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About the Department:
Mission
Statement
Religion courses at Smith are critical and comparative, interdisciplinary,
and cross-cultural. They examine the nature and function of religious
phenomena in the past and present of many cultures. They provide opportunities
to analyze systems of belief and patterns of religious behavior, the history
of religious traditions, the functions of religion in society, and various
forms of religious expression such as myth, ritual, sacred story, sacred
texts, liturgy, and theological and philosophical reflection.
In the department's
view, a student's personal religious perspective is not a consideration
for entering or for successfully completing a course in the department.
It is not unusual, however, for a student's interest in religion studies
to be motivated by personal, existential questions--the perennial questions
of human existence. There is no better way for a person to work out her
own answers than by studying the distillations of insight found in the
world's religious traditions.
Background
At the end of the
nineteenth century the Smith College curriculum included among its offerings
four or five courses under a simple non-departmental heading, "Biblical
Literature." Some of these were required courses for all students
at the college; the "higher criticism" of the Bible was a feature
of the syllabus. The 1899-1900 academic year saw religion courses at Smith
offered within a newly designated department, "Biblical Literature
and Comparative Religion," staffed by one professor, Irving F. Wood.
The announced text for the comparative religion course was Allan Menzies'
History of Religion: a Sketch of Primitive Religious Beliefs and Practices,
and of the Origin and Character of the Great Systems (New York, 1897).
By 1908 the department
faculty had grown in number by more than one hundred per cent, with one
professor, one associate professor, and a "reader." Added to
the religion curriculum over the next decade was a course titled "Early
Oriental Civilizations," treating mainly of ancient Near-Eastern
texts, and another titled "The Development of Christian Thought."
By then, biblical Hebrew and koine Greek were also being taught. By 1927
the department's faculty had increased to six, and in that year its name
was changed to Religion and Biblical Literature--still its designation
today. Informally, of course, "Religion Department" or "Department
of Religion" is the commonest expression.
What may be seen
as a milestone in the subsequent history of the department was the introduction
in 1940-41 of a course, "Contemporary Judaism," taught by the
late S. Ralph Harlow. Other landmarks include the appointment, in 1962,
of the first non-Protestant department member, the late Jochanan
Wijnhoven,
to teach full time in the area of Jewish studies; and the establishment
in 1967-68 of the endowed Ada Howe Kent Program to support the study and
teaching of "World Religions" understood to mean "non-Western"
religions in the department, in collaboration with other departments in
the Humanities at Smith. Following these innovations, our curriculum today
includes a rich and wide array of courses dealing with the religious traditions
of the world from a variety of different viewpoints
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