01.053.630 Tier, Mensch und Gott in der Antike: Human-Animal Studies im frühen Juden- und Christentum (LM-10B)

Veranstaltungsdetails

Lehrende/r: Dr. Justin David Strong

Veranstaltungsart: Seminar

Anzeige im Stundenplan:

Semesterwochenstunden: 2

Credits: 3,0

Unterrichtssprache: Englisch

Min. | Max. Teilnehmerzahl: 3 | 25

Voraussetzungen / Organisatorisches:
The course meets weekly, using a combination of seminar and lecture. The weekly session begins in the first hour with a seminar discussion of the reading assignments, followed by a lecture to introduce the subject of the following week. Participants are free to engage during the seminar in German or English. Lectures will be given in English.

Inhalt:
The biblical world is filled with animals. Despite their ubiquity, animals are normally overlooked as mere background characters. What insights emerge when we bring the animals of the background to the center stage? Consider the beginning of the Gospel of Mark: In the first verses, John the Baptist is described as wild and feral in his habitat, diet, and clothing (1:4–6), the Spirit descends "like a dove" (1:10), Jesus is "among the wild beasts" in the desert (1:12), and the first words Jesus’ speaks in the Gospel tradition are an invited for Simon and Andrew to "fish for people" (1:17).

Animal studies is one of the most vibrant emerging areas in the humanities today. It is motivated collectively by the "the animal turn," which decenters the human to bring non-human animals into focus and to examine the entanglement of human and animal lives. One way to convey the goals of human-animal studies is through three complementary methodological approaches: The first approach focuses on identifying the surprising ways in which humans find themselves to be like animals. A second approach works in the opposite direction to highlight the human-like traits in animals, such as sentience, subjectivity, and intentionality. The third approach questions the human/animal distinction and brings the effects of this new perspective on basic notions of human nature, animal nature, and in our course, even divine nature.

This course addresses many of the powerful and surprising ways that this new field is relevant to our exegesis of the Bible, theology, God, Jesus, the world of early Jews and Christians, and modern hermeneutical issues, including race, slavery, disability, ecology, human identity, values, and ethics.

Zusätzliche Informationen:
Das Seminar findet auf Englisch statt.

Termine
Datum Von Bis Raum Lehrende/r
1 Do, 21. Okt. 2021 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
2 Do, 28. Okt. 2021 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
3 Do, 4. Nov. 2021 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
4 Do, 11. Nov. 2021 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
5 Do, 18. Nov. 2021 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
6 Do, 25. Nov. 2021 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
7 Do, 2. Dez. 2021 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
8 Do, 9. Dez. 2021 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
9 Do, 16. Dez. 2021 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
10 Do, 6. Jan. 2022 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
11 Do, 13. Jan. 2022 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
12 Do, 20. Jan. 2022 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
13 Do, 27. Jan. 2022 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
14 Do, 3. Feb. 2022 16:15 17:45 00 301 T5 Dr. Justin David Strong
Veranstaltungseigene Prüfungen
Beschreibung Datum Lehrende/r Pflicht
1. Teilnahme k.Terminbuchung Nein
Übersicht der Kurstermine
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Lehrende/r
Dr. Justin David Strong