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http://www.aarweb.org/meetings/Annual_Meeting/Past_and_Future_Meetings/2007/Default.asp
2007 AAR Online Program Book (San Diego)
To view the expanded information on the session, press the . To collapse the entry, press the button.
Program Book Text
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Time and room assignments are subject to change; final time
and room assignments are available in the onsite Annual Meeting
Program At-A-Glance.
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San Diego Convention Center |
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Manchester Grand Hyatt |
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San Diego Marriott Hotel & Marina |
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A16-100
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Chairs Workshop: Best Practices: Diversifying Your Faculty – Honest Conversations |
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Friday - 9:00 am-4:30 pm
CC-24A
Sponsored by the Academic Relations Committee and the Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in the Profession Committee
Miguel A. De La Torre, Iliff School of Theology, Presiding
Panelists:
Edwin David Aponte, Lancaster Theological Seminary
Grace Ji-Sun Kim, Moravian Theological Seminary
Akintunde Ebunolu Akinade, High Point University
Sharon Watson Fluker, Fund for Theological Education
Stacey Floyd-Thomas, Brite Divinity School
Fumitaka Matsuoka, Pacific School of Religion
Separate registration is required.
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Abstract
Chairs Workshop: Best Practices: Diversifying Your Faculty – Honest Conversations
Sponsored by the Academic Relations Committee and the Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in the Profession Committee
The workshop will deal with issues on how to diversify the academic institution, specifically the student body and the administration. Based on the Career Guide for Racial and Ethnic Minorities in the Profession, the program will be an honest and open discussion on good practices to follow along with pitfalls to avoid. Plenary, panels, and interactive break-out sessions will be featured. Featured speakers include Sharon Watson Fluker, Stacey Floyd-Thomas, Edwin Aponte, and Fumitaka Matsuoka. Breakout sessions will be led by Edwin Aponte, Grace Ji-Sun Kim, Akintude Akinade, and Miguel A. De La Torre.
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A16-101
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Leadership Workshop: The Religion Major and Liberal Education |
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Friday - 9:00 am-4:30 pm
CC-24C
Timothy M. Renick, Georgia State University, Presiding
Panelists:
Richard M. Carp, Appalachian State University
Nadine S. Pence, Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion
Stephen Prothero, Boston University
Separate registration is required.
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Abstract
Leadership Workshop: The Religion Major and Liberal Education
Amid changing global and academic contexts, what is the nature and role of the religion major? What are its goals, and how do they relate to the goals of a liberal education? How do we know if we are succeeding in meeting these goals? The workshop will bring together a distinguished group of experts to lead a day-long and interactive discussion of the religion major. Through plenaries, panels, and breakout sections, participants will explore and share challenges, best practices, success stories, and failures. The workshop is part of an eighteen-month-long joint AAR/Teagle Foundation project to study the religion major.
Preliminary Agenda:
Introduction: Why Religious Studies?
Establishing the Religious Studies Major: Stories from the Trenches (interactive session)
Religious Studies Across the Curriculum: The Interdisciplinary Nature of the Major (panel discussion)
Lunch
The Major in Different Institutional Contexts/Different Models for the Major (interactive session)
What has worked? What has not? (panel discussion followed by a break-out session)
Summary: What Have We Learned (as a Discipline and Today)?
The workshop will be of benefit to a range of participants: faculty, administrators, and graduate students. The goal is to bring a diverse group of AAR members together in an lively and open discussion about what it means to major in religion, what our field contributes (and should contribute) to the education of our students, and how we can be better at what we do.
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A16-103
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AAR Board of Directors Meeting |
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Friday - 9:00 am-5:00 pm
MM-Manchester
Jeffrey L. Stout, Princeton University, Presiding
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A16-106
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Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies |
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Show Session Details |
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Friday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Edward C
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A16-107
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North American Paul Tillich Society |
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Theme: Paul Tillich and Jewish Thought |
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Friday - 9:00 am-11:15 am
GH-Manchester A
Marcia MacLennan, Kansas Wesleyan University, Presiding
Theme: Paul Tillich and Jewish Thought
Bryan Wagoner, Harvard University
Judaism in the Life and Thought of Paul Tillich
Anne Marie Reijnen, Faculté Universitaire de Théologie Protestante, Brussels, Institut Catholique de Paris
Liberal Theology, Zionism, and Christian Nationalism: A Topical Inquiry into the Dialogue between Paul Tillich and Martin Buber
Stephen Butler Murray, Skidmore College
The Relevance of Paul Tillich to the Future of the Jewish-Christian Dialogue
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A16-104
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Religion and Media Workshop: Religion and New Media -- Old Tools or New Trajectories? |
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Friday - 10:00 am-6:00 pm
CC-25A
S. Brent Plate, Texas Christian University, Kaley Middlebrooks Carpenter, Princeton Theological Seminary, and Jenna Tiitsman, Auburn Theological Seminary, City University of New York, Presiding
Jeffrey Sharlet, New York University
Eddo Stern, Los Angeles, CA
Tracy Fullerton, University of Southern California
Heidi Ann Campbell, Texas A&M University
Separate registration is required.
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Abstract
Religion and Media Workshop: Religion and New Media -- Old Tools or New Trajectories?
From stone tablets to scrolls, printing presses to the Internet, artists, journalists, and believers of all stripes have used the advanced technology of their age. However, the question arises as to whether these new media are merely tools, or actually arbiters of religious change itself. This day-long workshop begins with questions such as: How is the representation of religion effected in new media incarnations, from the Internet to gaming? How is new media changing traditional journalism, and what are the effects on religion reporting? Could new media even be changing religion itself, in terms of what it means to those who practice it--or even how it is practiced? These are some of the issues covered in presentations by Jeff Sharlet (writer/editor of The Revealer, Harpers, Rolling Stone; Eddo Stern (Game Designer;, Tracy Fullerton (Game Designer, USC); Ryan Bolger (co-author, Emerging Churches); and Heidi Campbell (author, When Religion Meets New Media).
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A16-108
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North American Paul Tillich Society |
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Theme: Paul Tillich as Biblical Theologian |
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Friday - 11:30 am-1:15 pm
GH-Manchester A
Loye Ashton, Tougaloo College, Presiding
Theme: Paul Tillich as Biblical Theologian
Ron MacLennan, Bethany College
Paul Tillich: Biblical Theologian of Connectedness
Francis Ching-Wah Yip, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Tillich as a New Testament Theologian?
Matthew Lon Weaver, Duluth, MN
The Existential Reception of Revelation: Paul Tillich as Biblical Theologian
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A16-105
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Women's Caucus Workshop |
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Show Session Details |
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Friday - 12:00 pm-3:00 pm
MM-Columbia 2
Sponsored by the Women's Caucus
Julie J. Kilmer, Olivet College, Harriet Luckman, College of Mount St. Joseph, and Paula Trimble-Familetti, Chapman University, Presiding
Melissa Stewart, Adrian College
Intersections between Women’s Studies and Religious Studies
Barbara J. Searcy, Lee University
Organizing Women’s Groups on College Campuses
Mary Keller, University of Wyoming
Online Teaching: What Five Years Have Taught Me
Ruth Fitzgerald, Grand Ledge, MI
Distance Learning—More Than Theology: A Student Perspective
Nancy L. Eiesland, Emory University
Accessing Feminist Theology: The Missing Subjectivity of Women with Disabilities
Kathryn A. Lyndes, Chicago Theological Seminary, Elmhurst College
Contemporary Strategies for Adjunct Classroom Teaching
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Abstract
Women's Caucus Workshop
Sponsored by the Women's Caucus
Includes three mini-sessions on Strategies for Women in the Profession, Women and Online Teaching, and Women in the Classroom.
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A16-200
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International Bonhoeffer Society: Editorial Board, Annual Meeting, Board of Directors |
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Friday - 1:00 pm-6:30 pm
MM-Marina G
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A16-201
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North American Association for the Study of Religion |
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Theme: Ritual Transformation of Agency |
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Friday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
CC-23A
Theme: Ritual Transformation of Agency
Jens Kreinath, Wichita State University and University of Heidelberg
Mimesis, Fractal Dynamics, and Agency in Yoruba Spirit Possessions
Gustavo Benavides, Villanova University
Priestly, Institutional, and Material Agency in Roman Catholic Sacramental Practice
Steven Engler, Mount Royal College and Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo
Patronage and Distributed Agency in Brazilian Spirit-possession
Responding:
Ivan Strenski, University of California, Riverside
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A16-202
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Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies |
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Friday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
GH-Edward C
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A16-203
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Thomas F. Torrance Theological Fellowship |
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Friday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
GH-Betsy B
1:00 pm Business Meeting
2:00 pm Eric G. Flett, Eastern University
Persons, Powers, and Pluralities: Thomas F. Torrance's Trinitarian Ontology of Culture
See www.tftorrance.org for more information.
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A16-205
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Person, Culture, and Religion Group |
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Friday - 2:00 pm-6:30 pm
CC-29B
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A16-204
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North American Paul Tillich Society |
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Theme: Paul Tillich and Religious Pluralism |
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Friday - 2:15 pm-4:00 pm
GH-Manchester A
John Thatamanil, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
Theme: Paul Tillich and Religious Pluralism
Christian Danz, University of Vienna
Christianity and the Encounter of World Religions: The Contribution of Paul Tillich to Current Discussions in the Theology of Religion
John Starkey, Oklahoma City University
The Human Predicament and Salvation in Tillich and Thatamanil
Andrew Yan, Hope College
Paul Tillich's Encounters with Buddhism: An Implication for His Systematic Theology
Luis Pedraja, Middle States Commission on Higher Education
The Tao of Tillich
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A16-300
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North American Association for the Study of Religion |
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Theme: Novelty, Presence, and History: Brief Pre-Modern Discourses on Method and Theory |
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Friday - 4:00 pm-6:30 pm
CC-23A
Theme: Novelty, Presence, and History: Brief Pre-Modern Discourses on Method and Theory
Alison Frazier, University of Texas, Austin
Saintly Presence: The Wager of Latin Hagiography in Renaissance Italy
Nancy Levene, Indiana University, Bloomington
Traces of History in St. Anselm
Constance Furey, Indiana University, Bloomington
Utopian History
Responding:
Nathan Rein, Ursinus College
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A16-301
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Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality |
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Theme: Teaching for Justice: Research and Teaching Strategies in Higher Theological Education |
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Friday - 4:00 pm-6:00 pm
MM-Marina D
Theme: Teaching for Justice: Research and Teaching Strategies in Higher Theological Education
Given that we are to live and work toward justice within most faith traditions’ perspectives, how does our scholarship and practice encourage “teaching for justice” within institutions of higher education? A panel of scholar-teachers will respond to this question with observations (via programming, syllabi, and/or course assignments) from their research and teaching of spirituality. For more information, please contact Anita Houck at ahouck@saintmarys.edu.
