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Academic Catalog 2025-26

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Your search for courses · during 26SP · tagged with RELG Pertinent Course · returned 9 results

  • ASST 285 Mapping Japan, the Real and the Imagined 6 credits

    From ancient to present times, Japan drew and redrew its borders, shape, and culture, imagining its place in this world and beyond, its From ancient times to the present, Japan drew and redrew its borders, reimagining its cultural and racial identity, and its place in this world and beyond. This course is a cartographic exploration of this complex and contested history. Cosmological mandalas, hell images, travel brochures, and military maps bring to light Japan’s religious vision, cartographic imagination, and political ambition that dictated its geopolitical expansion and the displacement of minority peoples at home, defining its real and imagined boundaries. We will explore a variety of maps, focusing on those in Carleton’s unique library collection.

    • Spring 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IS, International Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • ACE Theoretical ASST East Asia CL: 200 level EAST Supporting MARS Supporting POSI Elective/Non POSC RELG Pertinent Course RELG XDept Pertinent ASST Humanistic Inquiry DGAH Cross Disciplinary Collaboration RELG Buddhist Traditions DGAH Humanistic Inquiry
    • ASST  285.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Asuka Sango 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THLeighton 236 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • CCST 230 Worlds of Jewish Memory 6 credits

    Transmitting Jewish memory from one generation to the next has always been a treasured practice across the Jewish world. How have pivotal environments for Jews lived on in Jewish collective memory? How do they continue to speak through film, art, photography, music, architecture, museum/ memorial/ summer camp design, prayer, cuisine, and more? We'll compare dynamics of remembering and memorializing several Jewish worlds: ancient Egypt, medieval Spain, early modern Germany, pre- through post-Holocaust Europe and Russia, colonial into contemporary New York City, 1950s Algeria, and pre-State into contemporary Israel. Research projects can include family history explored through scholarship on cross-cultural memory.

    CCST 230 is equivalent to MELA 230.

    • Spring 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IS, International Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2 CX, Cultural/Literature
    • CL: 200 level HIST Pertinent Courses JDST Pertinent MEST Supporting Group 2 RELG Pertinent Course RELG XDept Pertinent CCST Principles Cross-Cultural Analysis EUST Transnational Support HIST Early Modern/Modern Europe
    • CCST  230.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Stacy Beckwith 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WLanguage & Dining Center 244 1:50pm-3:00pm
    • FLanguage & Dining Center 244 2:20pm-3:20pm
  • RELG 110 Understanding Religion 6 credits

    How can we best understand the role of religion in the world today, and how should we interpret the meaning of religious traditions–their texts and practices–in history and culture? This class takes an exciting tour through selected themes and puzzles related to the fascinating and diverse expressions of religion throughout the world. From politics and pop culture, to religious philosophies and spiritual practices, to rituals, scriptures, gender, religious authority, and more, students will explore how these issues emerge in a variety of religions, places, and historical moments in the U.S. and across the globe.

    • Spring 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • CCST Encounters CL: 100 level RELG Pertinent Course CCST Seeing and Being Cross-Cultural
    • RELG  110.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Chumie Juni 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WLeighton 426 9:50am-11:00am
    • FLeighton 426 9:40am-10:40am
  • RELG 120 Judaism: Text, History, Practice 6 credits

    What is Judaism? Who are Jewish people? What are Jewish texts, practices, ideas? What ripples have Jewish people, texts, practices, and ideas caused beyond their sphere? These questions will animate our study as we touch on specific points in over three millennia of history. We will immerse ourselves in Jewish texts, historic events, and cultural moments, trying to understand them on their own terms. At the same time, we will analyze them using key concepts such as ‘tradition,’ ‘culture,’ ‘power,’ and ‘diaspora.’ We will explore how ‘Jewishness’ has been constructed by different stakeholders, each claiming the authority to define it.

    • Spring 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IS, International Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • CL: 100 level JDST Pertinent MARS Supporting MEST Studies Foundation RELG Breadth RELG Jewish Traditions RELG Pertinent Course
    • RELG  120.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Chumie Juni 🏫 👤
    • Size:30
    • M, WLeighton 330 12:30pm-1:40pm
    • FLeighton 330 1:10pm-2:10pm
  • RELG 225 Faith and Doubt in the Modern World 6 credits

    Is religion an illusion we create to explain what we don’t understand? An elaborate means to justify the violence we commit? A way to hold onto meaning in the face of radical doubt? This course explores how Western theologians and philosophers have grappled with the loss of traditional religious beliefs and categories. What is the appropriate response to losing one's religion? It turns out that few abandon it altogether, but instead find new ways of naming the sacred, whether in relation to existential courage, aesthetic experience, moral hope, prophetic insight, or passionate love.

