NELC183 - Food and Fire

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Food and Fire
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC183401
Course number integer
183
Registration notes
Course is available to Freshmen and Upperclassmen.
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Humanities & Social Science Sector
Registration also required for Recitation (see below)
Meeting times
MW 01:00 PM-02:00 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Katherine M Moore
Description
This course will let students explore the essential heritage of human technology through archaeology. People have been transforming their environment from the first use of fire for cooking. Since then, humans have adapted to the world they created using the resources around them. We use artifacts to understand how the archaeological record can be used to trace breakthroughs such as breaking stone and bone, baking bread, weaving cloth and firing pottery and metals. The seminar will meet in the Penn Museum's new Center for the Analysis of Archaeological Materials. Students will become familiar with the Museum's collections and the scientific methods used to study different materials. Class sessions will include discussions, guest presentations, museum field trips, and hands-on experience in the laboratory.
Course number only
183
Cross listings
ANTH148401, CLST148401
Use local description
No

NELC182 - Ancient Civs of the Wrld

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Ancient Civs of the Wrld
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC182401
Course number integer
182
Registration notes
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Meeting times
TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Richard L Zettler
Description
This course explores the archaeology (material culture) of early complex societies or civilizations in Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the Aegean. According to the traditional paradigm, civilization first emerged during the fourth millennium BCE in Egypt and Mesopotamia. In the Mediterranean, state-level societies first appeared in Crete and mainland Greece in the early second millennium BCE. This course investigates how and why these civilizations developed, as well as their appearance and structure in the early historic (or literate) phases of their existence. A comparative perspective will illustrate what these early civilizations have in common and the ways in which they are unique. This course will consist largely of lectures which will outline classic archaeological and anthropological theories on state formation, before turning to examine the available archaeological (and textual) data on emerging complexity in Egypt, Mesopotamia, and the Aegean. This course does not presuppose any knowledge of archaeology or ancient languages; the instructor will provide any background necessary. Because this is a course on material culture, some of the class periods will be spent at the Penn Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. These will consist of a guided tour of a relevant gallery, as well as a hands-on object-based lab with archaeological materials selected by the instructor. This course meets the General Education Curriculums Cross Cultural Analysis f oundational approach, whose aim is to help students understand and interpret t he cultures of peoples (even long-dead peoples) with histories different from their own; it also fulfills the History and Tradition Sector breadth requirement.
Course number only
182
Cross listings
ANTH139401, URBS139401
Fulfills
History & Tradition Sector
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No

NELC166 - Religion Ancient Egypt

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Religion Ancient Egypt
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC166401
Course number integer
166
Registration notes
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Meeting times
MW 02:00 PM-03:30 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
David P Silverman
Description
Weekly lectures (some of which will be illustrated) and a field trip to the University Museum's Egyptian Section. The multifaceted approach to the subject matter covers such topics as funerary literature and religion, cults, magic religious art and architecture, and the religion of daily life.
Course number only
166
Cross listings
NELC468401, RELS114401
Use local description
No

NELC160 - The Making of Scripture

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
The Making of Scripture
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC160401
Course number integer
160
Registration notes
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Meeting times
TR 10:30 AM-12:00 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Simcha Gross
Description
The Bible as we know it is the product of a lengthy process of development, elaboration, contest, and debate. Rather than a foregone conclusion, the process by which the texts and traditions within the bible, and the status ascribed to them, was turbulent and uncertain. This course examines that process, examining the Bible, traditions and communities from the Second Temple Period - such as the Dead Sea Scrolls and Community - that rewrote, reconsidered, revised, or rejected now well-recognized figures and stories, and constructed distinct ideas of what was considered scripture and how it should be approached. Even as the bible began to resemble the corpus as we now know it, interpretive strategies rendered it entirely different, such as Hellenistic Allegorizers, working from the platonic tradition, rabbinic readers who had an entirely different set of hermeneutics, early Christians, who offered different strategies for reading the "Old" and "New" Testaments alongside one another (and employing categories like "Old" and "New," themselves constituting a new attitude and relationship to and between these texts), and lastly early Muslim readers, who embraced many of the stories in the Bible, altered others, and debated the status of these corpuses under Islam.
Course number only
160
Cross listings
JWST160401
Use local description
No

NELC159 - Mod Heb Lit & Film Trans: Fantasy, Dreams, and Madness in Lit & Film

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Mod Heb Lit & Film Trans: Fantasy, Dreams, and Madness in Lit & Film
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC159401
Course number integer
159
Registration notes
Course is available to Freshmen and Upperclassmen.
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Meeting times
TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Nili R Gold
Description
This course examines cinematic and literary portrayals of childhood. While Israeli works constitute more than half of the course's material, European film and fiction play comparative roles. Many of the works are placed, and therefore discussed, against a backdrop of national or historical conflicts. Nonetheless, private traumas (such as madness, abuse, or loss) or an adult s longing for an idealized time are often the central foci of the stories. These issues and the nature of individual and collective memory will be discussed from a psychological point of view. Additionally, the course analyzes how film, poetry and prose use their respective languages to reconstruct the image of childhood; it discusses the authors and directors struggle to penetrate the psyche of a child and to retrieve fragments of past events.
Course number only
159
Cross listings
COML282401, CIMS159401, JWST154401
Fulfills
Arts & Letters Sector
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No