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A16-302
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Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies |
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Theme: In or Out: Homosexuality, the Church, and the Sangha |
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Friday - 4:00 pm-6:30 pm
GH-Manchester G
Harry Wells, Humboldt State University, Presiding
Theme: In or Out: Homosexuality, the Church, and the Sangha
Robert Fastiggi, Sacred Heart Major Seminary, Detroit
The Catholic Church and Homosexuality
Ilene Stanford, Harvard University
In or Out? Marriage as a Social Practice
José Ignacio Cabezón, University of California, Santa Barbara
Is Homosexual Sex "Sexual Misconduct"? Critical Reflections on Some Classical Indo-Tibetan Sources
Michael Sweet, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Shameless Discretion: Insider and Outsider Perspectives of Homoeroticism in the Sangha
Responding:
Richard Reilly, St. Bonaventure University
6:00 pm Business Meeting
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A16-303
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Polanyi Society |
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Friday - 4:00 pm-6:00 pm
GH-Edward B
Jere Moorman, Polanyi Society, Presiding
4:00 pm William Coulson, Center for Studies of the Person
On Having Misread Polanyi’s Theory of Personal Knowledge
Responding:
Dale Cannon, Western Oregon University
Philip Rolnick, St Thomas University
5:15 pm William Kelleher, La Canada, CA
Personal Knowledge as Pure Self-Reflection
Responding:
Phil Mullins, Western Missouri State University
Diane Yeager, Georgetown University
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A16-304
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Karl Barth Society of North America |
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Friday - 4:00 pm-6:30 pm
CC-29C
Mark McInroy, Harvard University
Karl Barth and Personalist Philosophy: A Critical Appropriation
John McDowell, Edinburgh University
Christology and Prayer in Karl Barth's Theology
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A16-305
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North American Paul Tillich Society |
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Theme: Paul Tillich, Ethics, and Theology |
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Friday - 4:15 pm-6:30 pm
GH-Manchester A
David Nikkel, University of North Carolina, Pembroke, Presiding
Theme: Paul Tillich, Ethics, and Theology
Daniel Puchalla, University of Chicago
The Limits of Love, Power, and Justice: Tillich's Ontology and Theology against “Full-Spectrum” Military
Annekatrien Depoorter, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Doing Theology in a Context of Religious and Cultural Pluralism: A Comparison and Evaluation of Paul Tillich’s Method of Correlation and the Theological Method of Edward Schillebeeckx
Jennifer L. Baldwin, Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago
Erotic Play: A Trip into the Secret Lives of Girls, Feminist Theologies of the Erotic, and the Theological Thought of Paul Tillich
Sigridur Gotmarsdottir, Drew University
The Apophatic “God above God”: Tillich and the Poststructuralist Critique of Negative Theology
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A16-306
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Søren Kierkegaard Society Banquet |
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Friday - 6:00 pm-10:00 pm
Offsite
Athens Market Taverna
109 West "F" Street
6:00 pm Social Hour
7:00 pm Banquet (Contact Lee Barrett at lbarrett@lancasterseminary.edu)
8:00 pm K. Brian Soderquist, Søren Kierkegaard Center, University of Copenhagen
Using the New Translation of the Journals and Notebooks
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A16-400
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EIS Center Orientation |
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Friday - 7:00 pm-9:00 pm
GH-Elizabeth
Sponsored by the EIS Advisory Committee
Shelly C. Roberts, American Academy of Religion, Presiding
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Abstract
EIS Center Orientation
Sponsored by the EIS Advisory Committee
The EIS Center orientation will feature a short presentation which will include an overview of the center, an explanation of how to best utilize the center, and a question and answer session. After the presentation, the center will be open for use, with the exception of the Interview Hall. Employers will be able to review candidate credentials, leave messages for registered candidates, and make reservations for booth space. Candidates will be able to pick up their copy of the Annual Meetings Special Edition of Openings, and leave messages for employers. The center will also accepting onsite registrations at this time. Employers and candidates are encouraged to participate in orientation but are not required to attend.
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A16-403
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Society for the Arts in Religious and Theological Studies Reception |
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Friday - 7:00 pm-8:30 pm
MM-Coronado
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A16-404
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Society for Hindu-Christian Studies |
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Theme: How We Do Hindu-Christian Studies |
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Friday - 7:00 pm-11:00 pm
GH-Molly B
Theme: How We Do Hindu-Christian Studies
This panel seeks broad audience participation in a discussion of methods, theories, and approaches in the field of Hindu-Christian studies. Panelists will make brief remarks based on papers that will be made available in advance on the HCS listserv, and audience members will then be invited to join in the discussion. To sign up for the listserv or to get copies (after Nov. 2), please email: cbauman@butler.edu.
T. S. Rukmani, Concordia University, Presiding
Harold Coward, University of Victoria
Hindu-Christian Studies: A Retrospective
Susan Abraham, Harvard Divinity School
Theological Approaches to Hindu-Christian Studies
Brian K. Pennington, Maryville College
Historical-Critical Approaches to Hindu-Christian Studies
Arvind Sharma, McGill University
Hindu-Christian Studies through the Lens of Ethics
Catherine Cornille, Boston College
Missiology and Hindu-Christian Studies
Kristin Bloomer, University of Chicago
Ethnography and Hindu-Christian Studies
Responding:
T. S. Rukmani, Concordia University
The Future of Hindu-Christian Studies
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A16-405
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Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality |
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Theme: Dying to Live: A Film and Conversation about Spirituality on the Borderlands |
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Show Session Details |
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Friday - 7:00 pm-9:30 pm
CC-24B
Theme: Dying to Live: A Film and Conversation about Spirituality on the Borderlands
How does “crossing the border” affect one's spirituality? In this session, the short film Dying to Live will be shown, followed by a panel discussion with Mexican migrants and others whose lives are profoundly shaped by the tense reality of the U.S.-Mexican border. All are welcome to attend and to stay after the discussion to view displays and share conversation. For more information, please contact Anita Houck at ahouck@saintmarys.edu.
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A16-401
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Arts Series/Films: Jesus Camp |
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Friday - 7:30 pm-9:00 pm
GH-Betsy B
Sponsored by the Religion, Film, and Visual Culture Group
Rachel Wagner, Ithaca College, Presiding
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Abstract
Arts Series/Films: Jesus Camp
Sponsored by the Religion, Film, and Visual Culture Group
This documentary film provides a window into life at the Pentecostal youth camp "Kids on Fire" and by extension also portrays some of the most controversial religious and political aspirations of evangelical Christians in America today. Discussing the making of the film, the directors have expressed their affection for the people they filmed; however, the barrage of heated commentary surrounding the film has raised questions about the objectivity of the filmmakers in their selection and presentation of material. The film therefore provides a window not only into a segment of conservative Christianity but also into the challenges of religious documentary filmmaking. Directed by Rachel Grady and Heidi Ewing, 2006
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A16-402
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Arts Series/Films: King of Masks |
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Friday - 7:30 pm-9:00 pm
GH-Betsy A
Sponsored by the Women and Religion Section, Confucian Traditions Group, and Daoist Studies Consultation
Jonathan Herman, Georgia State University, Presiding
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Abstract
Arts Series/Films: King of Masks
Sponsored by the Women and Religion Section, Confucian Traditions Group, and Daoist Studies Consultation
This touching and provocative film, set in a remote part of China during the 1930s, tells the story of an elderly street performer who makes a marginal living by plying a unique craft which has passed from father to son for generations. Mindful that he has failed his familial duties by having no male heir, the old man reluctantly visits a harrowing black market, where he adopts/purchases a young boy to carry on the family name, as well as the ancient family art of silk masks. However, the boy is hiding a secret, one which challenges the old man's most deeply ingrained beliefs. King of Masks offers an intriguing glimpse into Chinese family values, gender relations, and the sometimes dysfunctional legacy of Confucian ethics. In Mandarin Chinese, with English subtitles. Directed by Tian-Ming Wu, 1996.
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A17-1
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AAR Regional Officers Breakfast |
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Saturday - 7:00 am-8:45 am
CC-29A
Jacqueline Z. Pastis, La Salle University, Presiding
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Abstract
AAR Regional Officers Breakfast
The Regional AAR Officers Breakfast Meeting is scheduled for Saturday morning, 7:00-8:45 am, at the AAR annual meeting in San Diego. AAR Executive Director Jack Fitzmier will offer brief comments followed by a report from the Regions Committee. We will then open the floor for discussion and networking.
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A17-7
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International Schleiermacher Society |
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Saturday - 7:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Emma B
8:00 am Coffee and breakfast (bring your own)
9:00 am Wendy Farley
“Mind Reduced to the Necessity of Seeking": Opportunities for Buddhist -- Christian Dialogue in Schleiermacher's Theological Anthropology
10:00 am Ethics Series I: (papers pre-distributed beginning in July; contact Ted Vial, tvial@iliff.edu)
Peter Foley, University of Arizona
Schleiermacher's Critique of Previous Ethical Theories in the 1803 Grundlinien
Jeffery Kinlaw, McMurray University
Schleiermacher's Critique of Fichte's Political Philosophy
11:15 am Planning
11:45 am-12:45 pm Adjourn to nearby restaurant for lunch
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A17-134
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Society for the Arts in Religious and Theological Studies |
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Saturday - 7:00 am-11:30 am
CC-30D
9:00 am Welcome
Wilson Yates, SARTS President
9:10 am Presentations by 2006 SARTS Fellowship Award Winners:
Maureen O¹Connell
Stephen Lösel
Rebecca Davis
David Friend
Winners of the 2006 SARTS Fellowship Awards will present their projects, ranging from murals in inner-city Philadelphia to the music of Mozart, and from the cuadros of Peruvian women to Reformation architecture in Europe.
10:50 am Break
11:00 am Business Meeting
For additional information regarding this session, visit us online at www.SARTS.org, or contact Kimberly Vrudny at 1-651-962-5337, kjvrudny@stthomas.edu.
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A17-2
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Theological Education Steering Committee Meeting |
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Saturday - 7:30 am-9:00 am
GH-Mohsen A
John Thatamanil, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
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A17-3
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Academic Relations Committee Meeting |
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Saturday - 7:30 am-9:00 am
MM-Encinitas
Fred Glennon, Le Moyne College, Presiding
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A17-6
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Student Liaison Group Annual Business Meeting |
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Saturday - 7:30 am-9:00 am
GH-Ford BC
Davina C. Lopez, Eckerd College, Presiding
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Abstract
Student Liaison Group Annual Business Meeting
Student Liaison Group members will gather to discuss business.
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A17-4
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International Members' Breakfast |
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Saturday - 7:45 am-8:45 am
GH-Manchester A
Richard M. Jaffe, Duke University, Presiding
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Abstract
International Members' Breakfast
All AAR international attendees are invited to an information session and continental breakfast hosted by the AAR’s International Connections Committee.
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A17-5
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Publications Committee Meeting |
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Saturday - 8:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Madeleine A
Francis X. Clooney, Harvard University, Presiding
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A17-100
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Special Topics Forum |
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Theme: What’s My Job? Academic Citizenship and the Well-being of Schools, Departments, and Programs |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Point Loma
Sponsored by the Academic Relations Committee
Fred Glennon, Le Moyne College, Presiding
Theme: What’s My Job? Academic Citizenship and the Well-being of Schools, Departments, and Programs
Panelists:
Mark Schwehn, Valparaiso University
Elizabeth Conde-Frazier, Claremont School of Theology
Jane Dammen McAuliffe, Georgetown University
Louis A. Ruprecht, Georgia State University
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Abstract
Special Topics Forum
Theme: What’s My Job? Academic Citizenship and the Well-being of Schools, Departments, and Programs
Sponsored by the Academic Relations Committee
Professors’ jobs are often described as "three-legged stools," supported by scholarship, teaching, and "service." This session reframes "service"' as "citizenship" and what it means to be a good citizen of the academy. Topics will include understanding and effectively engaging in shared governance, collaboration and collegiality, and representing the Academy in/to the public. As a special focus, we will ask about the impacts of the growing percentage of part-time and temporary faculty members in our institutions (e.g., how does this affect the citizenship requirements of the shrinking tenure-line faculty, what citizenship responsibilities accompany part-time and temporary faculty work, what responsibilities do tenure line faculty have toward part-time and temporary faculty as fellow citizens of our institutions?).
