Maricopa Community Colleges  REL203   20036-99999 

Official Course Description: MCCCD Approval: 12-10-2002

REL203  2003 Fall – 2013 Spring

LEC  3.0 Credit(s)  3.0 Period(s)  3.0 Load  Acad

American Indian Religions

Tribal traditions of the peoples native to North America, and pan-Indian religions in the twentieth century.

Prerequisites: ENG101 or ENG107 or equivalent.

Cross-References: AIS213

 

 

 

 

Course Attribute(s):

General Education Designation: Cultural Diversity - [C]

General Education Designation: Humanities and Fine Arts - [HU]

General Education Designation: Literacy and Critical Inquiry - [L]

 

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MCCCD Official Course Competencies:

 

 

REL203  2003 Fall - 2013 Spring

American Indian Religions

 

1.

Describe both academic and popular Euroamerican views of American Indian at the time of contact, during the development of European hegemony, and in the modern period. (I)

2.

Explain the importance of stories, myths, songs, and rituals. (II)

3.

Identify the significant religious personages and practitioners in American Indian religious traditions. (III)

4.

Compare and contrast American Indian and Western concepts of time, space, and other dimensions. (III)

5.

Describe how American Indian integrate religious world views and traditions into everyday life. (IV)

6.

Compare and contrast American Indian views of human religious responsibility with those of Euroamericans. (IV)

7.

Describe examples of the twentieth-century American Indian religious movement. (V)

 

 

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MCCCD Official Course Outline:

 

 

REL203  2003 Fall - 2013 Spring

American Indian Religions

 

I. Euroamerican Perceptions of American Indian

A. Historical contacts with Euroamericans

B. Popular and academic views of American Indian

II. American Indian Religious Orality

A. Stories, myths

B. Songs

C. Rituals

III. American Indian Cosmology

A. Religious personages

1. Creators

2. Tricksters

3. Culture heroes

B. Religious practitioners

1. Shamans

2. Religious leaders

3. Witches, sorcerers

C. Time, space, and other dimensions

IV. American Indian Values

A. Integration of religion and life

B. Kinship of all life

C. Sharing and reciprocity

D. Power and responsibility

V. Religious Development and Change

A. Historical Christian and Native interactions

B. Twentieth-century religious movements

 

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