Monthly Archives: April 2016

PhD position in Tromsø

A PhD position is now open at the University of Tromsø – The Arctic University of Norway, in the research project “Indigenous Religion(s): Local Grounds, Global Networks” (INREL).

Applicants must propose a case study either of a Christian organization or network and its engagement with indigenous peoples and indigenous religion(s), or of an example of indigenous theology and the networks and practices in which it is situated. The proposal should fit with the methodological and theoretical framework of the INREL project.

The position is for 4 years and comes with a salary (for the time being 444.700,- NOK a year) and extra funding for fieldwork.

For the full announcement, see https://www.jobbnorge.no/ledige-stillinger/stilling/125151/phd-position-in-religious-studies-at-the-department-of-history-and-religious-studies-campus-tromsoe

New Book: Islam and Popular Culture

Islam and Popular Culture

Edited by Karin van Nieuwkerk, Mark LeVine & Martin Stokes

Popular culture serves as a fresh and revealing window on contemporary developments in the Muslim world because it is a site where many important and controversial issues are explored and debated. Aesthetic expression has become intertwined with politics and religion due to the uprisings of the “Arab Spring,” while, at the same time, Islamist authorities are showing increasingly accommodating and populist attitudes toward popular culture. Not simply a “westernizing” or “secularizing” force, as some have asserted, popular culture now plays a growing role in defining what it means to be Muslim.

With well-structured chapters that explain key concepts clearly, Islam and Popular Culture addresses new trends and developments that merge popular arts and Islam. Its eighteen case studies by eminent scholars cover a wide range of topics, such as lifestyle, dress, revolutionary street theater, graffiti, popular music, poetry, television drama, visual culture, and dance throughout the Muslim world from Indonesia, Africa, and the Middle East to Europe. The first comprehensive overview of this important subject, Islam and Popular Culture offers essential new ways of understanding the diverse religious discourses and pious ethics expressed in popular art productions, the cultural politics of states and movements, and the global flows of popular culture in the Muslim world.

University of Texas Press

April 2016

https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/islam-and-popular-culture

CFP: Religion and Nation(alism): Entanglements, Tensions, Conflicts

The Estonian Society for the Study of Religions

announces a call for papers for the conference

Religion and Nation(alism):
Entanglements, Tensions, Conflicts

University of Tartu, Estonia, 10-11 November 2016

https://www.eaus.ee/en/conference-2016/

Recent developments throughout the world have shown that the connections between ethnic and religious identity have not lost their actuality. The relationships between religion and nationalism are multifaceted and interactive; their dynamics is influenced by social and political conditions. The politisation of religion may support ethnic and national unity, whereas religion may lead to particular forms of political activism. The concurrence of ethnic and religious identity (or the lack of it!) may result in nation building or the shaping of an ideology of the ‘chosen people’. Moreover, religious identities may offer possibilities for the formation of communities that cross national borders.

Studying the role that religion plays in these complex relationships will offer us insights into the formation, development or disintegration of certain groups and their choices, both in individual and public spheres. Thus, we welcome scholars from all fields of study (anthropology, archaeology, ethnology, folkloristics, history, political and religious studies, etc.) who study the connections between (ir)religion and nationalism or group identities. Particularly interesting aspects include:

  • diachronic and contemporary aspects of the relationships between nationalism and religion
  • regional aspects of religion and nation(alism)
  • ideological entanglements of religion and nation(alism)
  • religious tensions and conflicts between ethnic groups both past and present
  • the relationships between (ir)religion, nationalism and group identity
  • discursive intersections of religion and nationalism with gender, sexuality, race, class, culture and history
  • the religious aspects of secular nationalism and secular sources of the public authority of religious institutions and traditions
  • migration and religion, expatriate relationships with nation(alism) and religion
  • conspiracy theories about the religious background of migrants
  • neo-pagan and esoteric movements in the context of nation building

The language of the conference will be English, the length of papers 20 minutes. A conference fee of 80€ will be applied for meals and materials; participants are expected to pay for their own travel and accommodation.