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A17-101
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Special Topics Forum |
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Theme: Studies of World Religions in Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-New York
Sponsored by the International Connections Committee
Jin Hee Han, New York Theological Seminary, Presiding
Theme: Studies of World Religions in Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan
Panelists:
Archie Lee, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Weichi Zhou, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
Yen-zen Tsai, National Chengchi University
Mu-Chou Poo, Academia Sinica
Responding:
Kwok Pui Lan, Episcopal Divinity School
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Abstract
Special Topics Forum
Theme: Studies of World Religions in Mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan
Sponsored by the International Connections Committee
Visiting scholars participating in the China Focus will speak about the state of the field in China in the study of various religious traditions, including Chinese religious traditions, Christianity, and Islam. The participants will include Archie Lee, Weichi Zhou, Yen-zen Tsai, and Mu-chou Poo. Kwok Pui Lan and Jin Hee Han will moderate the session.
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A17-102
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Academic Teaching and the Study of Religion Section |
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Theme: What Happens When a Body Teaches a Body? |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-23A
Rodger Nishioka, Columbia Theological Seminary, Presiding
Theme: What Happens When a Body Teaches a Body?
Joel Dubois, California State University, Sacramento
Teaching Religion in “Real-time”: Applying the Calendrical Approach to Asian Religious Traditions
Stanford J. Searl, Union Institute and University
Embodied Knowledge: Teaching and Listening as Informed Spiritual Practices
Lynne Westfield, Drew University
Teaching in the Flesh: Experimenting with Incarnational Practices in Seminary Classrooms
G. William Barnard, Southern Methodist University
Stepping across Boundaries: Ritual Praxis Inside (and Outside) the Religious Studies Classroom
Jack A. Hill, Texas Christian University
The Borderlands as Liminal Context of Revelatory Experience: Embodied Pedagogies from Faculty of Color
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Abstract
Academic Teaching and the Study of Religion Section
Theme: What Happens When a Body Teaches a Body?
This session addresses one of the hottest but most contested subjects in the teaching of religious studies: embodied learning. The presenters will cover a range of teaching situations, hands-on ideas for classroom application, and pedagogical issues dealing with the body-learning of students and body-identities of teachers.
Teaching Religion in “Real-time”: Applying the Calendrical Approach to Asian Religious Traditions
Joel Dubois, California State University, Sacramento
Scholars are increasingly recognizing that the study of religious ideas and history needs to be balanced with the study of lived religion. But many religion courses taught in academic settings continue to feature historical periods and key ideas, with only secondary reference to practice, place, and time, making it particularly important to disseminate information about alternative models for teaching about lived religion. This presentation features the calendrical approach modeled by Professor Jon Levenson's "Judaism: the Liturgical Year" course at Harvard Divinity School. Using samples of primary source readings, the presentation demonstrates that the calendrical approach can be applied with equal success to Asian religions and is well suited to a variety of student audiences and institutional contexts. Instructors of Asian religion interested in experimenting with the method will also be directed to online lists of relevant resources.
Embodied Knowledge: Teaching and Listening as Informed Spiritual Practices
Stanford J. Searl, Union Institute and University
This will be an experiential presentation that invites participants to worship together, creating a pedagogical version about what it can mean to engage in a process of sacred inquiry through worship sharing and listening. Drawing upon the theoretical frameworks from psychology and spirituality, including the work of Carl Rogers, Eugene Gendlin, and George Kalamaras, this will be an active, embodied, and participatory session that investigates, in some collaborative manner, the potential for a worship-sharing process of inquiry and learning. This session will have particular relevance to teachers interested in how to apply the concepts of embodied knowledge, with particular attention to active and spiritually informed listening as a way of teaching.
Teaching in the Flesh: Experimenting with Incarnational Practices in Seminary Classrooms
Lynne Westfield, Drew University
This essay analyzes a three-year pilot project concerning teaching practices and syllabus design for incarnational pedagogy. While many educators are aware of Benjamin Bloom's taxonomy (1956) concerning educational behavior, few are aware of his three-pronged theory which moves beyond knowledge and includes affect and body as necessary behaviors of learning for adults. The irony, in theological education, is that while much attention is given to explaining and critiquing incarnational theologies, little attention is given to incarnational pedagogical practices for body, mind, and spirit. With the premise that sound education for competent church leadership must include body, mind, and spirit, the essay discusses the development of this intensive course titled "Ministry and Imagination" and the learnings we have gained about teaching with, through, and to the body. The essay extrapolates principles and practices of incarnational pedagogy from the pilot project research and suggests implications for seminary curriculum.
Stepping across Boundaries: Ritual Praxis Inside (and Outside) the Religious Studies Classroom
G. William Barnard, Southern Methodist University
During the past two decades, I have utilized a variety of experiential and participatory pedagogical modalities in my Religious Studies classes. For example, at various times students have, among other activities, made masks, drummed, watched their breath, or practiced Chi Kung. All of these non-orthodox activities are offered as a way to underscore and enliven the copious (and crucial) intellectual content that students must grapple with when taking one of my classes. In this paper, I will discuss in some detail two of the more complex and strikingly non-orthodox activities that I have integrated into two separate classes over the years. I will examine some of the difficulties and rewards of utilizing these techniques within a university setting, and I will also explore some of the ways in which a willingness to incorporate these types of exercises into the classroom challenges several current academic pedagogical assumptions.
The Borderlands as Liminal Context of Revelatory Experience: Embodied Pedagogies from Faculty of Color
Jack A. Hill, Texas Christian University
This paper argues that the borderlands--flashpoints of encounters with persons of different races, cultures, and classes--constitute potentially rich, liminal spaces for teaching and learning. It is based on recent qualitative interviews with religion and theology professors of color at colleges, universities, and seminaries throughout the U.S. who are committed to integrating experiences of marginalization into their teaching. The paper explores how faculty can more fully embody their teaching by transparently modeling multifaceted identities, deepening our awareness of dynamics of oppression, and providing insights for overcoming resistance to encounters with "the other" in the global neighborhood. The paper suggests how the use of creative teaching activities, texts from the margins, and personal metaphors of embodiment can liberate us from captivities to hegemonic paradigms. It concludes by proposing a list of "borderlands competencies" for educators who seek to take students to thresholds of new visions of self and community.
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A17-103
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Christian Systematic Theology Section |
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Theme: Sin |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-23B
Stephen G. Ray, Lutheran Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, Presiding
Theme: Sin
Amy Carr, Western Illinois University
Enduring Radical Distrust: Sin and Redemption among the Sinned Against
Chris Boesel, Drew University
Contextualizing That by Which We Are Contextualized: The Aporiatic Predicament of a Systematic Treatment of Sin
Brian Robinette, Saint Louis University
Transfiguring the Victim: Jon Sobrino, René Girard, and the Resurrection
Krista Hughes, Drew University
Moving Violation: A Feminist Reclamation of the Incurvatio
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Abstract
Christian Systematic Theology Section
Theme: Sin
Enduring Radical Distrust: Sin and Redemption among the Sinned Against
Amy Carr, Western Illinois University
Emerging Christian discourse about the “sinned-against” seeks to correct the tendency of Christian language about sin to address us primarily as sinners whose own actions are the source of a broken relationship to God. But Christian depictions of sin as distrust complicate efforts to distinguish our subjectivity as sinners and sinned-against, for one of the spiritual effects of being traumatized by another’s sin is precisely difficulty trusting God. Yet, how can theologians characterize such distrust as sin without implying that the sinned-against could have acted to prevent this sin from afflicting them? Building on biblical precedents for such naming, Flora Keshgegian’s arguments against speaking of the sinned-against as innocent, and Luther’s insights about God providentially stirring despair (and asking Christians to discern and endure the seemingly demonic masks of God), I will suggest several ways to enrich an account of sin and redemption from the perspective of the sinned-against.
Contextualizing That by Which We Are Contextualized: The Aporiatic Predicament of a Systematic Treatment of Sin
Chris Boesel, Drew University
Kierkegaard and Barth are enlisted to tease out a certain aporiatic predicament facing a systematic treatment of sin. Sin is a necessary theological category that resists efforts to define it and employ it as a theme for systematic ends as if the reality of sin were determinable by and contextualize-able within the work of Christian doctrine. It can, nevertheless, become “unhelpful” if and when (as too often happens) its necessity is allowed, systematically, to take on a disproportionate centrality in determining the doctrinal witness to the “Christian message” of Trinitarian activity. What is needed is a systematic approach to sin that both acknowledges the extent to which its reality as undomesticate-able, uncontextualize-able mystery exceeds the systematic intentions, efforts, and capacities of the theologian (and the reader of theology), while simultaneously witnessing to the limits of sin as contextualized by the Trinitarian activity to which Christian systematic theology attempts to point.
Transfiguring the Victim: Jon Sobrino, René Girard, and the Resurrection
Brian Robinette, Saint Louis University
This paper examines two distinctive, though complimentary proposals regarding the status of the victim in Christian theology. Engaging the work of Jon Sobrino and René Girard, it shows the importance of holding together in closest unity the themes of justice and forgiveness in Christian soteriology. The paper argues that the dialectical schema of victim/victimizer favored by Sobrino remains necessary to speak of God’s eschatological justice, but insufficient in accounting for God’s forgiveness and eschatological hospitality offered to both victims and victimizers. This is crucial to affirm since victimization is fiercely cyclical, as Girard’s work has shown. Only by receiving God’s offer of forgiveness in the risen victim can we perceive the depths of our guilt and complicity in the production of victims, even when bearing the mantle of justice. The “apocalyptic imagination” that energizes Sobrino’s project must be contextualized within the “paschal imagination” we find in the work of Girard.
Moving Violation: A Feminist Reclamation of the Incurvatio
Krista Hughes, Drew University
How might contemporary theology rethink sin as it is employed to describe the fundamental post-lapsarian character of humans as inescapably sinful? Starting from the confession that we understand sin only in light of divine grace, I seek to reconfigure this anthropological image according to a conception of grace that is thoroughly relational and dynamic and takes seriously the term’s aesthetic connotations. I focus my reflections through the figure of the homo incurvatus in se ipsum. While honoring feminist critiques of the Incurvatio’s appropriateness for describing woman’s sin, I suggest the Incurvatio does have applicability for women’s self-understanding as persons thirsting for grace, for it limns a self-consciousness and anaesthesia that bind women and men. If grace is that which nurtures our “knowing and feeling with” God and world, then sin names the flow of violating events –- toward the divine, the world, and ourselves –- that render us relationally insensible.
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A17-104
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Comparative Studies in Religion Section and Religion in South Asia Section |
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Theme: Encounters in Ethnography Today |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Torrance
George Pati, Valparaiso University, Presiding
Theme: Encounters in Ethnography Today
Panelists:
Amy Allocco, Emory University
Neil Dalal, University of Texas, Austin
Karen Pechilis, Drew University
Bruce M. Sullivan, Northern Arizona University
Corinne Dempsey, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point
Janet Gunn, University of Ottawa
Tracy Pintchman, Loyola University, Chicago
Selva J. Raj, Albion College
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Abstract
Comparative Studies in Religion Section and Religion in South Asia Section
Theme: Encounters in Ethnography Today
Ethnography is not new to historians of religions, but such scholars have enthusiastically embraced this method in recent years. Factors that seem to encourage and validate today’s expanding interest include globalization, issues of authenticity, the conjoining of fieldwork with home, and the pervasiveness of mediated classrooms. This panel, whose members all study South Asian religious traditions, especially Hinduism, explores current issues in ethnographic discourse, including: practice’s reframing of text; home as field; and biography and ethnography. Short individual presentations will provide detailed observations of an ethnographic encounter and the significance it has for addressing wider issues in the understanding and practice of religion and ethnography. There will be ample time after the presentations for audience members to share their experiences as we work together as a group to find further connections among all the encounters that will help us determine what the experience of ethnography is teaching us today.
