American Studies 217 - Religion, Democracy

Fall
2019
01
4.00
Francis Couvares
TTH 08:30AM-09:50AM
Amherst College
AMST-217-01-1920F
CHAP 101
fgcouvares@amherst.edu

[Pre-1900] The United States has inscribed the separation of church and state into its constitutional order, and yet Americans have for two centuries been more deeply committed to religious faith and practice than any other people in the Western world. This course endeavors to explore that paradox. Topics addressed include the changing meanings of "the city on a hill"; the varieties of millennial belief and utopian community; the relationship between religion, ethnicity, and gender; religious political activism, including abolition, prohibition, anti-war and anti-abortion movements; and the limits of religious tolerance from movements against Catholics and Mormons to recent warnings of a "clash of civilizations" with Muslim cultures.

Limited to 25 students. Fall semester. Professors Couvares.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.