This is an archived copy of the 2020-2021 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit http://catalog.ufl.edu.
Program Information
The graduate program in the Department of Religion at the University of Florida is designed to prepare students for careers in academia, public service, non-governmental organizations, and various forms of advocacy work. Our five areas of study include:
- Buddhist Traditions,
- Global Islam,
- Hindu Traditions,
- Religion in the Americas and
- Religion and Nature.
For additional information, please refer to the Graduate Student Manual.
The M.A. Program
The M.A. degree provides a broad background in the study of religious traditions and theoretical orientations in the discipline. An M.A. student can choose whether s/he will concentrate in one of the five areas of study. If s/he chooses to do so, s/he needs to take the courses recommended for that field of specialization. If s/he chooses not to, s/he can pick courses from across the fields. Course work usually culminates in a thesis and an oral examination.
The department also offers a combined program designed for superior students who have the ability to pursue an accelerated program leading to the Bachelor of Arts and the Master of Arts degree in Religion.
The Ph.D. Program
A student usually enters with a religion master’s degree either from this or another institution. Those admitted with master’s degrees in disciplines other than religion may petition to bypass the religion master’s degree with additional religion course work. All students are admitted into one of the areas of study and should fulfill the recommended course work as outlined in the area descriptions. Students in all fields are encouraged to take courses in other departments to support work in their area of specialization.
Course Work
Graduate students in religion ordinarily take courses of different kinds and for different purposes. One aim is to develop familiarity with leading traditions of research and analysis in religious studies. Another is to prepare for PhD examinations. A third is to pursue specific interests relevant to the student’s scholarly development, especially in relation to the thesis or dissertation. A fourth is to prepare for careers outside of academia. Students are expected to consult their supervisory committee chair and the department’s graduate coordinator in designing a course of study that satisfies these aims in the limited time available.
Every year a Method and Theory departmental seminar is offered (Method & Theory I or II in alternate years). This course is required of all first and second year graduate students. Its purpose is to help students develop awareness of various approaches to the study of religion, the history of these approaches, and their assumptions about understanding and explaining religious texts and behavior.
Every other year an Interdisciplinary Seminar is offered. The purpose of this course is bridge the department’s separate areas of study through the examination of topics and themes broadly relevant to the field of religious studies. The content of this course changes each time it is offered and all first and second year graduate students are required to take this course when it is offered during their first two years of graduate study.
Specialized instruction within the areas of study is carried on primarily in courses detailed in the area descriptions. The department also offers graduate seminars in related areas outside the specific fields. In addition, students regularly participate in individual or small reading courses with a member of the faculty, the form and content of which are tailored to the student’s particular needs and interests.
Almost all graduate students in religion take courses outside the department. Most enroll in graduate seminars and reading courses in such departments and centers as African Studies, Anthropology, Botany, English, History, Jewish Studies, Latin American Studies, Philosophy, Political Science, Sociology, Women’s Studies and Gender Research, Zoology, and from the interdisciplinary School of Natural Resources and the Environment.
While specific degree requirements and interests shape a candidate’s program, most generally enroll in three courses, including both seminars and reading courses, during each of the semesters prior to the M.A. thesis or Ph.D. qualifying examinations.
Mentoring
All students are assigned a faculty mentor upon admission to the program, based on expressions of faculty interest and the student’s intended area of study. The mentor and graduate coordinator answer questions and provide support for the student in choosing courses and planning a program. By the end of the second semester all master’s degree students must designate their supervisory committee chair and one additional department committee member. By the end of the second semester all doctoral students must designate their committee chair. By no later than the end of the fourth semester of study, all doctoral students must designate a four member supervisory committee including the chairperson and one UF faculty member from outside the department.
Degrees Offered with a Major in Religion
- Doctor of Philosophy
- without a concentration
- concentration in Tropical Conservation and Development
- concentration in Women's/Gender Studies
- Master of Arts
- without a concentration
- concentration in Jewish Studies
- concentration in Tropical Conservation and Development
- concentration in Women's/Gender Studies
Requirements for these degrees are given in the Graduate Degrees section of this catalog.
