Anthropology 316SE - Special Topics in Anthropology: 'Anthropology of Secularism'

Anthropology of Secularism

Fall
2021
01
4.00
William Girard

T 01:30PM-04:20PM

Mount Holyoke College
115382
Williston Memorial Library 618
wgirard@mtholyoke.edu
115382,115323
What is secularism? For many of us, the answer is obvious: the world without religious belief, or the separation of church and state, or even the "really real" world. In recent years, scholars in number fields have begun to question these common sense notions about secularism. In this course, we will investigate this rapidly expanding literature and the critical lines of inquiry it has opened up: Under what specific cultural and historic conditions did secularism first emerge? Is secularism experienced today in the same way throughout the world? If not, how do they vary? What ways of being and living does secularism encourage or allow to flourish? Which does it stunt, block, or prohibit?

Prereq: 8 credits in Anthropology or in Religion.

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