Spring 2023
HISTORY 280B 003 - SEM 003
Advanced Studies: Sources/General Literature of the Several Fields: Europe
The Invention of Religion in Early Modern Europe
Ethan H Shagan
Class #:33218
Units: 4
Instruction Mode:
In-Person Instruction
Offered through
History
Current Enrollment
Total Open Seats:
7
Enrolled: 8
Waitlisted: 0
Capacity: 15
Waitlist Max: 5
No Reserved Seats
Hours & Workload
3 hours of student-instructor coverage of course materials per week, and 9 hours of outside work hours per week.
Other classes by Ethan H Shagan
Course Catalog Description
For precise schedule of offerings see department catalog during pre-enrollment week each semester.
Class Description
Since the work of Talal Asad in the 1990s, scholars have endlessly repeated the claim that the analytical category of “religion” was invented in early modern Europe. This assertion is demonstrably false; “religion” has been invented many times, and the modern category continues to evolve. But it does identify an important truth: early modern Europe was a time and place of enormous cultural flux in which competing conceptions of religion were canvassed and power in the world was reorganized around conflicting visions of the human relationship with the divine. This class examines the changing meanings of religion from the fifteenth to the eighteenth centuries in a series of fraught cultural context: the Renaissance encounter with “paganism”; the expulsion of Jews and Muslims from Iberia; the European encounter with the New World; the Reformation’s fragmentation of Western Christianity into multiple “religions”; the theory and practice of religious toleration; the Enlightenment’s shaping of religion as an object of study; and European attempts to understand and control the religions of Asia. We will read both secondary scholarship and primary sources.
Open to graduate students, and to advanced undergraduates by permission of instructor.
Rules & Requirements
Repeat Rules
Reserved Seats
Current Enrollment
No Reserved Seats
Textbooks & Materials
See class syllabus or https://calstudentstore.berkeley.edu/textbooks for the most current information.
Guide to Open, Free, & Affordable Course Materials
Associated Sections
None