NELC154 - Women in Jewish Lit

Status
O
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Women in Jewish Lit
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC154401
Course number integer
154
Registration notes
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Benjamin Franklin Seminars
Meeting times
TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Kathryn Hellerstein
Description
"Jewish woman, who knows your life? In darkness you have come, in darkness do you go." J. L. Gordon (1890). This course will bring into the light the long tradition of women as readers, writers, and subjects in Jewish literature. All texts will be in translation from Yiddish and Hebrew, or in English. Through a variety of genres -- devotional literature, memoir, fiction, and poetry -- we will study women's roles and selves, the relations of women and men, and the interaction between Jewish texts and women's lives. The legacy of women in Yiddish devotional literature will serve as background for our reading of modern Jewish fiction and poetry from the past century. The course is divided into five segments. The first presents a case study of the Matriarchs Rachel and Leah, as they are portrayed in the Hebrew Bible, in rabbinic commentary, in pre-modern prayers, and in modern poems. We then examine a modern novel that recasts the story of Dinah, Leah's daughter. Next we turn to the seventeenth century Glikl of Hamel, the first Jewish woman memoirist. The third segment focuses on devotional literature for and by women. In the fourth segment, we read modern women poets in Yiddish, Hebrew, and English. The course concludes with a fifth segment on fiction written by women in Yiddish, Hebrew, and English. All readings and lectures in English.
Course number only
154
Cross listings
JWST268401, GSWS162401, GRMN262401
Fulfills
Arts & Letters Sector
Use local description
No

NELC153 - How To Read the Bible

Status
C
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
How To Read the Bible
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC153401
Course number integer
153
Registration notes
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Benjamin Franklin Seminars
Meeting times
TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Steven Phillip Weitzman
Description
The aim of this course is to explore what the Bible means, and why it means such different things to different people. Why do people find different kinds of meaning in the Bible. Who is right in the struggle over its meaning, and how does one go about deciphering that meaning in the first place? Focusing on the book of Genesis, this seminar seeks to help students answer these questions by introducing some of the many ways in which the Bible has been read over the ages. exploring its meaning as understood by ancient Jews and Christians, modern secular scholars, contemporary fiction writers, feminist activists, philosophers and other kinds of interpreter.
Course number only
153
Cross listings
RELS130401, JWST131401
Use local description
No

NELC150 - Intro To the Bible

Status
C
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Intro To the Bible
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC150401
Course number integer
150
Registration notes
Course is available to Freshmen and Upperclassmen.
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Humanities & Social Science Sector
Meeting times
TR 04:30 PM-06:00 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Isabel Cranz
Description
An introduction to the major themes and ideas of the Hebrew Bible (the Old Testament), with attention to the contributions of archaeology and modern Biblical scholarship, including Biblical criticism and the response to it in Judaism and Christianity. All readings are in English.
Course number only
150
Cross listings
RELS150401, JWST150401, NELC450401
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No

NELC148 - Warriors,Concubines,And Converts: the Ottoman Empire in the Mid East & Euro

Status
O
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Warriors,Concubines,And Converts: the Ottoman Empire in the Mid East & Euro
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC148401
Course number integer
148
Registration notes
Course is available to Freshmen and Upperclassmen.
Crse Online: Sync & Async Components
Meeting times
TR 03:00 PM-04:30 PM
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Oscar Aguirre Mandujano
Description
For almost six hundred years, the Ottomans ruled most of the Balkans and the Middle East. From their bases in Anatolia, Ottoman armies advanced into the Balkans, Syria, Egypt, and Iraq, constantly challenging the borders of neighboring European and Islamicate empires. By the end of the seventeenth century, Constantinople, Jerusalem, Cairo, Baghdad, Sarajevo, Budapest, and nearly Vienna came under Ottoman rule. As the empire expanded into Europe and the Middle East, the balance of imperial power shifted from warriors to converts, concubines, and intellectuals. This course examines the expansion of the Ottoman sultanate from a local principality into a sprawling empire with a sophisticated bureaucracy; it also investigates the social, cultural, and intellectual developments that accompanied the long arc of the empire's rise and fall. By the end of the course, students will be able to identify and discuss major currents of change in the Ottoman Empire and the Middle East. The student will have a better understanding of the roles of power, ideology, diplomacy, and gender in the construction of empire and a refined appreciation for diverse techniques of historical analysis.
Course number only
148
Cross listings
HIST148401
Fulfills
History & Tradition Sector
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No

NELC136 - Introduction To Islam

Status
X
Activity
LEC
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Introduction To Islam
Term
2020C
Subject area
NELC
Section number only
401
Section ID
NELC136401
Course number integer
136
Registration notes
Course is available to Freshmen and Upperclassmen.
Meeting times
CANCELED
Level
undergraduate
Description
This course is an introduction to Islam as a religion as it exists in societies of the past as well as the present. It explores the many ways in which Muslims have interpreted and put into practice the prophetic message of Muhammad through historical and social analyses of varying theological, philosophical, legal, political, mystical and literary writings, as well as through visual art and music. The aim of the course is to develop a framework for explaining the sources and symbols through which specific experiences and understandings have been signified as Islamic, both by Muslims and by other peoples with whom they have come into contact, with particular emphasis given to issues of gender, religious violence and changes in beliefs and behaviors which have special relevance for contemporary society.
Course number only
136
Cross listings
RELS143401, SAST139401
Fulfills
Cross Cultural Analysis
Use local description
No