    • Spring 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • CL: 200 level PHIL Pertinent RELG Christian Traditions RELG Pertinent Course EUST Transnational Support
    • RELG  225.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Lori Pearson 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THLeighton 402 1:15pm-3:00pm
  • RELG 266 Modern Islamic Thought 6 credits

    Through close reading of primary sources, this course examines how some of the most influential Muslim thinkers of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in the Middle East and South Asia conceptualized God and the ideal God-human relationship to address such pressing questions as: How should religion relate to modern technological and scientific advancements? Can Islam serve as an ideology to counter European colonialism? Can Islam become the basis for the formation of social and political life under a nation-state, or does it demand a transnational political collectivity of its own? What would a modern Islamic economy look like?

    • Spring 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IS, International Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • ASST South Asia CL: 200 level MEST Supporting Group 1 PPOL Other Comparative RELG Islamic Traditions RELG Pertinent Course SAST Humanistic Inquiry SAST Support Humanities
    • RELG  266.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Kambiz GhaneaBassiri 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • T, THLibrary 344 10:10am-11:55am
  • RELG 322 Apocalypse How? 6 credits

    When will the world end, and how? What’s wrong with the world that makes its destruction necessary or inevitable? Are visions of “The End” a form of resistance literature, aimed at oppressive systems? Or do they come from paranoid minds disconnected from reality? This seminar explores apocalyptic thought, which in its basic form is about unmasking the deceptions of the given world by revealing the secret workings of the universe. We begin with ancient Jewish and Christian apocalypses and move into modern religious and “secular” visions of cosmic collapse, including doomsday cults, slave revolts, UFO religions, and Evangelical fantasies about armageddon in the Middle East. We will also create a giant handwritten manuscript of the book of Revelation using calligraphy pens, paint, and gold leaf.

    X-List WMST 322

    • Spring 2026
    • HI, Humanistic Inquiry IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies WR2 Writing Requirement 2
    • CL: 300 level JDST Pertinent MARS Capstone MARS Supporting MEST Supporting Group 1 RELG Christian Traditions RELG Jewish Traditions RELG Pertinent Course
    • RELG  322.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Sonja Anderson 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • M, WLeighton 303 1:50pm-3:00pm
    • FLeighton 303 2:20pm-3:20pm
  • RELG 400 Integrative Exercise 2 credits

    Religion 400 covers two required elements of the comprehensive exercise for the Religion major. All seniors must enroll in Religion 400 for one credit in fall term of senior year, when students will write and revise their comps research proposals. All seniors must then enroll in Religion 400 for two credits in spring term of senior year, when each student will finalize the research paper, create and deliver an oral presentation on it, and attend the oral presentations of all religion majors in the senior class. (The paper is drafted during winter term in Religion 399.)

    • Spring 2026
    • No Exploration
    • Student is a Religion major and has Senior Priority.

    • RELG Pertinent Course
    • RELG  400.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Lori Pearson 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • Grading:S/NC
  • SOAN 228 Public Sociology of Religion 6 credits

    This course focuses on special topics in the public sociology of religion.  We will look at the intersection of race, religion, and politics in the U.S.; the intersection of science and religion in Indigenous-led environmental and land back movements; secular and Islamic feminism in Egypt and Indonesia; and democracy, secularism, and religious tolerance in Indonesia, Egypt, and globally.  As we do so, we will examine core theoretical perspectives and empirical developments in the contemporary study and sociology of religion.

    Recommended Preparation: Completion of SOAN 110 or SOAN 111 with a grade of C- or better.

    • Spring 2026
    • IS, International Studies SI, Social Inquiry
    • CL: 200 level RELG Pertinent Course RELG XDept Pertinent
    • SOAN  228.01 Spring 2026

    • Faculty:Wes Markofski 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WLeighton 236 1:50pm-3:00pm
    • FLeighton 236 2:20pm-3:20pm

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2025–26 Academic Catalog

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Registrar: Theresa Rodriguez
Email: registrar@carleton.edu
Phone: 507-222-4094
Academic Catalog 2025-26 pages maintained by Maria Reverman
This page was last updated on 10 September 2025
Carleton

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507-222-4000

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