82240 - Methodologies of Religious Studies (1) (LM)

Academic Year 2024/2025

Learning outcomes

After completing the course, students are familiar with the main theoretical, methodological and technical tools of the historical-religious disciplines and of ethnographic research that deal with the study of religions, religious phenomena and dynamics in local and global socio-cultural contexts, with particular attention to identifying connections, developments, persistence and transformations of religious phenomena and socio-political implications of the interaction between groups in complex societies. They are able to apply anthropological knowledge to critically promote the value of religious differences and religious pluralism. They update their knowledge and develop independent perspectives of analysis, taking into account the scientific and international debate on methodological issues.

Course contents

The course participates in the University's Teaching Experimentation project according to the 'hybrid' (blended) model: 30% of the lessons take place on line.

See the lesson structure below and the additional teaching material on Virtuale.

The course includes an ethnographic field-work experiment.

 

Classes begin: 16 September 2024 (I semester, 1 period)

Mon, Wed h 9-11 aula Seminari 1 (DISCI, first floor)

Tue h 9-11 aula Torresani (DISCI, second floor)

 

Represent beliefs: concepts, methods and participation

This course looks at some of the main conceptual and interpretative issues in the study of the history of religions, focusing on the methodological challenges involved in fieldwork research. More specifically, the concept of ‘participation’ will be discussed in detail, as it is one of the most topical issues in the relevant research field.

During the course, the following subjects will be addressed:

  • Construction and representation of ‘sacred’
  • Historical and phenomenological approach
  • Distance and estrangement
  • Observation and participation
  • Emotional and fluctuating participation
  • Method, validity and authority of scientific report
  • ethnographic postmodernism
  • the nature of models
  • Participation in belief?

Some of the issues discussed in the course will also be reconsidered by watching the movie Lisbon Story by Wim Wenders (1995).

At the end of the course the student shall be able to:


  • Read, analyze, summarize, understand, and explain explicit and implicit information in texts on historical-ethnographic theories, with special attention on methodological questions in religious studies.
  • Develop the necessary skills to collect, process, analyze, and interpret genuine empirical data related to the magic and religion field.
  • Be able to become aware of one’s own interpretative subjectivity during fieldwork research and consider one’s own participation.
  • Recognize and manage the ethnographic variables involved in magic and religion fieldwork research.
  • Take advantage of the Internet as a framework enabling self-study and collaborative learning; also knowing the implications of an open, real, and participatory space to develop collaborative writing techniques and strategies online using e-learning tools.

Educational Innovation Project (for attending students)

Attending students will organize a field micro-experimentation (recommended, not mandatory) on the magical-religious phenomenon of cartomancy in relation to the Catholic tradition. With the help of Virtuale, some of the practical-theoretical issues related to the concepts of 'seeing', 'reading', 'perceiving' will be discussed.

Course structure

1-Opening of the course (6 hours in attendance)

Introduction of the course and of the proposed teaching structure, presentation of the main basic theoretical issues.

2-First part of online experimentation (6 hours via Teams)

Virtual opening of a monothematic forum with presentation of some situational and real case studies in the religious field related to the representation of belief in images (seeing and foreseeing). Theme: Participation method as a scientific tool compared to the latest critical debates on the topic.

Students are encouraged to intervene, even in written form and can in turn discuss comparison/comparison materials. In this way the students, guided by the teacher, analyze the proposed problem, identifying the specificities and the critical issues that arise.

At the end of this phase, the Compito Tool is launched in Virtual mode with a request for delivery of a short-written work created on the basis of a short field work (to be agreed with the teacher), enriched with digital content of different types (images, audio and video clips). The paper requires the problematization of one's emotional participation in the belief during online and field experimentation. Delivery of the paper for the beginning of the fourth part of the course.

3-Thematic study (14 hours in attendance)

Starting from the themes addressed in the Forum, in-depth lessons and conceptual explanations are proposed, understanding the topics and the authors in the programme. In order to discuss the thematic cores that have emerged, explanations and proposals for study materials are provided, also with the support of films, audiovisuals, articles/essays, diagrams, graphs, tables.