Please submit your abstract of 250-300 words to the conference e-mail address: conference2016@eaus.ee before 31.05.2016. Pre-arranged panels will also be considered. Notification of acceptance, and the opening of registration, not later than: 01.07.2016.

For inquiries please contact the Secretary of the conference, Piret Koosa (piret.koosa@gmail.com). Current information about the conference can be found at our home page https://www.eaus.ee/en/conference-2016/

The conference is being organised by the Estonian Society for the Study of Religions in cooperation with the University of Tartu (School of Theology and Religious Studies, Institute of Cultural Research and Arts) and the Estonian Literary Museum.

Organising committee: Madis Arukask, Alar Kilp, Piret Koosa, Katre Koppel, Mare Kõiva, Jaan Lahe, Atko Remmel, Ülo Valk, Ergo-Hart Västrik

Conference programme: Crossing the Borders. Interdisciplinary Research in Arabic and Islamic Studies International Graduate Student Conference

Here you can find the programme for International Graduate Student
Conference “Crossing the Borders. Interdisciplinary Research in Arabic
and Islamic Studies” organized by The Chair of Arabic Studies at
Yerevan State University in cooperation with Middle Orient project.

Conference programme: https://middleorient.com/?p=6724

The conference will take place at Yerevan State University on May 5th
and 6th, 2016.

CFP: Lund University conference on gender & theology

Tradition is the New Radical – Remapping Masculinities and Femininities in Theology
KEY NOTE SPEAKERS: TINA BEATTIE, VICTOR SEIDLER AND LINN MARIE TONSTAD | 12–14 DECEMBER 2016 | CENTRE FOR THEOLOGY AND RELIGIOUS STUDIES | LUND UNIVERSITY
Over the past two decades a strong trend in theology has been the retrieval of patristic and medieval traditions, often for radical purposes. Whereas much (above all Protestant) theology during modernity sought to be progressive by means of distancing itself from tradition, recent currents within both Anglican and Catholic theology seek progress through the retrieval of hidden, forgotten or suppressed aspects of the tradition. Examples range from Sarah Coakley’s daring retrieval of ascetic practices for feminist purposes to Gerald Loughlin’s gathering of radical analyses of the biblical tradition in his monumental Queer Theology: Rethinking the Western Body.
This conference will explore the remapping of masculinities and femininities that these developments have generated in contemporary theology. On the one hand, the aim is to further enhance the radical analyses of the biblical tradition in order to continue along the emancipatory track set out by feminist and queer theologians in the past decades. On the other hand, the aim is also to investigate possible flipsides of this fascination with tradition. In focusing our attention on liberating symbols and practices in the past, is there a risk that we lose sight of existing gender stereotypes on a concrete societal and ecclesial level? Are conservative patterns regarding gender and sexuality sometimes even being reproduced under the guise of seemingly radical historical metaphors?
CALL FOR PAPERS
We invite papers with a clear relevance for the conference theme as described above. Abstracts of no more than 300 words should be sent by June 15 to:
johanna.gustafsson_lundberg@ctr.lu.se and
jayne.svenungsson@ctr.lu.se
Abstracts are to be headed with the applicant’s name, professional affiliation, and title of proposed paper.

NCSR: Conference registration now open!

Registration open!

You are now welcome to register and pay your participation for the Nordic Conference for the Sociology of Religion 2016 – celebrated in Helsinki on 17th to 19th August!

The registration fee before May 31st is only 170€ – and 130€ for students!For the conference fee, you will receive:

  • Free access to all scientific events at the conference
  • Free lunch cruise on Thursday
  • Free conference dinner on Thursday evening
  • Three lunches, coffee/tea and fruit during some breaks
  • A two-year subscription of the paper version of Nordic Journal of Religion and Society. This journal traditionally publishes the plenary lectures of the conference and some selected submitted papers as well. The subscription of the journal is included in the conference fee for new subscribers as well as for present subscribers.

Please register through our website or clicking the button below!

See you in Helsinki!
Kati Tervo-Niemelä, Jenni Spännäri and the whole team

To the registration page!

PS: See also the updated conference program, including info about the sessions!

