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How to Mainstream Feminist Studies by Raising Questions: The Case of the Introductory Course

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 September 2014

June O'Connor*
Affiliation:
University of California, Riverside

Extract

“Religious Myths and Rituals,” a course I teach once a year, is a lower division undergraduate course designed to introduce students to the academic study of religion. Its purpose is to acquaint students with the wide range of scholarly views regarding the meanings, origins, and functions of religion, the mythic and ritual components of religion, the widespread presence of religious symbols, the metaphoric character of religious language, diverse crosscultural images of transcendence, sacrality, and the like. In order to introduce the theoretical materials or to test or illuminate them, we focus on the specific religious expressions of American Indian and African tribal societies. Although examples from other religions are cited in the course of class lectures, these two tribal cultural settings serve as our primary reference points for understanding the phenomenon of religion.

On the course syllabus and early in the quarter, I articulate the following questions as a way of describing the task of the course: What is religion? What are the origins and functions of religion? What can we learn about myths and mythologies and the functions they have in human experience? Why do rituals arise in human behavior? (How do they take shape and what are they for?) Do any of the myths and rituals of traditional, tribal religions have any bearing on contemporary American life? How might we discern the meaning of religious symbols? What are some of the predominant myths and rituals that both reflect and affect our own lives as individuals or as a people (as Christians, Jews, Buddhists, atheists—as students, Americans, Westerners, as women or men)?

Type
Creative Teaching
Copyright
Copyright © The College Theology Society 1984

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References

1 This is one of three introductory courses in the Program in Religious Studies at the University of California, Riverside. The other two are Introduction to Eastern Religions and Introduction to Western Religions. Thus I make no effort to cover Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, or Islam in my introductory course on the phenomenology of religion.

2 Philosophy in a New Key: A Study in the Symbolism of Reason, Rite, and Art (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1942).Google Scholar

3 Synecdoche is a figure of speech by which a part is put for the whole (the sail for the ship, man for all human beings), or the whole for a part (the year for the fall, man for a particular class and race of men).

4 The Necessity of Myth” in Murray, Henry A., ed., Myth and Mythmaking (New York: George Braziller, 1960), p. 355.Google Scholar

5 See also Gretchen M. Bataille and Kathleen Mullen Sands' study of autobiography, American Indian Women: Telling Their Lives (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1984).Google Scholar Essays which comprise the book are supplemented by an extensive (51 page) annotated bibliography.