REL 287(F) The Dynamics of Globalization: Society, Religion and the Environment (Same as Environmental Studies 287)
This course offers a theoretical reflection on the social, cultural and environmental dynamics of globalization and their consequences for the nature and place of religion. Rather than
argue for or against globalization, we first examine the nature of this new configuration and
its relation to (post)modernity, asking questions such as: What are the cultural and social
dynamics of globalization? What are the effects on the nature of the state and the political
practices that take place in the global world? What are its environmental consequences? We
then shift to examining the role of religion, arguing that its renewed relevance is a function
of the socio-cultural transformations that globalization brings about, particularly the loss of
community and the increasing atomization of individuals. We conclude by examining some
of the perspectives created by the new religious expressions that attempt to respond to this
situation, from personal spiritual quests as manifested in interest in Buddhism, ecology or
mountain climbing, to various forms of fundamentalism, such as Evangelicalism, the fastest
growing religious movement in the Americas, and the most radical forms of Islamicism.
Reading list: Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity; Castells, The Rise of the Network
Society; Bauman, Globalization; Kivisto, Multiculturalism in a Global Society; Casanova,
Public Religions in the Modern World; Ortner, Life and Death on Mt. Everest; Matthews,
Global Cultura/ Individual Identity; Shuck, Mark of the Beast; Roy, Globalized Islam. This
course satisfies "Humans in the Landscape" Environmental Studies requirement for concentration.
Format: seminar. Requirements: a class presentation and a research paper (15 pages).
No prerequisistes. Enrollment limit: 22 (expected 22). Preference given to Religion majors.
Hour: DREYFUS