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A17-105
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History of Christianity Section and North American Religions Section |
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Theme: War and Religion in North America |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-24C
W. Clark Gilpin, University of Chicago and Harry Stout, Yale University, Presiding
Theme: War and Religion in North America
Panelists:
Edward J. Blum, San Diego State University
Ira Chernus, University of Colorado
Brandi Denison, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Jonathan Ebel, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Andrew Murphy, Valparaiso University
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Abstract
History of Christianity Section and North American Religions Section
Theme: War and Religion in North America
This interactive discussion, featuring Professors W. Clark Gilpin and Harry Stout as moderators, explores the intersection of religion and war in the history and life of the United States. American historians have long seen wars as turning points in the American journey. From the “radicalism” of the American Revolution to the current “war on terror,” wars have fueled dramatic changes in the social, economic, and political lives of Americans. Yet many narratives of religion in the United States do not see war as a primary component in the making of American religion. Just how have wars shaped religious life and practice in the United States? And how, in turn, has religion shaped war, including its military, social, and cultural dimensions? This lively session asks its participants to muster their expertise in service to a critical issue in the life of the AAR and its members.
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A17-106
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Philosophy of Religion Section |
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Theme: G.W.F. Hegel: 200 Years after The Phenomenology of Spirit |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Torrey 2
Joseph Prabhu, California State University, Los Angeles, University of Chicago, Presiding
Theme: G.W.F. Hegel: 200 Years after The Phenomenology of Spirit
Thomas A. Lewis, Brown University
Projection in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit
Christopher Roberts, Reed College
From the Slaughterbench of History to the Golgotha of Absolute Spirit: Hegel’s Sacrificial Rhetoric and Philosophy’s Sublation of Religion
Andrew Hass, University of Stirling
Hegel and the Art of Negation
Alison Bjerke, University of California, Santa Barbara
Love and the Dialectic
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Abstract
Philosophy of Religion Section
Theme: G.W.F. Hegel: 200 Years after The Phenomenology of Spirit
Projection in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit
Thomas A. Lewis, Brown University
Hegel’s treatment of religion in the Phenomenology of Spirit offers a striking early account of religion as projection. Where philosophy presents spirit in the concepts of thought, religion portrays spirit through representations, consisting largely of images, allegory, and metaphor. Through its images, religion represents spirit as an other, so that even the religious community in which spirit is present remains “burdened with the antithesis of a beyond.” The Phenomenology — much more than the later Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion — stresses the need to move beyond religious representations to philosophical concepts. The subtlety of Hegel’s view of religion, however, appears in its much greater appreciation of religion’s importance than that found in most projectionist theories. While religion is to some degree alienating, Hegel portrays it as having a necessary and potentially positive social impact, rather than the deleterious consequences Feuerbach highlights.
From the Slaughterbench of History to the Golgotha of Absolute Spirit: Hegel’s Sacrificial Rhetoric and Philosophy’s Sublation of Religion
Christopher Roberts, Reed College
This presentation argues that, as Hegel attempted to demonstrate this movement from religion to philosophy (or, from religion’s viewpoint, to effect philosophy’s usurpation of religion’s rightful place in society), he deployed in various ways a sacrificial rhetoric that reformulated key notions such as piety, devotion and authority. To achieve this change, Hegel had to reconceive the very history of Christianity, and, along with this, notions of sacrifice in relation to a rather unorthodox conception of Geist. To examine Hegel’s claims to be a Lutheran, I will turn to the culminating pages of The Phenomenology of Spirit. This dense instance of sacrificial rhetoric provides a rich hermeneutical resource for understanding Hegel’s attempt to validate a great deal of religion’s influence in modern society, but at the same time carve out a distinct space for philosophy as its translator in the university and in society as a whole.
Hegel and the Art of Negation
Andrew Hass, University of Stirling
This paper will argue that Hegel’s Phenomenology presents a view of art that allows us to think of it beyond its subservience to either religion or philosophy, and beyond its aestheticization as “fine art” which we find in the later works. Out of its enmeshment with religion – “religion in the form of art” – we might think of a more originary “art” that returns us to the creative activity at the heart of consciousness and its coming to being in and for itself, as earlier sections describe. But this generative activity turns out to be, paradoxically, a negating force. The paper questions then whether, conceived as an originary movement, this creative negation, “art” in its most generative sense, also disrupts our received notions of religion and philosophy, and forces us into new interdisciplinary ways of thinking, in which art, religion, and philosophy might be radically reconceived even beyond Hegel.
Love and the Dialectic
Alison Bjerke, University of California, Santa Barbara
Hegel’s dialectic has inspired whole fields of poststructuralist analysis that pivot around the question of desire, but matters are otherwise regarding the question of love. The paucity of scholarship on the role of love in Hegel’s thought is striking in light of the fact that love provides the model for Hegel’s earliest dialectic, and the dialect arguably ends in a love relationship in Hegel’s latest published lectures on religion. Furthermore, it is significant that the Phenomenology of Spirit culminates in a moment of forgiveness. Reading the Phenomenology in conversation with Hegel’s early ruminations on love shows that forgiveness is the operation of love. By exploring the connection between love and forgiveness, I will argue that the Spirit ultimately returns to itself thanks to the mystical impulse of love. This reading of love has implications for debates within political theology because it suggests that forgiveness, not recognition of right, achieves freedom.
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A17-107
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Religion and the Social Sciences Section |
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Theme: Religion and Food |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-24A
Carol B. Duncan, Wilfrid Laurier University, Presiding
Theme: Religion and Food
Lynne Gerber, Graduate Theological Union
The Christian Dieter’s Dilemma: Navigating Abundance and Restriction in Christian Weight Loss Programs
William Schanbacher, Claremont Graduate University
Food Security and Food Sovereignty: Poverty and the Material Foundations of the Global Politics of Food
Laura Hartman, University of Virginia
Let Them Eat Cake: Food Prices, Fair Trade, and Christian Ethics
Mary Ann Clark, Prescott, AZ
There Is No Orisha As Lucky As The Stomach: Feasting and Feeding within Santería Ritual Practice
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Abstract
Religion and the Social Sciences Section
Theme: Religion and Food
The Christian Dieter’s Dilemma: Navigating Abundance and Restriction in Christian Weight Loss Programs
Lynne Gerber, Graduate Theological Union
Christian weight loss programs call on people to develop seemingly ascetic practices in the name of pleasing God by getting thin. But they also want to affirm a God who provides all good things to His people and who would never deprive them, especially of food. In order to be effective both as weight loss and as religious groups, these programs have to find a way navigate this fundamental tension. This paper will examine two distinctive approaches to resolving it: abundance within strict food guidelines and extreme restraint with the most pleasurable of foods. It will argue that this tension is reflective of the affinity between evangelical Christianity and consumer culture and the resulting reluctance of Christian weight loss groups to critique one of the primary sources both of abundant food opportunities and cultural dictates that define bodily control in the face of abundance as a virtue.
Food Security and Food Sovereignty: Poverty and the Material Foundations of the Global Politics of Food
William Schanbacher, Claremont Graduate University
As emergent topics in the social sciences and discussions on global poverty, this paper evaluates and contrasts the “food security” and “food sovereignty” movements. This evaluation addresses two methodological concerns: (1) How the social sciences and religious studies approach the study of food in general and (2) How a reflective concern for food sovereignty in specific can supplement discussions in the social sciences pertaining to food in a wide variety of cultural and religious contexts. Through a brief survey of key WTO policies and UN Human Development Reports, this paper contends that current trends in neo-liberal and developmental global food policy are endangering the basic material (i.e. food) foundations of religious and cultural traditions for a majority of the worlds poor.
Let Them Eat Cake: Food Prices, Fair Trade, and Christian Ethics
Laura Hartman, University of Virginia
Controversy over food pricing is not new to Christian ethics. Long before “fair trade” advocates argued that coffee sold at the lowest prices often is produced at the expense of badly-paid workers, Quaker abolitionist John Woolman was contemplating the price of sugar and molasses because of its complicity in the slave trade. Martin Luther, two centuries prior, at the dawn of capitalism, saw such economic abuses in his time that he called for state-determined prices, not trusting sinful individuals to trade fairly on their own. Contemporary feminists write of pricing in a context of mutuality, calling not only for fair wages and prices, but also for economic decisions based on the Christian norm of neighbor-love. This paper uses a method of historical Christian ethics, informed by an understanding of economics, politics, and ecology, to evaluate and assess the contributions of Christian thought to the question of appropriate food prices.
There Is No Orisha As Lucky As The Stomach: Feasting and Feeding within Santería Ritual Practice
Mary Ann Clark, Prescott, AZ
Three ritual practices can be used to understand why food—its preparation, presentation and consumption—form important ritual activities within Orisha worship communities. Within these traditions, rituals of blood sacrifice are commonly described with a metaphor of feeding and feasting enacted by the devotees for the Orisha. The fact that many rituals are either preceded or followed by a meal shared by the participants extend this metaphor beyond the principal ritual space. During other ritual occasions, fresh fruit and cooling desserts are presented to deities and devotees. What do these food choices tell us about these traditions and their theological understandings?
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A17-108
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Study of Islam Section |
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Theme: Tradition, Reform, and Modernity in South Asian Islam: Perspectives on the Deoband Madrasa |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Santa Rosa
James W. Laine, Macalester College, Presiding
Theme: Tradition, Reform, and Modernity in South Asian Islam: Perspectives on the Deoband Madrasa
SherAli Tareen, Duke University
Internal Debates on Democracy, Pluralism, and Secularism in the Islamic Tradition: The Case of the Deoband Madrasa in India
Brannon Ingram, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
An Indian Scholar between Tradition and Modernity: The Fatawa of Rashid Ahmad Gangohi (d. 1905) on the Sufis
Kelly L. Pemberton, George Washington University
An Islamic Discursive Tradition on Reform as Seen in the Writing of Deoband’s Maulana Taqi Uthmani
Fareeha Khan, University of Michigan
Madhhab Structure as Tool for Reform: Maintaining Interpretive Authority While Redefining Women’s Right to Divorce
Fuad Naeem, International Islamic University
Sufism and Revivalism in South Asia: An Evaluation of Their Relationship in the Light of the Writings of Were Mawlānā Ashraf 'Alī Thānvī of Deoband and Mawlānā; Ahmad Raza Khān of Bareilly
Responding:
Ebrahim Moosa, Duke University
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Abstract
Study of Islam Section
Theme: Tradition, Reform, and Modernity in South Asian Islam: Perspectives on the Deoband Madrasa
Recent years have witnessed a spate of journalistic writing on the North Indian madrasa known as Deoband after it was reported that the Taliban considered themselves spiritual and intellectual descendants of the Deoband school. Established in 1867, the Deoband madrasa was created with the goal of instituting religious education and reform as a means of reinvigorating the diminished social and political prestige of the Indian Muslims in the aftermath of the abortive revolt against British authority in 1857. Despite the media attention lavished on Deoband today, we still lack critical scholarship on the institution’s founding figures. The field of madrasa studies in general, and the study of Deoband in particular, remains largely unexplored and little understood. This panel hopes to redress this problem by examining four key figures in the history of Deoband and their responses to questions of law, gender, democracy, and Islamic mystical religiosity in the modern era.
Internal Debates on Democracy, Pluralism, and Secularism in the Islamic Tradition: The Case of the Deoband Madrasa in India
SherAli Tareen, Duke University
Lately, questions relating to Islam’s compatibility with democracy, or the question of why Islam seems incompatible with Western notions of secularism and democracy, have generated a considerable amount of interest in both scholarly and journalistic communities. This paper is not concerned with answering the question of whether Islam is or is not compatible with democracy. Rather, it is primarily interested in presenting a set of illustrations from modern Muslim discourses that demonstrate the variety of responses to this issue with regard to one important school of Muslim reformist thought, Deoband. More specifically, this paper is based on a comparison between the thought of two major Deoband thinkers, Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanavi (d. 1943) and Maulana Ubaid Ullah Sindhi (d. 1943).
