About Our Department

Stanford's Department of Religious Studies offers a variety of disciplinary perspectives on religion and on the history, literature, thought, and practice of particular religious traditions. The department is home to a dozen regular faculty, with strengths especially in the study of Christianity, Judaism, Buddhism, and Islam; it enrolls about thirty graduate students and roughly as many undergraduate majors.

Religious Studies works closely with several related programs at Stanford: the Department of Philosophy, with which we share staff and offer a joint undergraduate major; the Stanford Center for Buddhist Studies, with which we share Building 70 on the Main Quad; the Taube Center for Jewish Studies, the Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies; the Program in Medieval studies; Interdisciplinary Studies in Humanities, with which we offer joint graduate degrees; and the Asian Religions & Cultures Initiative. More information on these programs can be found in Resources.

In addition to our regular curriculum, the department sponsors several annual academic programs: the Religious Studies Colloquium; the Aaron-Roland Lecture in Jewish Studies; the Evans-Wentz Lecture in Asian Philosophy, Religion and Ethics; the Howard M. Garfield Forum for Undergraduates; and the Religious Studies Lecture in Islamic Studies.

Stanford's Department of Religious Studies was founded in 1973, with William Clebsch as its first chair. A lively account of the early history of religious studies at the university can be found at former chair and emeritus professor Van Harvey's "Religious Studies at Stanford: An Historical Sketch."


New Publications

Becoming Heidegger: On the Trail of His Early Occasional Writings, 1910-1927
-Theodore Kisiel and Thomas Sheehan, eds.
(Northwestern University Press, 2007)

The Encyclopedia of Taoism: 2-Volume Set
- Fabrizio Pregadio, ed.
(Routledge Curzon, 2007)


The Cambridge Companion to the Talmud and Rabbinic Literature
Charlotte E. Fonrobert and Martin Jaffee, eds.
(Cambridge University Press, 2007)

Charlotte E. Fonrobert and Martin Jaffee, eds., The Cambridge Companion to the Talmud and Rabbinic Literature (Cambridge/ New York:Cambridge University Press, 2007)

 
Department of Religious Studies, Stanford University, Building 70, 450 Serra Mall, Main Quad, Stanford, CA 94305-2165
phone 650-723-3322   |   fax 650-725-1476
Copyright © 2007 Stanford Department of Religious Studies   All Rights Reserved   |   Updated 9.24.2007