This unit entry is for students who completed this unit in 2012 only. For students planning to study the unit, please refer to the unit indexes in the the current edition of the Handbook. If you have any queries contact the managing faculty for your course or area of study.
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6 points, SCA Band 1, 0.125 EFTSL
Refer to the specific
census and withdrawal dates for the semester(s) in which this unit is offered, or view unit timetables.
Notes
Synopsis
Is secularism on the wane, as we witness a significant resurgence of interest in religion? This unit explores new forms of religiosity that are shaping the way many people respond to today's globalising world. Major trends include the rise of fundamentalist streams in the world religions, the proliferation of revitalization movements supporting local religious traditions, and the emergence of post-modern forms of religion such as New Age and eco-spirituality. These value-focused belief systems reinterpret the meaning of contemporary life experience, but they are also concerned about global crises and injustices and propose utopian alternatives to the prevalent ethos of materialism and greed.
Outcomes
On successfully completing this unit, students will be able to
- analyse contemporary and emerging forms of religiosity in historical terms - namely, through an understanding of
- the co-evolution of modern religion, science and capitalist economies in Europe from the Enlightenment period to the mid-20th century and
- subsequent departures from the project of modernity since WW
- compare and analyse the different, alternative forms of modernity and post-modernity that are currently being created in non-Western countries through new interpretations of Islam, Hinduism and other world religions
- define the political circumstances and socio-economic conditions that are leading to a renewed prominence of religion in contemporary political life in general and in relation to particular cases, such as Islamic, Christian and Hindu fundamentalism
- characterize the global trend toward a revitalization of local religious traditions and the ways this process can generate not only religious ethno-nationalism and conflicts with immigrant populations, but also avenues for local resistance to disenfranchisement through globalization
- articulate the context and identify the causes that have precipitated a globalization of Pentecostal and Charismatic Christianity and the relative decline of public support for mainstream Christian churches
- compare, contrast and identify commonalities among a range of emerging New-Age spiritualities that are advocating a post-modern utopic religious pluralism, based on freedom of individual expression, personal religious experience and a monistic universalism
- evaluate contemporary forms of Shamanism, Witchcraft and Paganism as attempts to rediscover and rework pre-modern forms of religiosity for a post-modern world
- identify and compare the core values of alternative religious and spiritual movements
- critically consider what contribution religion and alternative spiritualities can make to solving some of the most pressing psychological, social, environmental, economic and political problems of a globalising world.
Assessment
Tutorial Participation in Discussion (500 words): 10%; Class Test (short answer) 1000 words: 25%; Book, Website or Documentary Film Analysis (1000 words): 25%; Essay (2000 words): 40%
Chief examiner(s)
Dr Julian Millie
Contact hours
1 one-hour lecture and 1 one-hour tutorial per week for 11 weeks
This unit applies to the following area(s) of study
Religion and theology
International studies
Anthropology
Prerequisites
ATS1325 and ATS1326 or ATS1254 and ATS1255 or ATS1365 and ATS1366 or RLT1010 and RLT1020 unit, or permission of the unit coordinator.
Prohibitions
ATS3629