
Academic Programs --- About Us--- Contact Us--- News & Events--- RGSO
About the Department of Religious Studies
Brief
History
With initial funding
from John D. Rockefeller, The University
of Iowa took a courageous and innovative
step forward when it founded the School
of Religion in 1927, some four decades before
other public universities took similar action.
The founders most basic concern was to incorporate
the study of religion, as a prominent and
often pre-eminent factor in human culture,
within the university curriculum. However,
in its last three decades, the School has
undergone disciplinary and curricular transformations
that reach far beyond the founders’
vision.
The Supreme Court decision of 1963 that banned prescribed prayers and religious exercise from public schools (Abington Township v Schempp) was a landmark event. The decision also opened up the real possibility for the rigorously academic study of religion, which was deemed to be constitutionally legitimate in public institutions. Colleges and universities across the country established religion departments. At that time Iowa was already a recognized leader among state universities. Robert S. Michaelson had become Director of the School of Religion in 1954, and he developed a commitment to cross-cultural studies in religion at The University of Iowa. The University responded to Michaelson’s leadership by expanding the School’s faculty from six individuals in 1954 to fourteen in 1969.
This expansion led to the School’s recognition within the academy as a visible and respected presence among major research institutions that offer undergraduate and graduate programs in the academic study of religion. Most importantly, the School's fundamental approach to scholarship and teaching assumed a more comparative and interdisciplinary orientation. In its curriculum the School expanded well beyond its initial Judeo-Christian focus into the history of Asian religions. These changes in some cases set the pace for monumental changes in the field of religious studies generally speaking.
After 75 years as the School of Religion, and after establishing such a significant tradition within the academy as a major institution among public universities, the faculty have officially changed our name to “Department of Religious Studies.” This change of name signifies a change in both substantive identity and purpose. Today we define our mission in these words: to advance scholarly inquiry into religion and its influences, and to educate students for responsible citizenship in a religiously pluralistic world by teaching them to think clearly and critically about religion. Our focus is on the comparative study of religion and the arts, religion and conflict, and religion and health (bioethics).
Interested
in Graduate Study? | Interested
in a Religious Studies Major?
Academic Programs
| News and Events
| Faculty Directory
| About Us | Contact
Us
Department of Religious
Studies | The
University of Iowa
314 Gilmore Hall, Iowa City, IA 52242
319-335-2164
religion@uiowa.edu
Copyright © 2004 The University of Iowa. All rights reserved.