Invitation to Public Panel Discussion with Professor Jose Casanova at the Institute for Religion, Politics, & Society

We hope you will be able to join us for a public panel discussion on Global Catholicism, with Professor Jose Casanova, to be held at Australian Catholic University in Melbourne on Friday, May 6.
Information about the event, and a registration link, can be found in the flyer below, as well as here: https://irps.acu.edu.au/events/asia-pacific-catholicism-and-globalization-public-event/
Please circulate this to anyone who may be interested.
irps.acu.edu.au
The project, following the successful model of the Jesuits and Globalization project, gathers a group of experts on different regional and thematic aspects of Asian Catholicism in order to examine jointly and comparatively three sets of questions: a) A comparative historical reconstruction of the development of Asian Catholicism in major Asian countries and Oceania (Korea, …

New Book: Religion, Gender and Citizenship. Women of Faith, Gender Equality and Feminism

New book just published: Line Nyhagen and Beatrice Halsaa (April 2016). Religion, Gender and Citizenship: Women of Faith, Gender Equality and Feminism. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

Through interviews with Christian and Muslim women in Norway, Spain and the United Kingdom, this book explores intersections between religion, citizenship, gender and feminism. How do religious women think about citizenship, and how do they practice citizenship in everyday life? How important is faith in their lives, and how is religion bound up with other identities such as gender and nationality? What are their views on ‘gender equality’, women’s movements and feminism? The answers offered by this book are complex. Religion can be viewed as both a resource and a barrier to women’s participation. The interviewed women talk about citizenship in terms of participation, belonging, love, care, tolerance and respect. Nearly all want gender equality, but many regard such equality as compatible with different roles and spaces for women. Women’s movements are viewed as having made positive contributions to women’s status, but interviewees are also critical of claims related to abortion and divorce, and of feminism’s alleged selfish, unwomanly, anti-men and power-seeking stance. In the interviews, Christian privilege is largely invisible and silenced, while Muslim disadvantage is both visible and articulated. Line Nyhagen and Beatrice Halsaa unpack and make sense of these findings, discussing potential implications for the relationship between religion, gender and feminism.

Line Nyhagen is Reader in Sociology at Loughborough University, UK.

Beatrice Halsaa is Professor in Gender Studies at the University of Oslo, UK.

Reviews:

‘… a landmark contribution [and] essential reading for anyone interested in understanding the relation between religion, citizenship and women’s right and equality in the 21st century’ (Niamh Reilly, NUI Galway, Ireland).

‘This excellent book reveals the complexity of religious women’s lives in Europe and challenges generalisations made about, as well as by, religious women’ (Kristin Aune, Coventry University, UK).

For more information, see https://www.palgrave.com/uk/book/9781137405333#aboutBook

For a discount flyer (for individuals only), please write to L.Nyhagen@lboro.ac.uk

Fast Track doctoral scholarships

Starting October 1st, 2016 the a.r.t.e.s. Graduate School for the Humanities Cologne offers Fast Track doctoral scholarships over a period of three years.
The a.r.t.e.s. Graduate School serves the entire Faculty of Arts and Humanities and covers all qualification levels of academic training in the arts and humanities – from Master to postdoc. The Fast Track model allows students in their last semester of Master’s studies to immediately be accepted as doctoral students in the structured programme of the a.r.t.e.s. Graduate School. Candidates admitted to the structured doctoral programme are supervised by a team of three researchers and study a curriculum that involves, among other things, participation in regular meetings of one of the six interdisciplinary graduate classes.
The Fast Track model addresses excellent graduates who are already able to present a viable proposal for a doctoral dissertation project directly after the completion of their degree and who are therefore able to be immediately accepted into the structured doctoral programme of the a.r.t.e.s. Graduate School. The doctoral projects of the scholarship holders will be supervised by full professors at the University of Cologne. Applicants may contact potential supervisors in the course of application.
The Fast Track doctoral scholarship is a full scholarship at EUR 1.250 per month and is awarded for three years, starting October 1st, 2016. Please send your complete application documents by May 20, 2016 (application receipt).
For all questions regarding the scholarships, the announcement or the application process, please see https://artes.phil-fak.uni-koeln.de/23699.html?&L=1.
Contact for further questions: artes-application@uni-koeln.de.