Students have additional in-depth content available in Virtual, both textual and video.

4-Second part of online experimentation: comparison and conclusions (4 hours online via Teams)

In this phase we proceed to the presentation and problematization of the papers, with digital contents, uploaded by the students in Virtual in the Compito Tool. Discussion with the students of the results obtained to explain, at a theoretical level and in the process of conclusion, the connections between the activities carried out and the proposed insights.

Each of the activities carried out may include an intermediate evaluation, which also takes into account the student's commitment and participation.

For experimentation, see also the additional explanatory material uploaded to Virtuale in the Educational Innovation Project section.

Readings/Bibliography

Programme for attending students

1.Jonathan Z. Smith, Relating religion: essays in the study of religion, Chicago-London, The University of Chicago Press, 2004 (capitoli 2, 3, 4, 12).

The chapters by Smith 1) are available in Virtuale and at copy shop Ecrire in via Caroleria 18/a.

2. Sbardella F. (a cura di), Etnologia del sacro. Religione e modernità nella riflessione francese, Pàtron, Bologna 2019.

3. Geertz Armin W., Approcci cognitivi ed evoluzionistici alla religione, Pàtron, Bologna 2020.

Programme for non-attending students

1. Jonathan Z. Smith, Relating religion: essays in the study of religion, Chicago-London, The University of Chicago press, 2004 (capitoli 2, 3, 4, 12).

The chapters by Smith 1) are available in Virtuale and at copy shop Ecrire in via Caroleria 18/a.

2. Sbardella F. (a cura di), Etnologia del sacro. Religione e modernità nella riflessione francese, Pàtron, Bologna 2019 (disponibile presso Lbreria Pàtron, piazza Verdi 4/D, Bologna)

3. Geertz Armin W., Approcci cognitivi ed evoluzionistici alla religione, Pàtron, Bologna 2020.

4. Dupront A., «Antropologia religiosa», in Il sacro. Crociate e pellegrinaggi, pp. 433-557.

The chapters by Dupront 4) are available at copy shop Ecrire in via Caroleria 18/a.

Teaching methods

Traditional lectures will alternate with seminars for in-depth discussion in which students are invited to actively take part with personal investigations, presentations and reports concerning the proposed issues.

Part of the programme will be completed by using e-learning tools: this activity will be based on collaborative writing applied to ethnographic research through the use of collaborative digital tools.

Assessment methods

The final examination is an interview. The students will be asked some questions concerning the texts included in the syllabus and the subjects presented in them.

For attending students, the assessment of the final interview is complemented with specific questions on the subjects discussed in class and with the research report on the fieldwork assignment.

Exam registration should be completed via the Almaesami website.

Assessment criteria:

  • Teamwork and problem solving skills
  • Quantity and quality of each student’s participation in e-learning activities
  • Active participation in class discussion: ability to present, contrast, and defend one’s ideas with data that are relevant to the proposed subjects
  • In-depth and detailed knowledge of the syllabus text contents
  • Argument and critical skills
  • Language appropriateness
  • The evaluation of the written report will consider the typical conventions of academic writing (orthography, layout, and presentation), and also the ability to ponder, analyze, and draw conclusions.

The achievement by the student of an organic vision of the topics addressed together with their critical use, a good command of expression and of specific language will be evaluated with marks of excellence.

A mnemonic knowledge of the subject, together with ability to synthesize and analyze articulated in a correct, but not always appropriate language, will lead to discrete evaluations.

Training gaps and/or inappropriate language - albeit in a context of minimal knowledge of the exam material - will lead to grades that will not exceed the sufficiency.

Training gaps, inappropriate language, lack of orientation within the bibliographic materials offered during the course will be evaluated negatively.

Teaching tools

The final examination is an interview. The students will be asked some questions concerning the texts included in the syllabus and the subjects presented in them.

 

Students who require specific services and adaptations to teaching activities due to a disability or specific learning disorders (SLD), must first contact the appropriate office: https://site.unibo.it/studenti-con-disabilita-e-dsa/en/for-students

Office hours

See the website of Francesca Sbardella