An Indian Scholar between Tradition and Modernity: The Fatawa of Rashid Ahmad Gangohi (d. 1905) on the Sufis
Brannon Ingram, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
A major target of South Asian reformist thought has been Sufism, historically the pre-eminent source of the very interior self-formation that the reformists have claimed to advocate. Reformists, like the Sufis, upheld the Prophet Muhammad as the foremost pious exemplar. Many of the most vehement attacks on Sufism, in fact, were made by reformists who were themselves Sufis. How did this curious turn of events in the history of South Asian Islam come about? My paper provides one perspective on this question by examining the writings of a seminal figure of the Deoband school, Rashid Ahmad Gangohi (1829-1905), focusing on his collection of his legal responsa (fatawa, sing. fatwa) in Urdu, the Fatawa-yi Rashidiyya, as well as supplementary literature in Urdu by other Deobandis and secondary studies in English.
An Islamic Discursive Tradition on Reform as Seen in the Writing of Deoband’s Maulana Taqi Uthmani
Kelly L. Pemberton, George Washington University
This paper critically analyzes a cross-section of the jurisprudential works and “perfecting the faith” texts produced by one of the most renowned scholars to emerge in recent history from Deoband: Maulana Muhammad Taqi `Uthmani. While assessing `Uthmani’s contribution to what might be termed a “contemporary discursive tradition” of Islamic reform, I focus upon two key tensions that emerge in his writing: between the idea of a “universal” Islam guided by the principles of Shari`a and the particularities of Hanafi jurisprudence in contemporary Pakistan; and between Uthmani’s own apparently contradictory uses of taqlid (imitation of precedent) and ijtihad (independent reasoning). The paper argues that ‘Uthmani’s teachings carry broader implications for a recasting of reformist movements in Islam today, one that envisions them as part of an ongoing dynamic construction of religious authority.
Madhhab Structure as Tool for Reform: Maintaining Interpretive Authority While Redefining Women’s Right to Divorce
Fareeha Khan, University of Michigan
This paper investigates the interconnections between reform, gender, and religious authority in the intellectual history of the Deoband madrasa. More specifically, it deals with the discourses on Muslim divorce law of Maulana Ashraf ‘Ali Thanavi, the renowned Indian Hanafi scholar and Sufi of the Deoband school. One of the most startling aspects of Thanavi’s collection of fatwas is that he advocates the transference of the right of divorce to women. The unilateral right to divorce is often portrayed as a jealously guarded privilege afforded to the man alone, with Muslim women usually being allowed only recourse to court action if severe breaches of marital rights could be proven. By advocating the transferal of this right to the wife, Thanawi shows that even the most taboo Muslim ideas could be challenged, as long as this challenge was posed in a way that could fit within existing frameworks of Muslim legal discourses.
Sufism and Revivalism in South Asia: An Evaluation of Their Relationship in the Light of the Writings of Were Mawlānā Ashraf 'Alī Thānvī of Deoband and Mawlānā; Ahmad Raza Khān of Bareilly
Fuad Naeem, International Islamic University
Scholarly and popular discourse has often considered modernists and puritanical reform movements as the primary catalysts of change in the Islamic world over the last two centuries. This discourse as well as supposed dichotomies between Sufism and revivalism or between traditionalism and change are challenged upon closer analysis of how Sufism has often been at the center of Islamic revivalism in the modern era and how tradition has been reinterpreted, reformulated, and reinvented to assert new modes of Islamic identity in the modern world. In the context of South Asia, the two major orientations of Sunni Islam over the last century, the Deobandī and the Barelvī are represented by 'ālim-Sufis Mawlānā Ashraf 'Alī Thānvī (1860-1943), and Mawlānā Aḥmad Raza Khān (1856-1921), respectively. Despite differences, they utilized Sufi ideals to reformulate Islamic practice and self-identity in the modernizing mileau of Muslim India under British rule.
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A17-109
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Theology and Religious Reflection Section |
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Theme: Sighting Whiteness: The Presence in Absence of Whiteness in White Theology and the Academy |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Coronado
Hjamil A. Martinez Vazquez, Texas Christian University, Presiding
Theme: Sighting Whiteness: The Presence in Absence of Whiteness in White Theology and the Academy
Panelists:
James W. Perkinson, Ecumenical Theological Seminary
Elaine Robinson, Brite Divinity School
Mary McClintock Fulkerson, Duke University
Responding:
Dwight N. Hopkins, University of Chicago
Namsoon Kang, Brite Divinity School
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Abstract
Theology and Religious Reflection Section
Theme: Sighting Whiteness: The Presence in Absence of Whiteness in White Theology and the Academy
This panel will explore the ways in which Anglo/White theologians ignore, obscure, or deny the questions of race and racism, especially in terms of their own whiteness (in both the ontological and geopolitical senses). How does this lack of vision take shape in theology and the academy? How can Anglo theologians work toward sighting/citing/site-ing whiteness in transformational ways?
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A17-110
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Women and Religion Section |
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Theme: Women in the American Religious Imagination |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Windsor
Jung Ha Kim, Georgia State University, Presiding
Theme: Women in the American Religious Imagination
Jeannine Hill Fletcher, Fordham University
“This Woman Is a Pagan, but a Very Good Friend”: Chinese Women in the American Religious Imagination
Judith Plaskow, Manhattan College
Embodiment, Elimination, and the Role of Toilets in Struggles for Social Justice
Nami Kim, Spelman College
From “Helpless Heathens” to “Deserving Victims”: “Asian Women” in the American Religious Imagination
Wilis Rengganiasih Endah Ekowati, Florida International University
Official DeNUNciation: Theravāda Buddhist Nuns in Indonesia Struggling to Define Identity
Responding:
E. Ann Matter, University of Pennsylvania
Business Meeting:
Jung Ha Kim, Georgia State University, Presiding
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Abstract
Women and Religion Section
Theme: Women in the American Religious Imagination
“This Woman Is a Pagan, but a Very Good Friend”: Chinese Women in the American Religious Imagination
Jeannine Hill Fletcher, Fordham University
Among the archives of the Maryknoll Sisters (Ossining, New York) are papers from their work in Chinese missions. Their letters, diaries, and published works reflected and shaped the religious imagination of 1930s and 1940s America. A caption on an otherwise unmarked photograph will serve as the touchstone for this investigation into the conflictual representation of Chinese women. It reads: “This woman is a pagan, but a very good friend.” The conflicted nature of the representation of Chinese women will emerge from culling portraits like this one from the many writings of Maryknoll. However, the unique experience of Maryknoll sisters allowed them to come to know Chinese women as friends. Their writings help to fill out the portrait of Chinese women held in the American religious imagination.
Embodiment, Elimination, and the Role of Toilets in Struggles for Social Justice
Judith Plaskow, Manhattan College
Despite four decades of feminist discussion and reclamation of the body, the subject of elimination as a fundamental aspect of body experience has received little attention. This paper will use the issue of women and toilet space in the U.S. as a starting point for mapping a larger project that takes seriously both theoretical issues around elimination and embodiment and the relationship between adequate toilet facilities and access to full public participation and citizenship. After looking at public toilets as a site of women’s marginalization and incomplete resistance, I will consider the questions of why the demand for sufficient bathroom space has not been part of a broader feminist analysis and agenda and why it is important to end the silence around this issue.
From “Helpless Heathens” to “Deserving Victims”: “Asian Women” in the American Religious Imagination
Nami Kim, Spelman College
This paper examines the images of “Asian women” in the American religious imagination by comparing the nineteenth century US Christian missionary discourse with the contemporary “faith-based” human rights discourse. There are interesting parallels found between the two in relation to the components of what is called the “fairy tale” that characterizes the story of victim in human rights crisis. The components are victim who deserves “rescue,” the villain, and the savior who rescues the victim. In the missionary discourse during the so-called golden age (1880-1920) of American Protestantism, it was the image of helpless “heathen” women that kindled light on “Western” people’s imagination about “Asian women,” thus motivating Christians to support the mission movement both ideologically and materially. Similarly, oppressed and deprived “Asian women” who need “rescue” from the “ungodly” regimes is one of the images that mobilizes Christians to support the new faith-based movement both ideologically and materially.
Official DeNUNciation: Theravāda Buddhist Nuns in Indonesia Struggling to Define Identity
Wilis Rengganiasih Endah Ekowati, Florida International University
The Theravāda Buddhism basic reasoning for prohibiting women from the Sangha is the historical accident: the fading away of the Bhikkhuni Sangha, the order of nuns, in the eleventh century CE due to war and famine in India and Sri Lanka. This paper will examine the controversy over the bhikkhuni ordination taken by Indonesian Theravādin women and rejected as invalid by the Theravādin monastic governing body in Indonesia. Based upon the author’s field research and interviews, as well as the author’s experience as a Theravādin woman in Indonesia, the paper’s main focus is the Indonesian-context discourse. Drawing upon the Eightfold Path, the bhikkhunis and their supporters plea: with “right speech,” “right understanding,” “right thought,” and the “right action,” the first step might be taken now to liberate all, including women, in this very lifetime.
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A17-111
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Afro-American Religious History Group |
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Theme: Go West: African Americans and Religion in the West |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Del Mar
Kamasi Hill, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, Presiding
Theme: Go West: African Americans and Religion in the West
Larry G. Murphy, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary
Thematic Prisms for Exploring African American Religious History in the US West
Julius Bailey, University of Redlands
Imagining the American West: Benjamin T. Tanner and the Politics of Racial Destiny in the AME Church
Lerone Martin, Emory University
"It Is Wonderful!" out West: Father Divine, the Peace Mission Movement, and California
Responding:
Randi Jones Walker, Pacific School of Religion
Business Meeting:
Moses N. Moore, Arizona State University, Presiding
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Abstract
Afro-American Religious History Group
Theme: Go West: African Americans and Religion in the West
Thematic Prisms for Exploring African American Religious History in the US West
Larry G. Murphy, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary
Though black people had resided in the trans-Mississippi West since Spanish colonial days, the mid-nineteenth century saw a significant movement of US-based blacks into this region. Along with this influx came the institution created decades before amidst white oppression on the farms and white discrimination in the cities - the black church. The church and its clergy leadership held a pivotal position in black community life. This paper identifies hermeneutical lenses for discerning an understanding of the nature and mission of black church bodies established by clergy as well as laity in the procreant environs of the US West. It thus addresses the challenge of new frontiers; the West as “land of promise;” as El Dorado; as alternative to the violent racial stigmatization of the South, while yet a space of continuing racial animus; as “a man’s world” where women excelled; as home missions opportunity; as site of black ecumenism.
Imagining the American West: Benjamin T. Tanner and the Politics of Racial Destiny in the AME Church
Julius Bailey, University of Redlands
During his tenure as editor of the Christian Recorder from 1868 to 1884, through editorials, articles, and letters, Bishop Benjamin T. Tanner of the AME Church made political, economic, biblical, and scientific arguments for the “Americanness” of blacks and the appropriateness of their migration to the site of the quintessential American spirit, the West. Tanner’s unbridled passion for the American West and its potential role in the future of the race and complicated re-framing of the central homeland for African Americans provides a useful counterpoint to the prominent “Back-to-Africa” advocates such as Edward Blyden and Henry McNeal Turner, undermines the strict dichotomy between nationalist and assimilationist perspectives in African American religious history, and illumines the distinctiveness of the imagined space of the West in the politics of racial destiny.
