Fall 2024 Religion UN3771 section 001

Early Modern Indigenous Thought

EARLY MOD INDIGENOUS THOU

Call Number 00352
Day & Time
Location
F 2:10pm-4:00pm
113 MILSTEIN CEN
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Timothy Vasko
Type SEMINAR
Course Description

What is the source of truth and authority? What is the origin of the world and how does that determine the social order? Who ought to rule, why, and how? What are the standards for measuring justice and injustice? What is our relationship to the environment around us and how should its resources be distributed among people? How do we relate to those who are different from us, and what does it mean to be a community in the first place? Historically, the answers to these questions that have been described as “religious” and “political” have been the restricted to a specific tradition of Western European Christianity and its secular afterlives. However, these are questions that every society asks, in order to be a society in the first place. This course analyzes how indigenous peoples in the Americas asked and answered these questions through the first three centuries of Western European imperial rule. At the same time, this course pushes students to question what gets categorized as uniquely “indigenous” thought, how, and why.

Web Site Vergil
Department Religion @Barnard
Enrollment 7 students (15 max) as of 12:06PM Tuesday, December 3, 2024
Subject Religion
Number UN3771
Section 001
Division Barnard College
Section key 20243RELI3771V001