• RELA 2800

    Introduction to Yoruba Religions
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.89

    Last Taught

    Spring 2026

    The Orisa traditions of the Yoruba-speaking peoples of West Africa have survived and thrived across centuries of war, slavery, and colonization, and continue to provide meaning to the lives of millions of people all over the world. This course will survey the various Orisa traditions of West Africa and the Americas, their interactions with other traditions as well as their influence on Black Atlantic art and spirituality.

  • RELG 5559

    New Course in Religion
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.92

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    This course provides the opportunity to offer a new topic in the subject of general religion.

  • RELB 2200

    Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.92

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    This is a lecture-based course--an idiosyncratic but hopefully helpful introduction to Buddhist philosophy. A few aspects of Buddhist philosophy, at any rate. The subject is potentially endless and can be grabbed from several different ends. Note: this course emphasizes the history of Buddhist concepts and arguments in premodern South Asia. But we will explore what are hopefully ideas of interest: in philosophy of mind; metaphysics; gender.

  • RELA 5094

    What is Love?: Reflections from the Islamic Tradition
     Rating

    4.67

     Difficulty

    4.00

     GPA

    3.93

    Last Taught

    Spring 2026

    This seminar will examine some of the most profound and influential writings about love from the Islamic intellectual and poetic traditions. Perhaps more than any other civilization, the literary and philosophical traditions of Islamic civilization have been "love-centric." In this course we will closely read and discuss various philosophies and theories of love from the mundane to the mystical.

  • RELB 5559

    New Course in Buddhism
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.94

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    This course provides the opportunity to offer a new course in the subject of Buddhism.

  • RELI 5094

    What is Love?: Reflections from the Islamic Tradition
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.94

    Last Taught

    Spring 2026

    This seminar will examine some of the most profound and influential writings about love from the Islamic intellectual and poetic traditions. Perhaps more than any other civilization, the literary and philosophical traditions of Islamic civilization have been "love-centric." In this course we will closely read and discuss various philosophies and theories of love from the mundane to the mystical.

  • RELG 3713

    Black Religion and the Criminal Justice System
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.94

    Last Taught

    Spring 2026

    This course examines the relationship between black religion and the criminal justice system in the U.S. from Jim Crow to the Black Lives Matter era. We will focus on the ideas, lived experiences, and activism of the incarcerated; religious engagements with policing; and movements for criminal justice reform and prison abolition. Authors likely will include Martin Luther King, Jr., Malcolm X, and Elijah Muhammad.

  • RELG 3416

    Sustainability and Asceticism
     Rating

    4.33

     Difficulty

    2.50

     GPA

    3.94

    Last Taught

    Spring 2025

    To what extent does the pursuit of sustainability require restraining or retraining our desires? How can people be encouraged to consume less, or in less destructive ways, when cultures of consumption prove resistant to change? This seminar will explore these questions from the perspective of South Asian traditions (Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain). We will consider classical sources as well as contemporary debates about sustainable development.

  • RELC 2770

    The Black Church
     Rating

     Difficulty

     GPA

    3.96

    Last Taught

    Fall 2025

    "The Black Church" carries unique symbolic weight in America--but why? This course explores how the idea of the Black Church gained moral authority, whether there is a collective Black Church or only black churches, the traditions and practices the concept names, who the concept celebrates and who it marginalizes, and how--or whether--the Black Church, as myth or reality, is still relevant in African American life today.

  • RELA 2748

    Introduction to African Philosophy: Race, Religion, and Rationality
     Rating

    4.67

     Difficulty

    1.00

     GPA

    4.00

    Last Taught

    Summer 2025

    This course will survey the central debates of the field of African Philosophy: what counts as "African"? what counts as "philosophy"?, the universality or cultural particularity of rationality, the role of race and racism in modern, Western Philosophy, the role of writing and orality in philosophy, and "African" conceptions of the self, truth, knowledge, gender, ethics, and justice.