, and cultural factors. This course seeks to understand how religion, especially Protestant Chri stianity, has both shaped and been shaped by political, economic, and cultural conditions in the U.S. After doing a brief survey of the development of religion in the antebellum U.S., the course will focus on three case studies of religious reactions to t he urban industrialization in the Gilded Age and the Progressive Era. The three reactions we will look at are the Social Gospel, fundamentalism and pentecostalism. By examining the origins of these three movements in their broader cultural and political c ontext, we can appreciate their unique contributions to American society and their broader global ramifications."


 

Religion and Politics in America (Political Science 603/Religion 603 )
Prof. Timothy J. O'Neill
Southwestern University
http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~amrel/links/oneill.htm
"This course explores the relationship, and occasionally the tension, between religious and political impulses and values in America. Our approach will be both theological and political, analyzing the changes and continuity in religious and political beliefs and structures. Topics include how religion encourages political action (disputes over abolitionism, prohibition, abortion, and nuclear arms), how politics affects religion (religious pluralism, the develo pment of black churches, Mormons and Jehovah Witnesses), and how we are affected by both. Be advised that this is an area in which reasonable people can (and should?) disagree."


 

The Religions of the American Peoples (American Studies 241)
Prof. Peter W. Williams
Miami University
http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~amrel/links/williams1.htm
"Purposes of Course: To provide students with basic knowledge of some of the religious communities in North America outside the historic Protestant "mainstream." To examine the impact of immigration and ethnic ity on the pluralistic character of American culture and society as reflected in its religious communities. To develop skills of analysis and expression."


 

Religious Pluralism in America (American Studies 242 and Comparative Religion 242)
Profs. Peter W. Williams and Lisa J. Poirier
Miami University
http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~amrel/links/williams2.htm
"Purposes of Course: To provide students with basic knowledge of the cultural and religious experience of some of the major ethnic communities in North America whose origins have been primarily non-European. To examine the impact of immigration and ethnicity on the pluralistic character of American culture and society as reflected in its religious communities. To develop skills of analysis and expression."


 

Protestantism and the Development of American Culture (American Studies 341)
Prof. Peter W. Williams
Miami University
http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~amrel/links/williams3.htm
"This course is first designed to describe some of the major varieties or "families" of Protestant Christianity in the United States (and its colonial antecedents) in terms of their origins and historical deve lopments; distinctive beliefs, practices, patterns of worship and of organization; and the sociological and geographical circumstances of their appeal."


 

Nature and Religion in American Society (Religious Studies 451)
Prof. Rachel Miller
Lewis and Clark College
http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~amrel/links/r451-nras.html
"Drawing from primary sources, works of literature and poetry, in conjunction with works of recent scholarship in the fields of history, religious studies and anthropology, this course will explore the intersection of religious beliefs and attitudes towards nature throughout American history, from the seventeenth century to the 1990s."

 

 

American Religious History to the Mid-19th Century (History 451)
Prof. Charles Cohen
University of Wisconsin - Madison
http://www.wisc.edu/history/clc/451syl.html (link is to a PDF)
"Otto von Bismarck once remarked that God has a special providence for drunkards, fools, and the United States. This course may help you determine if his point is valid."


 

Religion in the South (Religion 466)
Prof. Terry Matthews
Wake Forest University
http://www.wfu.edu:/~matthetl/south/
"Hopefully, by the end of the semester, each student will have developed an appreciation of the rich religious history of the South, as well as an awareness of the intellectual, moral, political, social and economic forces that helped mold the region and give it a distinctive ethos. For it was this diversity of culture that served to shape religious experience in the South, and it was religion, in turn, that helped to fashion and mold the values and vision of the region."

 

 

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

AAR Syllabi Project
http://www.wlu.ca/~wwwaar/home.html
 
World Lecture Hall syllabi:  Religious Studies
http://www.utexas.edu/world/lecture/rel/
 
Younger Scholars Program in American Religion (IUPUI)
http://www.iupui.edu/~raac/html/young_scholars.html
 
Religious course syllabi at Syracuse
http://syllabus.syr.edu/REL/ 
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