Offered this year
Courses are still tentative. Days/times have not yet been confirmed.Fall 2025
RCS 200: Greek and Roman Mythology
Instructor: TBA
Study of Greek and Roman myths, in the context of the culture and thought of Greece and Rome. Uses literary and artistic sources to establish and analyze the nature and function of myths in these cultures. Topics include the gods, heroes, local myths, political and cultural uses of myths and the origins of the influence of Greek and Roman myths on European culture.
Monday and thursday 10 - 11:30
* This course is cross-listed with GRS 200.
RCS 200B: Introduction to Asian Religions
Instructor: Dr. Martin Adam
A survey of the sources, beliefs and practices of Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism and the Chinese religions. The traditions are studied in their cultural and political contexts from both historical and contemporary perspectives.
Monday and Thursday 1:00 - 2:30
*This course is cross-listed with PAAS 204
RCS 260: The Bible as Literature
Instructor: Dr. Christopher Douglas
Surveys basic stories and books in the Old and New Testaments (including Genesis, Exodus, 1 and 2 Kings, Job, Song of Songs, Psalms, Isaiah, select minor prophets, the Gospels, Acts, select Pauline epistles, Hebrews and Revelations). Focus on the intrinsic literary features of the biblical books themselves. Aims to familiarize students with important biblical stories, genres and references in literature and religious discourse.
*This course is cross-listed with ENSH 233.
RCS 303: Origin of Space, Time and Matter in the Universe
Instructor: Dr. Arif Babul
For non-science students interested in expanding their understanding of the physical world. The aim is to combine topics in earth physics, particle physics, astronomy, and cosmology to study the nature and origin of space-time and matter, and the chemical composition of the earth, planets and stars. Highlights of larger issues, such as the nature of scientific knowledge, and the validity of science and the scientific method. A non-mathematical approach.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday 1:30 - 2:30
*This course is cross-listed PHYS 303.
RCS 309: Religion and Sexuality
Instructor: Dr. Rachel Brown
Explores the relationship between sexuality and religion. Topics include sexual and religious ethics, gender roles assigned by religious traditions, the ways these roles are changing and the effect of these changes on contemporary societal norms in Canada and elsewhere.
Monday and Thursday 2:30 - 4:00
RCS 349: Jews and Christians in the Greek and Roman World
Instructor: Dr. Gregory Rowe
An introduction to the major approaches to the interpretation of classical myth, from ritualist to structuralist to feminist and beyond.
This course is cross listed with GRS 349.
RCS 350: Medieval Latin
Instructor: Dr. Gregory Rowe
Readings are structured around a topic in post-classical Latin literature, with a primary focus on religious texts. Possible topics include: Latin literature of Late Antiquity, medieval epic, Latin lyric of the 12th century, medieval Latin comedy.
This course is cross listed with LATI 350.
RCS 369: Milton's Major Poetry and Selected Prose
Instructor: Dr. Gary Kuchar
A study of Paradise Lost, as well as other major poems and selected prose.
This course is cross listed with ENSH 355.
RCS 479A: Modern Religion and Empire
Instructor: Dr. Andrew Wender
Critically examines religion, empire, and multiple worldwide cases of their intersection from post-medieval era to the present. Organizing themes may include religious dimensions of empires’ rise and fall, imperial connotations of modern ideas and institutions concerning religion and the nation-state, imperial notions of messianic salvation, religious resistance to empire, civilizational empires, and today’s forms of imperial resurgence. Diverse worldviews (e.g., Abrahamic faiths, further monotheistic and nontheistic religions, Indigenous traditions) are situated within relevant contexts.
This course is cross listed HSTR 479A.
Spring 2026
RCS 120: The People, Practices and Politics of Contemporary Yoga
Instructor: Dr. Paul Bramadat
An introduction to yoga in the West. Students will consider the spiritual, philosophical, religious, cultural, and physical dimensions of yoga, one of the most popular activities in North America. We will experience or observe several forms of yoga, and use these experiences to understand the ways yoga is influenced by social class, race, capitalism, and beauty norms. Our exposure to and discussions of yoga will help us understand not just yoga, but the societies in which it is flourishing.
Monday and Thursday 1:00 - 2:30
RCS 200: Greek and Roman Mythology
Instructor: TBA
Study of Greek and Roman myths, in the context of the culture and thought of Greece and Rome. Uses literary and artistic sources to establish and analyze the nature and function of myths in these cultures. Topics include the gods, heroes, local myths, political and cultural uses of myths and the origins of the influence of Greek and Roman myths on European culture.
Monday and Thursday 10:00 - 11:30
*This course is cross-listed with GRS 200
RCS 200A: Introduction to Judaism, Christianity and Islam
Instructor: Dr. Shamma Boyarin
An introductory survey of the sources, beliefs and practices of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. The traditions are studied in their cultural and political contexts from both historical and contemporary perspectives.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday 11:30 - 12:30
RCS 305: Magic, Mysticism and the Occult
Instructor: Dr. Martin Adam
Survey of mysticism and the occult as found in the history and literature of various religious traditions; critical analysis of the nature and significance of mystical experience; an exploration of belief in occult forces and figures; probing the connection between the occult and mysticism and the relationship between mysticism, the occult, and knowledge.
Monday and Thursday 1:00 - 2:20
RCS 306: Critics of Religion
Instructor: Dr. Paul Bramadat
Examines critiques of religion from the modern "new atheists" and their historical precursors; may include figures such as Freud, Durkheim, Marx, Weber and Nietzsche. Assessment of these criticisms in order to understand the situation of religions in relation to society in the contemporary period.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday 1:30 - 2:20
RCS 310: Liberation through Anarchy?: A Religious Exploration
Instructor: Dr. Shamma Boyarin
More details coming soon!
*Please take note of the time variation for this class
Tuesday 2:30 - 2:20 and Friday 2:30 - 3:30
RCS 311: Religion and Non-violent Civil Disobedience
Instructor: Dr. Martin Adam
Explores diverse traditions of non-violent civil disobedience, with special emphasis on Mohandas Gandhi’s religious ideals of nonviolence (ahimsā) and truth (satya) as applied in personal, social, political and environmental contexts. Comparisons drawn to the work of religious and political figures such as B. R. Ambedkar, Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, Krishnamurti, Thich Nhat Hanh, Aung San Suu Kyi, and the Dalai Lama.
Monday, Wednesday and Friday 2:30 - 3:30
*This course is cross-listed with PAAS 367.
RCS 312: Koiné Greek
Instructor: Dr. Gregory Roew
An introduction to the common dialect of ancient Greek used throughout the Greek world in the wake of the conquests of Alexander the Great (d. 323 BC), with an emphasis on gaining fluency. Readings from the Septuagint (Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible), the New Testament and selected documents. Differences in grammar and orthography from classical Greek are discussed. May involve a palaeographical element, with readings from ancient papyri and medieval manuscripts.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday 9:30 - 10:30
*This course is cross-listed with GREE 310.
RCS 351: The Transformation of the Late Roamn World
Instructor: Dr. Gregory Rowe
The world of Late Antiquity in the Mediterranean region and the Near East during the period 150-750 CE. Emphasis on Christianization, the shifting role of the central state, the interaction of the Latin-speaking and Greek-speaking worlds and the development of a characteristic Late Antique culture in art and literature.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday 11:30 - 12:30
*This course is cross listed with GRS 350
RCS 370: Intersections of Law and Religion from Ancient to Current Worlds
Instructor: Dr. Andrew Wender
Comparative global exploration of relationships among law and religion, across multiple historical contexts and traditions. Includes theistic worldviews like Judaism, Christianity and Islam, with sources and manifestations of law unfolding from the biblical to contemporary worlds. Diverse understandings of law in non-theistic traditions like Hinduism and Buddhism. Within modern settings, emphasis on secularist outlooks that re-embody, rather than eliminate, overlaps between law and religion, and on debates involving states' attempts to monopolize control over religion.
Tuesday and Thrusday 4:30 - 6:00
This course is cross listed with HSTR 370A.
RCS 382: Greek and Roman Religion
Instructor: TBA
Survey of Greek and Roman religious thought and practices. Focuses on conventional religious rituals and their social value, and on the success of Greek and Roman polytheism in adapting to changing historical and social circumstances. Particular attention to mystery religions, including Christianity, and their relationship to conventional forms of religious behaviour.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday 11:30 - 12:30
This course is cross listed with GRS 381.
RCS 401: Topic: Religion, Food, Power and Politics
Instructor: Rachel Brown
More information coming soon!
Monday 1:00 - 4:00