ANTH 273(F) Sacred Geographies (Same as EXPR 273 and Religion 273)*
Bringing together insights from anthropology, art history, and religious
studies, this course will explore the geography of sacred space: the spatial
organization of meaning across time and the world as humans have again and
again made a division between sacred and profane. We will attend to this
process as expressed in the geography, social dynamics, and architecture
of sacred space, noting patterns of similarity and difference among and between
the "little traditions" of folk and traditional societies as well as the
"great traditions" of universalist and modern societies. Having developed
an analytical vocabulary for understanding sacred space, we will put our
model in motion by examining the dynamics of change, redefinition, and
contestation that have so often surrounded the history of sacred spaces.
Requirements: full attendance and participation plus three 4- to 6-page
essays.
No prerequisites.
Hour: JUST and DARROW