"It Is Wonderful!" out West: Father Divine, the Peace Mission Movement, and California
Lerone Martin, Emory University
The scholarly treatment of the Peace Mission Movement has primarily focused on two aspects of the movement: Father Divine’s claims of divinity and his controversial financial affluence. With the exception of a few texts, the racial reform efforts of the movement have been forgotten. Furthermore, This interpretive lens is primarily applied to the movement’s activity on the east coast, namely New York and Philadelphia. However, approximately a third of the movement’s branches existed west of the Mississippi, with California being the home to the majority. Whites comprised roughly 70 percent of the Peace Mission Movement’s membership in California. Further investigation into the career of the Peace Mission Movement in California will reveal often overlooked aspects of the Movement, in particularly the movement's myriad of efforts and activities aimed at racial equality.
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A17-112
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Bonhoeffer: Theology and Social Analysis Group |
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Theme: Appraising Bonhoeffer: Pastoral Resistance |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-24B
Martin Rumscheidt, Atlantic School of Theology, Presiding
Theme: Appraising Bonhoeffer: Pastoral Resistance
Peter Frick, St. Paul's College, University of Waterloo
Who Is Bonhoeffer: Theologian, Philosopher, Exegete, or Pastor?
Rachel Payne, Baylor University
Chronos, Kairos, and Jubilee in Dietrich Bonhoeffer and André Trocmé: Nonviolent Revolution Realized through Eschatologically Reading Scripture
Nancy Lukens, University of New Hampshire
The Language of Non-Religious Interpretation in Bonhoeffer’s Prison Writings
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Abstract
Bonhoeffer: Theology and Social Analysis Group
Theme: Appraising Bonhoeffer: Pastoral Resistance
Throughout his life, Dietrich Bonhoeffer assumed many roles; he was, among other things, a theologian, a philosopher, a poet, an exegete, and a pastor. The papers in this session will examine and assess these roles in different ways: by looking at the broad sweep of Bonhoeffer's life and the various roles he played over time; by placing him in conversation with Nazi-era French pastor and pacifist André Trocmé; and by exploring Bonhoeffer's creation and use of non-religious language in his prison writings. At stake in this appraisal of Bonhoeffer is not only our understanding of Bonhoeffer in his own context, but an understanding of Bonhoeffer that informs current use (and current misuse) of his work and legacy. This session will also interest those who wish to explore the role of pastor in resistance and in constructive Christian responsibility.
Who Is Bonhoeffer: Theologian, Philosopher, Exegete, or Pastor?
Peter Frick, St. Paul's College, University of Waterloo
The main objective of this study is to clarify the various professional roles Bonhoeffer assumed over his lifetime and to examine how these roles functioned in their uniqueness and how they were correlated among each other. Who was Bonhoeffer? A theologian, a philosopher, an exegete, a pastor? Was he primarily one of these, or did his life bear witness to the fact that he was simultaneously some or even all of these? I will argue that Bonhoeffer understood himself as embodying all of these roles. For him, these four roles are mutually correlated in a manner that is progressive from theologian to pastor. Ultimately, being a pastor was the most valued for Bonhoeffer. It is possible to hold the three first roles without being a pastor; but it is impossible to be a pastor without also being a theologian, philosopher, and exegete.
Chronos, Kairos, and Jubilee in Dietrich Bonhoeffer and André Trocmé: Nonviolent Revolution Realized through Eschatologically Reading Scripture
Rachel Payne, Baylor University
Faced with the horror of the Nazi regime’s violent agenda, Dietrich Bonhoeffer and André Trocmé both relied on an eschatological reading of the Sermon on the Mount to inform and justify their revolutionary actions. In their published works, both emphasize the role of the church community as a means of perpetuating a nonviolent social ethic, but only the Frenchman largely succeeded in equipping his congregation to perform practical work toward realizing social justice on earth by redeeming victims of oppression. My aim in this paper is to highlight the references that each man makes to the constancy of God’s timeline as opposed to the capriciousness of human history. I will show that the small but significant differences between their readings of chronos and kairos--particularly with regard to how they interpret Jesus’ radical re-readings of Jewish models of eschatology--suggest the reason for their divergence in praxis.
The Language of Non-Religious Interpretation in Bonhoeffer’s Prison Writings
Nancy Lukens, University of New Hampshire
This paper considers implications for today's reception of Bonhoeffer's May 1944 statement: "Our church... is incapable of taking the word of reconciliation and redemption to humankind and the world. Our earlier words are therefore bound to lose their force..." Bonhoeffer affirms a "new language, perhaps quite non-religious, but liberating and redeeming." The paper examines the prison poems, particularly "Jona" and "Von guten Mächten," as expressions of Bonhoeffer’s non-religious interpretation, linking these writings with the "view from below" and "costly grace," which contrast sharply with rhetorical misappropriations of Bonhoeffer on the religious Right. It argues with Jürgen Henkys that precisely because of Bonhoeffer’s experience of the loss of credibility of religious language in the church and in the culture around him, his poetry in particular becomes his ultimate expression of non-religious interpretation of Christian faith and cannot be responsibly read as rooted in individualistic piety or self-righteous civil religion.
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A17-113
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Buddhist Philosophy Group |
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Theme: Dignāga in China |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Columbia 3
A. Charles Muller, Toyo Gakuen University, Presiding
Theme: Dignāga in China
Zhihua Yao, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Empty Terms in Buddhist Logic: Dignāga and His Chinese Commentators
Dan Lusthaus, Brookline, MA
Dignāga's Sasaṃvitti Re-examined through the Chinese Sources
Chen-Kuo Lin, National Chenchi University
The Object of Cognition in Dignāga’s Ālambanaparikṣavṛttihi: On the Controversial Passages in Paramārtha’s and Xuanzang’s Translations
Junjie Chu, University of Vienna
Dignāga on the Object of Cognition
Business Meeting:
A. Charles Muller, Toyo Gakuen University, Presiding
John D. Dunne, Emory University, Presiding
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Abstract
Buddhist Philosophy Group
Theme: Dignāga in China
Despite the monumental importance of Dignāga for Buddhist philosophy and Indian philosophy in general, most of his important works survive in complete form only in Chinese and/or Tibetan translations. The Chinese translations of his Ālambana-parīkṣā (one of which includes the only extant version of Dharmapāla's commentary) display interesting and suggestive differences of interpretation that shed light on how key elements of Dignāga's epistemology were understood. Nyāyamukha is extant only in its two Chinese translations. Roughly a dozen texts in the Chinese canon discuss passages from the Pramāṛasamuccaya. Several other Dignaga texts are also preserved in Chinese. The papers will focus on important issues in the interpretation and analysis of Dignāga's thought: epistemological and logical issues, questions of language and the status of cognitive objects, Dignāga's impact on Indian and Chinese Buddhism, how he was interpreted, and contributions of his thought to contemporary philosophy.
Empty Terms in Buddhist Logic: Dignāga and His Chinese Commentators
Zhihua Yao, Chinese University of Hong Kong
The present paper will explore how Dignāga, the founder of Buddhist logic, deals with the issue of empty subject terms. On the one hand, he proposed a method of paraphrase, which resembles Russell’s theory of descriptions. On the other hand, his use of his apoha theory tended toward a pan-fictionism. Subsequently, Dharmakīrti's efforts made the latter approach become more acceptable among later Indian and Tibetan Buddhists. In contrast, the Chinese Buddhists, who were free from the influence of Dharmakīrti, dealt with the issue in three different ways: 1) adhering to Dignāga’s method of paraphrase; 2) allowing exceptions for non-implicative negation; and 3) indicating the propositional attitude of the given proposition. The variety of the Buddhist approaches to the problem of empty terms will enrich our understanding of the philosophical issues related to empty terms.
Dignāga's Sasaṃvitti Re-examined through the Chinese Sources
Dan Lusthaus, Brookline, MA
Dignāga, in both the Pramāṛasamuccaya and Nyāyamukha, includes svasaṃvitti (Ch,: zizheng) as an intrinsic and necessary component of pratyakṣa (cognitive sensation). What does svasaṃvitti mean, and how does it help provide Dignāga's formulation of pratyakṣa with the requisite qualities of a pramāṛa? The discussion will explore two hypotheses: (1) Redefining pramāṛa in Dignāga's usage from "justification" or "truth" to "what undeniably conveys novel knowledge;" this distinction may not be trivial. (2) Evidence in the Chinese sources that svasaṃvitti originally meant something other than "cognition cognizing itself" and that this later meaning (already partially entertained in the Cheng weishilun), when imported back into Dignāga, introduces more confusion than light. For Dignāga, svasaṃvitti may have meant something akin to the Pāli terms: sacchikiriyā (realization, experience), sacchikaroti (to see with one's own eyes, to experience for oneself); sacchikaraṇīya (able to be experienced [in four ways: by kāya, sati, cakkhu, and paññā]).
The Object of Cognition in Dignāga’s Ālambanaparikṣavṛttihi: On the Controversial Passages in Paramārtha’s and Xuanzang’s Translations
Chen-Kuo Lin, National Chenchi University
In this paper, I will examine how Dignāga’s Ālambanaparikṣavṛttih was differently received in Paramārtha’s and Xuanzang’s translations. Following Dharmapāla’s Commentary, Xuanzang claims that the object of cognition in Ālambanaparikṣavṛtti refers to five kinds of sensory objects. By contrast, in Paramārtha’s translation the object of cognition refers to six kinds of objects. Why was the object of mano-vijñāna left unexamined in Xuanzang’s translation? In order to solve the interpretive controversy between Paramārtha and Xuanzang, I will also address the following questions: Is it legitimate to read Dignāga’s Ālambanaparikṣavṛtti in light of “consciousness-only”? Or is it better to read it in light of Dignāga’s later logico-epistemological works, such as Nyāyamukha and Pramāṛasamuccayavṛtti? How is the object of mano-vijñāna related to the other five sensory objects? Does it have to do with mānasa-pratyakṣa or “mano-vijñāna arising simultaneously with five sensory objects” (wu-chu-yi-shi)? Those questions will be examined in my paper.
Dignāga on the Object of Cognition
Junjie Chu, University of Vienna
In the Pramāṛa-samuccaya with its Vṛtti Dignāga states that perception is free from conceptual construction and that its object is the svalakṣaṛa – usually translated as "particular'" while cognitive objects other than those in perception are either conventionally existent or imagined. However Dignāga does not offer a clear explanation of this svalakṣaṛa. Dharmakīrti interprets it as a real thing that can fulfill a purpose. In this paper, after an analysis of Dignāga's thought about the object of cognition in his earlier works, I will examine his statement in PS(V) about svalakṣaṛa and demonstrate that Dignāga, unlike Dharmakīrti, is consistently an Internalist (antarjñeya¬vādin), so that his svalakṣaṛa should be understood as being internal in nature.
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A17-114
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Comparative Religious Ethics Group |
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Theme: Current Work in Comparative Ethics: Religious Liberalism, Moral Virtuosity, and the Experience of Limits |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Carlsbad
Anne E. Monius, Harvard University, Presiding
Theme: Current Work in Comparative Ethics: Religious Liberalism, Moral Virtuosity, and the Experience of Limits
Elizabeth Barre, Florida State University
The Possibility of Religious Liberalism: The Common Good and Civil Society in Catholic and Islamic Political Thought
Nathaniel Barrett, Boston University
Musicality and Ren: An Examination of the Early Confucian Ideal of Moral Virtuosity and Its Applicability to Multicultural Societies of Late Modernity
Peter T. C. Chang, Harvard University
Comparative Study of Conscience: Joseph Butler and Wang Yang-ming
David Clairmont, University of Notre Dame
Persons as Religious Classics: Green, Tracy, and the Theology of Bridge Concepts
Responding:
Sumner B. Twiss, Florida State University
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Abstract
Comparative Religious Ethics Group
Theme: Current Work in Comparative Ethics: Religious Liberalism, Moral Virtuosity, and the Experience of Limits
The Possibility of Religious Liberalism: The Common Good and Civil Society in Catholic and Islamic Political Thought
Elizabeth Barre, Florida State University
Given the current religious conflicts taking place in the Middle East, many are beginning to wonder whether the values associated with democratic liberalism might be fundamentally incompatible with Islam. Indeed, Muslims themselves often argue that Islam—unlike Christianity—cannot recognize a separation between religion and politics. Is this accurate? By comparing certain aspects of Catholic and Islamic political thought, I will show that this assertion betrays a misunderstanding of both Islam and Christianity. In fact, there turn out to be many ways in which Islamic struggles with liberalism mirror the struggles of the Catholic Church. More specifically, I will argue that notions of the “common good” and “civil society” play similar roles in the political arguments of both traditions. Yet, I will also show that subtle differences have important implications for understanding the different ways in which liberalism might (or might not) take root in the Islamic world.