Religion Courses
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
REL 6347 | American Buddhism | 3 |
RLG 5143 | Religion and Social Change | 3 |
RLG 5195 | Topics in Religion and Society | 3 |
RLG 5199 | Religion and Nature in North America | 3 |
RLG 5297 | Topics in Biblical Studies | 3 |
RLG 5338 | Topics in Asian Religions | 3 |
RLG 5361 | Global Islam | 3 |
RLG 5365 | Studies in Islam | 3 |
RLG 5396 | Religion and Animals | 3 |
RLG 5495 | Topics in Religious Thought | 3 |
RLG 5549 | 3 | |
RLG 5696 | Topics in Jewish Thought | 3 |
RLG 5906 | Individual Work | 1-5 |
RLG 5937 | Topics in Religious Studies | 3 |
RLG 6035 | Method and Theory I | 3 |
RLG 6036 | Method and Theory II | 3 |
RLG 6095 | Utopias and Dystopias | 3 |
RLG 6107 | Core Seminar in Religion and Nature | 3 |
RLG 6125 | 3 | |
RLG 6126 | Religion in the Americas | 3 |
RLG 6129 | 3 | |
RLG 6137 | Religion in North America | 3 |
RLG 6138 | 3 | |
RLG 6167 | Radical Environmentalism | 3 |
RLG 6181 | 3 | |
RLG 6183 | Religion and Environmental Ethics | 3 |
RLG 6185 | Religion, Nature, and Society | 3 |
RLG 6186 | 3 | |
RLG 6187 | 3 | |
RLG 6196 | 3 | |
RLG 6310 | 3 | |
RLG 6319 | Interpreting Asian Religions | 3 |
RLG 6339 | 3 | |
RLG 6346 | 3 | |
RLG 6385 | Native Religions in the Americas | 3 |
RLG 6386 | 3 | |
RLG 6387 | Religions in Latin America | 3 |
RLG 6910 | Supervised Research | 1-5 |
RLG 6940 | Supervised Teaching | 1-5 |
RLG 6957 | Overseas Studies in Religion | 1-3 |
RLG 6971 | Research for Master's Thesis | 1-15 |
RLG 7979 | Advanced Research | 1-15 |
RLG 7980 | Research for Doctoral Dissertation | 1-15 |
SRK 6905 | Individual Study in Sanskrit | 1-4 |
Religion Departmental Courses
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
REL 6038 | Religion and Fieldwork | 3 |
REL 6347 | American Buddhism | 3 |
RLG 5143 | Religion and Social Change | 3 |
RLG 5195 | Topics in Religion and Society | 3 |
RLG 5199 | Religion and Nature in North America | 3 |
RLG 5297 | Topics in Biblical Studies | 3 |
RLG 5338 | Topics in Asian Religions | 3 |
RLG 5361 | Global Islam | 3 |
RLG 5365 | Studies in Islam | 3 |
RLG 5396 | Religion and Animals | 3 |
RLG 5495 | Topics in Religious Thought | 3 |
RLG 5696 | Topics in Jewish Thought | 3 |
RLG 5906 | Individual Work | 1-5 |
RLG 5937 | Topics in Religious Studies | 3 |
RLG 6035 | Method and Theory I | 3 |
RLG 6036 | Method and Theory II | 3 |
RLG 6038 | Religion and Fieldwork | 3 |
RLG 6095 | Utopias and Dystopias | 3 |
RLG 6107 | Core Seminar in Religion and Nature | 3 |
RLG 6126 | Religion in the Americas | 3 |
RLG 6137 | Religion in North America | 3 |
RLG 6167 | Radical Environmentalism | 3 |
RLG 6183 | Religion and Environmental Ethics | 3 |
RLG 6185 | Religion, Nature, and Society | 3 |
RLG 6319 | Interpreting Asian Religions | 3 |
RLG 6385 | Native Religions in the Americas | 3 |
RLG 6387 | Religions in Latin America | 3 |
RLG 6709 | Islam in Africa | 3 |
RLG 6910 | Supervised Research | 1-5 |
RLG 6936 | Seminar Relig Studies | 3 |
RLG 6940 | Supervised Teaching | 1-5 |
RLG 6957 | Overseas Studies in Religion | 1-3 |
RLG 6971 | Research for Master's Thesis | 1-15 |
RLG 7979 | Advanced Research | 1-15 |
RLG 7980 | Research for Doctoral Dissertation | 1-15 |
SRK 6905 | Individual Study in Sanskrit | 1-4 |
religion (PHD)
SLO 1 Knowledge
Students will identify, define, and describe classical and contemporary methods and theories in the study of religion and the sub-fields of religions of Asia, religions of the Americas, and religion and nature.
SLO 2 Knowledge
Students will translate one research language other than English as approved by their dissertation committees
SLO 3 Skills
Students will articulate orally and in writing the results, significance, and applications of their scholarship and research
SLO 4 Skills
Students will teach in their particular sub-fields, as well as in the broad field of comparative religions
SLO 5 Professional Behavior
Students will produce original research and scholarship that meet the professional standards of the field
Religion (MA)
SLO 1 Knowledge
Students will identify, define, and describe classical and contemporary methods and theories in the study of religion and
the sub-fields of religions of Asia, religions of the Americas, and religion and nature
SLO 2 Skills
Students will teach in their particular sub-fields, as well as in the broad field of comparative religions
SLO 3 Professional Behavior
Students will produce research and scholarship that meet the professional standards of the field