Overview
To view overview information, please select an offering from the drop-down menu above.
Academic contacts
To view unit coordinator information, please select an offering from the drop-down menu above.
Offerings
MURDOCH-S2-EXT-2024-2024
MURDOCH-S2-FACE2FACE-2026-2026
MURDOCH-S2-FACE2FACE-2028-2028
MURDOCH-S2-INT-2024-2024
MURDOCH-S2-ONLINEFLEX-2026-2026
MURDOCH-S2-ONLINEFLEX-2028-2028
Other learning activities
To view other learning activity information, please select an offering from the drop-down menu above.
Learning activities
To view learning activity information, please select an offering from the drop-down menu above.
Learning outcomes
1.
Critically analyse religious beliefs, practice and institutions in the contemporary world using sociological concepts and theories.
2.
Explain the relationship of religion to wider social processes such as politics, economics, globalisation, international conflict, ethnicity and gender.
3.
Analyse national and global trends in religious beliefs and practices using a variety of data sources.
Assessments
To view assessment information, please select an offering from the drop-down menu above.
Additional information
Unit content:The early sociologists predicted that religion would disappear in the modern age. They were wrong – religion
endures, but it has been affected by modernity. How has religion shaped late?modern societies such as
Australia? In this unit, we will examine the classical sociological approaches to religion of Durkheim and
Weber, as well as the Critical stance taken by Marx and Feminist scholars, and the more individual, Existential
understanding of faith espoused by Kierkegaard and William James. Following this, we look at the interaction
between faith and the uniquely late?modern phenomena of Neoliberalism, Globalization, Secularization,
concluding with a discussion of faith’s continuing importance today.
Other notes:It is highly recommended that students complete SOC134 Introduction to Sociology prior to enrolling in this unit.