Musicality and Ren: An Examination of the Early Confucian Ideal of Moral Virtuosity and Its Applicability to Multicultural Societies of Late Modernity
Nathaniel Barrett, Boston University
This paper explores some of the unique resources and possible limitations of early Confucian moral philosophy through an examination of a conspicuous trope of early (pre-Qin) Confucian texts: refined musical performance as a metaphor for moral virtuosity, or ren. With special attention to Xunzi’s essay, “Discourse on Music,” the paper unpacks the many ways in which musical metaphors serve to clarify some of the most compelling traits of Confucian moral philosophy – especially its emphasis on the aesthetic and spontaneous aspects of moral conduct – as well as some of its liabilities. In particular, musical metaphors alert us to the issue of the importance of cultural commonality for the development of moral virtuosity, an especially important issue for those who wish to adapt Confucian ideals to our late-modern, multicultural setting.
Comparative Study of Conscience: Joseph Butler and Wang Yang-ming
Peter T. C. Chang, Harvard University
Joseph Butler and Wang Yang-ming exalted conscience (or liang-chih, in Wang’s terminology) as the individual person’s moral guide. While elevating the authority of conscience, Butler and Wang were mindful that this faculty does err; hence, one’s invocation of conscience in moral decision-making may yet serve as an excuse or cover for erroneous convictions. In my paper, I analyze how Butler and Wang dealt with the dilemma of moral fallibility and the complex reality of erroneous conscience. I will show that in light of human finitude, these two thinkers pleaded for a degree of toleration of people’s diverse and even faulty opinions. Yet they also expected strict conformity to a set of core values considered foundational to the moral order. My ultimate aim is to show that Butler and Wang upheld a moral framework that allowed them to accommodate diverse, even erroneous, conscientious views without surrendering to extreme subjectivism.
Persons as Religious Classics: Green, Tracy, and the Theology of Bridge Concepts
David Clairmont, University of Notre Dame
This paper examines the early comparative work of Ronald Green to uncover missed comparative opportunities in his Kantian program. Specifically, it focuses on the notion of limits as uniting the distinctly moral and religious domains of human life. To develop the importance of reflection on moral and religious limits for comparative ethics, this paper turns to the work of David Tracy on the religious classic to examine how the moral person as one who confronts her or his own moral and religious limits has the capacity to bear a "surplus of meaning" in the unfinished nature of their moral lives. Outlining the person as religious classic offers a new place for historical and theological voices to come together in constructive comparative conversations.
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A17-115
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Feminist Theory and Religious Reflection Group |
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Theme: Discussion of Saba Mahmood's The Politics of Piety: The Islamic Revival and the Feminist Subject |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-America's Cup
M. Gail Hamner, Syracuse University, Presiding
Theme: Discussion of Saba Mahmood's The Politics of Piety: The Islamic Revival and the Feminist Subject
Panelists:
Janet R. Jakobsen, Columbia University
Amina Wadud, Virginia Commonwealth University
Kathleen Roberts Skerrett, Grinnell College
Responding:
Saba Mahmood, University of California, Berkeley
Business Meeting:
Rosemary P. Carbine, College of the Holy Cross, Presiding
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Feminist Theory and Religious Reflection Group
Theme: Discussion of Saba Mahmood's The Politics of Piety: The Islamic Revival and the Feminist Subject
Saba Mahmood's recent book, The Politics of Piety: The Islamic Revival and the Feminist Subject has generated prolific excitement and debate across numerous discourses. This panel discussion includes papers from three scholars from three different subfields of religious studies. The paper presentations will be followed by a response from Professor Mahmood.
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A17-116
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Hinduism Group |
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Theme: Producing Vaishnavism: Texts, Practices, and Devotees in the Colonial Context |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-America's Cup
Brian A. Hatcher, Illinois Wesleyan University, Presiding
Theme: Producing Vaishnavism: Texts, Practices, and Devotees in the Colonial Context
James P. Hare, Columbia University
Garlanding Hinduism: Nabhadas's Bhaktamal in the Colonial Context
Rebecca Manring, Indiana University, Bloomington
Advaita's Nineteenth-Century Reconstruction
Varuni Bhatia, Columbia University
Instructions for Worship: Vaishnava Ritual Manuals and Everyday Practice in Colonial Bengal
Jason Fuller, DePauw University
Bhaktivinoda Thakura and the Recovery of Gaudiya Vaisnavism in Late Nineteenth-Century Bengal
Business Meeting:
Timothy Lubin, Washington and Lee University, Presiding
Vijaya Nagarajan, University of San Francisco, Presiding
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Hinduism Group
Theme: Producing Vaishnavism: Texts, Practices, and Devotees in the Colonial Context
The late nineteenth century marked a critical moment in the emergence of Vaishnavism, and Hinduism more generally, as a marker of religious and political identity. While a trend toward consolidation dates from prior to the colonial era, the colonial encounter served as a catalyst for the establishment of Hinduism as a religious tradition comparable to Christianity and Islam. Out of specific sectarian contexts a pan-Indian concept of Vaishnavism took hold and came to define a Hinduism centered on monotheistic bhakti devotionalism. The four papers in the session will address themes such as religious reform, print, the emerging middle-classes, the rise of new intellectuals, and the spread of capitalism to shed light on Vaishnavism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. As a session, we hope to show that the new institutions and contexts of the colonial environment directly or indirectly shaped the transformations within Vaishnava traditions during this period.
Garlanding Hinduism: Nabhadas's Bhaktamal in the Colonial Context
James P. Hare, Columbia University
Composed in the late sixteenth- or early seventeenth-century, Nabhadas's Bhaktamal occupies a central position in the consolidation of Hinduism. Although composed in a Ramanandi context, this text presents a catholic view of Vaishnavism that cuts across boundaries of sect, region, caste, and gender. An extensive commentarial literature has formed around this text. The earliest and most influential commentary is Priyadas's 1712 CE Bhaktirasabodhini, which has itself become the subject of commentary and exegesis. This paper examines the reception and publication of the Bhaktamal and Bhaktirasabodhini during the late nineteenth and very early twentieth centuries. These decades saw numerous translations, commentaries, and retellings of the Bhaktamal, culminating in Sitaramsharan Bhagwan Prasad "Rupkala's" exegesis and edition, published in the first decade of the twentieth century. In the supra-sectarian framework of the Bhaktamal, Rupkala and others found an ideal location for the construction of a non-sectarian Vaishnavism.
Advaita's Nineteenth-Century Reconstruction
Rebecca Manring, Indiana University, Bloomington
Advaita Acharya, the elder statesman and forerunner of the Gaudiya Vaishnava tradition, lent the young movement his gravitas and respectability in its formative years. Four hundred years later, he (or at least, newly discovered hagiographies) appeared to uphold conservative, Brahmanical values in a world now governed by European rationalists. Clearly his summoners were consciously using him as a weapon in an ideological battle, but was it a battle against colonialism or something else entirely?
Instructions for Worship: Vaishnava Ritual Manuals and Everyday Practice in Colonial Bengal
Varuni Bhatia, Columbia University
This paper will analyze two manuals of Gaudiya Vaishnava ritual and worship: Gauranga Puja Paddhati (A Method for the Worship of Chaitanya), which appeared in print in 1906, and Vaishnaviya Sadhan Paddhati (A Manual of Vaishnava Practice), which was published in 1935. It will look at how these manuals operate in the religious world of the emerging Bhadralok (middle-classes) of Bengal. What kind of practices do they propagate? What kind of an adjustment among time, work, and worship can be seen in these manuals? Who is their target audience, and how do the authors understand themselves influencing their readership? This paper will show how the coming of print, the concept of the workday, and the critiques of missionaries and other educated Indians created the conditions wherein Vaishnava practices had to be disciplined in accordance with theological challenges as well as secular concerns.
Bhaktivinoda Thakura and the Recovery of Gaudiya Vaisnavism in Late Nineteenth-Century Bengal
Jason Fuller, DePauw University
In late nineteenth-century Bengal, religious modernizers and social reformers attacked Gaudiya Vaisnavism for its sectarianism, irrationality, and intellectual inadequacy. Responding to the challenges of a universalizing Christianity and Brahmo reform movements, a well-respected Deputy Magistrate named Bhaktivinoda Thakura took up the defense of Gaudiya Vaisnavism at the end of the century. Over the course of thirty years Bhaktivinoda distinguished himself as the leading defender of Vaisnavism in Bengal. His greatest contributions to Vaisnava faith and practice were ideas which emerged out of his unflinching confrontation with the proponents of secularism and religious modernization during the colonial period. In this paper I will address Bhaktivinoda’s “modernization” of Vaisnavism through an investigation of the ways in which he employed emerging technologies and middle-class discursive practices in his rearticulation of Gaudiya Vaisnavism for a new urbane bourgeois audience in the latter half of the nineteenth century.
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A17-117
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Law, Religion, and Culture Group |
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Theme: Authority and Representation in Legal and Religious Contexts |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Leucadia
Oceanside
Pacific
Point Loma
Leucadia
Russell T. McCutcheon, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Presiding
Theme: Authority and Representation in Legal and Religious Contexts
Loriliai Biernacki, University of Colorado, Boulder
Miming Manu: Women and Authority in Relation to Manu's Law Book
Greg Johnson, University of Colorado, Boulder
Social Lives of the Dead: Contestation and Continuities in Hawaiian Repatriation
Ruth Mas, University of Colorado, Boulder
Sedimenting Secularity in Contemporary France: Law and Muslim Bodies that Matter
Paul R. Powers, Lewis and Clark College
“When the Scrolls Shall Be Unrolled”: Turning Deeds into Words in Classical Islamic Legal and Eschatological Thought
Responding:
Bruce Lincoln, University of Chicago
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Law, Religion, and Culture Group
Theme: Authority and Representation in Legal and Religious Contexts
This paper session is composed of three papers that cohere around themes pertaining to authority and representation in religiously consequential legal (con)texts. The papers share an analytical focus on issues surrounding ways discourse, language, and rhetoric function in such contexts, with particular attention to subaltern voices. While exploring common themes, these papers take on diverse contexts, including Manu’s Law Book and its subversion, repatriation conflicts surrounding the royal dead in contemporary Hawai`i, the formation of secular Muslim subjectivities in relationship to the structuring force of the French state, and the interaction of legal categories and eschatological literature in classical Islam.
Miming Manu: Women and Authority in Relation to Manu's Law Book
Loriliai Biernacki, University of Colorado, Boulder
For the past several decades much of the debate about women's roles across the spectrum of religious traditions has focused upon locating women as agents, within the religious practices of particular traditions. Recently, however, some feminist scholars of Hinduism and Indian culture have suggested that the idea of agency may not be such a useful category. This is particularly the case in view of sources available for understanding pre-colonial Indian women. In this paper I offer an alternative strategy for mapping a presence of women as subjects in this context. I suggest that we find responses to legal texts, specifically to well-known maxims (nyāyas) within the legal text, cropping up elsewhere. These responses take the form of an imitation of the legal maxim, which then subvert its meaning. Thus we find convenient versified quips performing a kind of mimicry which radically undermines dominant tropes defining women and their roles.
