"Our aim is to help students learn to analyze and to think, write, and speak clearly. If you are interested in exploring what really matters to people, both historically and in the contemporary world, this is the major for you."
Dr. Charles Orzech,
Former Department Head
A major in Religious Studies is both exciting and practical. Religion is a key component of every culture, and a major in Religious Studies involves wide-ranging reading in literature, history, politics, and social systems. Religious Studies not only prepares students for graduate study and teaching in the field, or for professional service within religious organizations, it also provides skills that lead to careers in a wide variety of areas.
As a major you will study the history of your own and others' religious traditions, rituals and social practices; the political, cultural, and economic impact of religion; and the varieties of religious ethics. You will also learn to read critically, write persuasively, and speak with force.The Department teaches courses on such traditions as Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, Shinto, and Taoism. Historical studies include courses about religions of Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Europe, and America. Theoretical studies include courses on religious philosophy, religious ethics, and theology, as well as political, social, and psychological approaches to religion. Cultural studies include courses that investigate the role religion plays in politics, economics, social movements, and the arts and sciences.
The Department of Religious Studies:
On completion of the major students will:
With regard to the goals of clear analysis, writing, and speaking, department courses focus strongly on the close reading and analysis of texts and the understanding of the social, political, and religious contexts of those texts. Our classes involve substantial written and spoken participation and virtually all upper-division courses are writing intensive. The department also plans to offer a number of speaking intensive courses as well.
See the Registrar's complete listing for the Religious Studies Major.
Required: 122 semester hours, to include at least 36 hours at or above the 300 course level .
Requirements
Students in this program must also complete additional General Education requirements in several categories established by the College of Arts and Sciences for its programs. These additional requirements are described in the university catalog. Courses meeting the additional College requirements are in the university catalog. The College requires four writing intensive courses as described in the university catalog.
Major Requirements
See the Registrar's complete listing for the Religious Studies Double Major.
Requirements for the Religious Studies double-major are the same as for the major.
See the Registrar's complete listing for the Religious Studies Minor.
The Religious Studies Minor complements majors in a variety of fields in the humanities and social sciences; for others, it provides a way to focus various disciplines in the humanities on a profoundly significant part of cultures around the world. The minor consists of 18 semester hours including two courses in Traditions and Historical Studies and Cultural and Theoretical Studies.
Recent Religious Studies graduates have attended graduate programs at Princeton, Columbia, Duke, Emory, Harvard, Princeton Theological Seminary, Union Theological Seminary, University of Chicago, University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Wake Forest, and Yale.
Our majors have gone on to a number of careers, including: