COURSE NUMBER: |
SOCI 317 |
COURSE TITLE: |
Christian Social and Political Movements |
NAME OF
INSTRUCTOR: |
Dr John Hiemstra |
CREDIT WEIGHT
AND WEEKLY TIME DISTRIBUTION: |
credits 3 (hrs lect 3 - hrs sem 0 - hrs lab 0) |
CALENDAR
DESCRIPTION: |
This course examines the rise of Christian social and political
movements within Roman Catholic and Protestant traditions since the
French Revolution (1789). It explores the context in which these
movements arose, their distinctive ideas and strategies, as well as the
practical changes to the establishment they advocated. Attention will
be given to movements such as the British anti-slavery movement,
faith-based schools, Christian democracy, American civil rights
movement, liberation theology, Bonhoeffer & the Confessing Church,
and creation care.
Same as HIST 317 and POLI 317
Prerequisite: HIST 204 or POLI 205 or three
credits in sociology at the introductory level. |
REQUIRED TEXTS: |
A READER, “Course Readings, HIST 317 - POLI 317 - SOCI
317 (2016-2017)” is available in the bookstore for purchase. These are
required readings indicated day-by-day on Moodle. Other articles will
also be linked on Moodle for reading, and are required readings if
prefaced by ‘READ:’ but only recommended if prefaced by ‘FYI:’. |
MARK
DISTRIBUTION IN PERCENT: |
|
Midterm Exam |
25% |
Research paper |
25% |
Presentation of paper |
10% |
Class participation and reading quizzes |
15% |
Final Exam |
25% |
|
|
|
100% |
|
COURSE
OBJECTIVES: |
- To understand the logic and dynamics of Christian
social
movements as they work “against” established power structures, and how
they relate to other actors that are working “alongside” or “in and
through” established power structures.
- To understand the
diverse Christian visions that have been used to oppose, transform, or
avoid modern/post-modern culture since the French Revolution (1789).
- To understand the full range of cultural spheres that
have been influenced by distinctive Christian movements and actions.
- To
be able to critique—including outlining major positive and negative
features of—different types of Christian cultural action and change in
the last two centuries.
- To research and write a research (or
other) paper on a Christian movement engaging with a specific aspect of
the modern/postmodern establishment culture.
|
COURSE
OUTLINES: |
PART I. Getting our Bearings:
- 1. Contemporary relevance:
- Brian Stewart, “On the Front Lines,” in Reader
- Pope Francis’ comments to popular movements,”
October 27-29, 2014, in Reader
- 2. Social Movements and the ‘Establishment’: working
in & through, alongside, or against the established power
structures
- Reader:
Tilly and Wood, “Social Movements, 1768-2008,” in Reader
- 3. Enlightenment impacts: the French Revolution
(1789) as modernization/secularization
- Reader: Groen Van Prinsterer, “Unbelief,” from
Lectures on Unbelief and Revolution.
- 4. Case Study: Antislavery movement (19th century
Britain)
- Reader: Adam Hochschild, “English Abolition: The
Movie”
- 5. Christianity and movements
- Reader: Smith, “Correcting a Curious Neglect, or
Bring Religion back in,” in Reader
- Reader: Sawyer, “Christ and Culture” [and H.
Richard Niebuhr], in Reader
PART II. CHRISTIAN MOVEMENTS: 19th –mid 20th century: {readings
announced on Moodle}
- 6. Faith-based school movements in secularizing
societies.
- The Dutch “School Struggle” 19th century
- Canada: Christendom model of common schooling?
- 7. Should Christians accept a ‘singular secular’ or a
‘pluriform’ public realm?
- 8. “The Social Question” and the rise of Christian
labour and social movements in the industrial revolution
- Roman Catholic Encyclicals and Catholic movements
- Neo-Calvinist movements on the social question
- Methodist movements and approaches to social change
- 9. Christian Democratic movements and rise of
European CD parties
- 10. Social Gospel movements in the USA &
Canada
- 11. Modernist, Fundamentalist (&
Evangelical?) culture-shaping movements in North America
- The ‘Social Credit movement’: Alberta Premier
William Aberhart (1935-43)
- 12. Faith & Science, and the ‘Modern’
University:
- Europe/ USA/ Canada: Bible College movements versus
19th century Christian Colleges versus 20th century state-universities;
Christian universities globally, even in ‘failed states’!
PART III. WWII onwards {possible topics, announced on Moodle}
- 13. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the Confessing Church, and a
movement to depose Hitler
- 14. Civil Rights movement and Martin Luther King, jnr.
- 15. The “Second Vatican Council” and the
revitalization of Catholic movements
- 16. “Liberation Theology”& peoples movements
in Latin America
- 17. Christian Environmental movements
- The anti-fracking movement: Wiebo Ludwig’s War?
- Faith-based movements and global climate change
[Dr. Haluza-DeLay]
- 18. Christian movements of peace and/or pacifism:
John Howard Yoder: pacifism and political engagement; Project
Ploughshares
- 19. Christianity and Aboriginal cultural movement(s?)
- 20. Christian Anti-apartheid movements in South Africa
- 21. Movements for economic justice globally
PART IV. CASE STUDIES/TERM PAPERS
- 22. Presentation of your term papers / case studies
in class
|