Fall 2024 Religion UN3202 section 001

RELIGION IN EARLY AMERICA

Call Number 00349
Day & Time
Location
MW 2:40pm-3:55pm
202 Milbank Hall (Barnard)
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Gale L Kenny
Type LECTURE
Course Description

This course examines religion in North America from the 1500s through the early 1800s with a focus on colonial projects, race and slavery, and gender. We begin with comparing Spanish and French Catholic and English Protestant colonies, missionary efforts, and systems of enslavement as well as how religion factored into Native Americans and African people’s survival and resistance. The second part of the class turns to the 1700s and the emergence of religious revivals and evangelicalism alongside increasing religious variety in the British colonies of North America. Finally, we examine the early United States (1790s-1850s) and ask how disestablishment, imperial ambitions, new religious movement, and debates over the “slavery question” transformed the religious landscape. While focused on religious history (and primarily different Christian traditions), the category of “religion” itself and theoretical frameworks for studying religion are also integral to the class.

Web Site Vergil
Department Religion @Barnard
Enrollment 14 students (35 max) as of 11:06AM Tuesday, December 3, 2024
Subject Religion
Number UN3202
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Note Students must also enroll in the Discussion Section RELI UN3
Section key 20243RELI3202V001