Social Lives of the Dead: Contestation and Continuities in Hawaiian Repatriation
Greg Johnson, University of Colorado, Boulder
This paper explores an under-analyzed relationship between Western law and native cultures—one where law has, in potent respects, stimulated “traditional” cultural activities, even when these activities take the form of contestation and outright intra-cultural conflict. The specific context addressed is repatriation politics in contemporary Hawai`i, with particular attention to examples of the Polynesian postmortem in the present: the 1994 “theft” of royal caskets from the Bishop Museum and the ongoing Kawaihae dispute that involves fourteen Native Hawaiian organizations in a struggle over numerous ancient objects. This paper analyzes how contemporary articulations of Hawaiian identity, however embattled and divisive, illustrate the ways in which micro-political discourses in the present stand in a relationship of marked continuity with the “stabilized” Hawaiian past. To dismiss present claims to tradition as “inauthentic” due to their manifestly political content, it is argued, is to commit a basic category mistake in the study of tradition.
Sedimenting Secularity in Contemporary France: Law and Muslim Bodies that Matter
Ruth Mas, University of Colorado, Boulder
I examine modalities of secular Muslim subjectivity in relation to the structuring force of the French state. Specifically, I focus on how epistemologies about Muslims are reconfigured throughout the ongoing “war on terror” and then inscribed by law onto Muslim bodies in France. The contemporary securing of law as an element of the architecture of global empire has also been crucial to regenerating France’s colonial terms of “exception” into the present through France’s complicity with the “war on terror.” One of the most public strategies in consolidating French sovereignty has been to rationalize and thus legitimate, amidst the recent debates over the wearing of the hidjab, the deployment of laïcité in France’s colonies. I examine this debate, and the polemics that ensued in order to examine how they constitute the splitting and fragmenting of the grounds on which Muslim feminine subjects are constituted in relation to the French state.
“When the Scrolls Shall Be Unrolled”: Turning Deeds into Words in Classical Islamic Legal and Eschatological Thought
Paul R. Powers, Lewis and Clark College
Pre-modern Islamic eschatological accounts prominently depict a heavenly book or tablet in which every deed of every living person is recorded in writing, to be reviewed on Judgment Day, determining each individual’s eternal fate. Such tropes portray the prospect of representing an entire human lifetime, imagined as consisting of a set of discreet actions, in a comprehensive written text. I argue that Islamic law functions in part to provide a named category of action-type for each human act, helping to complete a worldview in which actions are conceptualized as discrete units capable of corresponding to items on a written list. Islamic legal and eschatological literatures thus interact symbiotically, together defining both how to act and what is at stake in acting. Exploring this intertextual nexus shows that “putting Islamic law into practice” can happen in a variety of ways, including in practices of reading accounts of the afterlife.
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A17-118
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Platonism and Neoplatonism Group |
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Theme: Foundations of Neoplatonism |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Betsy C
Gregory Shaw, Stonehill College, Presiding
Theme: Foundations of Neoplatonism
John Bussanich, University of New Mexico
The Triumph of the Archaic: Peter Kingsley on Orphic-Pythagorean Mysticism
John Peter Kenney, Saint Michael's College
Pagan Monotheism and the Foundations of Christian Platonism
Dylan Burns, Yale University
Hellenic-Christian Polemics between Pseudo-Dionysius’ Celestial Hierarchy and Julian’s Contra Galileos
Sarah Pessin, University of Denver
Tracking the Ps. Empedoclean "First Element": Revising the Plotinian Cosmos in Judeo-Islamic Neoplatonism?
Business Meeting:
Willemien Otten, University of Chicago, Presiding
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Platonism and Neoplatonism Group
Theme: Foundations of Neoplatonism
This session contains papers that reflect on the principles of historic Neoplatonism
The Triumph of the Archaic: Peter Kingsley on Orphic-Pythagorean Mysticism
John Bussanich, University of New Mexico
This communication examines Peter Kingsley's provocative reconfiguration of the mystical dimension of ancient philosophy and religion. On his view the intuitive symbolic poetry of Parmenides and Empedocles, which encodes Orphic-Pythagorean magical and meditative practices, was eclipsed by the rationalistic turn of Classical and Hellenistic philosophers. I shall argue that despite notable differences in the use of language and pedagogical methods, all these thinkers make a similar distinction between supra-rational awareness and discursive philosophical thinking, which is reflected in their insistence that degrees of spiritual experience correspond to the hierarchical structure of reality. I shall discuss the "spiritual history" developed by the later Neoplatonists to support the view that one finds more continuity than discontinuity from archaic to classical and post-classical figures.
Pagan Monotheism and the Foundations of Christian Platonism
John Peter Kenney, Saint Michael's College
This paper has two purposes: to re-examine the origins of Neoplatonism in reference to recent scholarship on pagan monotheism and then to consider anew the foundations Christian Platonism, especially the thought of Augustine.
Hellenic-Christian Polemics between Pseudo-Dionysius’ Celestial Hierarchy and Julian’s Contra Galileos
Dylan Burns, Yale University
This paper draws attention to an intriguing, overlooked passage of the Celestial Hierarchy as an example of Denys’ engagement with Neoplatonic polemics. The passage (CH 260C-261A), a commentary on Dt 32: 8-9, is a complex meditation on providence and free will: specifically, the question of why God selected first the Jews as his chosen people and then sent his universal savior to them in a relatively remote part of the world. The paper will argue that this passage attempts to rebut a well-developed critique of Christian theodicy stemming from Platonists as early as Celsus, but reaching the form Denys responds to only in Julian’s Contra Galileos. The observation that the pseudo-Areopagite was familiar with Julian’s polemic (or an epitome of it) has important ramifications for recent discussions of Denys’ identity and the orientation of the corpus as a whole.
Tracking the Ps. Empedoclean "First Element": Revising the Plotinian Cosmos in Judeo-Islamic Neoplatonism?
Sarah Pessin, University of Denver
Through an investigation of the notion of an “Empedoclean” cosmic “First Element” in various tenth-fourteenth century traditions, I aim to better elucidate the foundations of Jewish and Islamic Neoplatonism in way of uncovering nuances in their understanding of the Neoplatonic cosmos, the role of Universal Intellect, and the process of emanation. In particular, I focus on three issues: (1) I examine the relation of the “Empedoclean First Element” to Plotinus’ own doctrine of intelligible matter, (2) I consider the relationship of these ideas to Empedocles’ own notions of Love and Strife (with special recourse to the eleventh century Neoplatonism of Solomon Ibn Gabirol), and (3) I explore the implications of this First Element doctrine on the emergence in Jewish Neoplatonism of the idea of emanation as a play of light and shadow (with a focus on the tenth century works of Isaac Israeli).
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A17-119
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Practical Theology Group |
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Theme: Worship Practices and Social Activism |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-25A
Dale P. Andrews, Boston University, Presiding
Theme: Worship Practices and Social Activism
Claire Wolfteich, Boston University
Division in the Body: Prayer and the Public Struggle over Abortion
Peter R. Gathje, Memphis Theological Seminary
Rituals of Resistance: Creating Conversion and Community for Abolition of the Death Penalty
Peter Gordon Slade, Ashland University
Grits and Grace: Mission Mississippi's Interracial Ecumenical Prayer Breakfasts as a Practice of Racial Reconciliation and Social Transformation
Jeremy Posadas, Emory University
"I Have a Dream," "People Power," "¡Sí, se puede!": Worship, Politics, and Repertoires of Performed Public Life in US and Philippine Contexts
Responding:
William T. Cavanaugh, University of Saint Thomas
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Abstract
Practical Theology Group
Theme: Worship Practices and Social Activism
Division in the Body: Prayer and the Public Struggle over Abortion
Claire Wolfteich, Boston University
The struggle over abortion rights is a persistent part of the American culture wars, amply studied from political and sociological perspectives. What is less researched is the way in which various forms of prayer and worship are integrated into both sides of this debate. Prayer is quite visible in the pro-life movement but also has played a role in shaping the pro-choice movement. This paper will explore the practice of prayer in both the pro-life and pro-choice movements, looking particularly at how prayer shapes a community, sends it forth to political action, and is understood as means of social transformation. The paper will explore the integral role of prayer in the public struggle over abortion, identify practical theological dilemmas, and point to the need for careful, communal reflection upon the practice of prayer and the issue of abortion.
Rituals of Resistance: Creating Conversion and Community for Abolition of the Death Penalty
Peter R. Gathje, Memphis Theological Seminary
Ritual can be defined as religious theater designed to help us connect with the Divine, or a power/purpose beyond ourselves, a larger story/meaning to which we belong. Rituals are stylized and usually repetitive acts that take place at a set time and location. They almost always involve the use of symbolic objects, words, and actions. This paper describes and analyzes rituals of resistance to the death penalty that address the emotional, religious, and moral attachments to the death penalty. The rituals of resistance include vigils and fasting on cathedral steps before scheduled executions, and a weekly public demonstration at busy city intersection. Attention will be paid to how these rituals envision and practice an alternative worldview through ritually reconfiguring space, time, and symbols and words within the Christian faith to both create a community of abolition and invite people to move from support of the death penalty to opposition.
Grits and Grace: Mission Mississippi's Interracial Ecumenical Prayer Breakfasts as a Practice of Racial Reconciliation and Social Transformation
Peter Gordon Slade, Ashland University
Mission Mississippi, perhaps the largest model of intentional ecumenical church-based racial reconciliation work in the United States today, proclaims its twice weekly prayer breakfasts are the essential core of its work to “change Mississippi.” Exploring this claim using the incites of theologians (Dietrich Bonheoffer, Jürgen Moltmann, and Miroslav Volf) and sociologists (Michael O. Emerson and Christian Smith), this paper argues that the unspectacular early-morning gatherings of African American and white Christians around coffee, biscuits and prayer, is in fact a practice and discipline of Christian reconciliation with the power to re-shape participants racialized political and religious attitudes.
"I Have a Dream," "People Power," "¡Sí, se puede!": Worship, Politics, and Repertoires of Performed Public Life in US and Philippine Contexts
Jeremy Posadas, Emory University
This paper offers one contribution to continue filling the persisting lacuna between liturgical practice and political practice as scholars theorize them. Three actual instances of the practice of nonviolent mass demonstration - the 1963 US March on Washington, the 1986 Philippine People Power Revolution, and present-day public actions of faith-based community organizing groups - are analyzed as explicit conjunctions of politics and worship, from which one can articulate some of the mutual relationships between liturgical and political action. Upholding practical theology’s impulses to critical correlation (broadly understood), this work does not make either liturgical action or political action derivative from the other; instead, it considers political action and liturgical action as two repertoires of performed and enacted public life that necessarily overlap, at least for those who regularly practice worship. This provides richer possibilities for a liturgical (-practical) theology of politics, or a political liturgical (-practical) theology.
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A17-120
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Pragmatism and Empiricism in American Religious Thought Group |
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Theme: Richard Bernstein's Pragmatism |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Columbia 1
David Lamberth, Harvard University, Presiding
Theme: Richard Bernstein's Pragmatism
Curtis Hutt, Brown University
Bernstein, Rorty, and Dewey on the Ethics of Historical Belief
Deborah Whitehead, University of Colorado, Boulder
Continuing the Argument: Tradition, Plurality, and Bernstein's "Engaged Pragmatism”
Kevin Schilbrack, Wesleyan College
Moral Realism, Metaphysics, and Pragmatism
Responding:
Eddie S. Glaude, Princeton University
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Pragmatism and Empiricism in American Religious Thought Group
Theme: Richard Bernstein's Pragmatism
Bernstein, Rorty, and Dewey on the Ethics of Historical Belief
Curtis Hutt, Brown University
Richard Bernstein, as noted by Nancy Frankenberry, isolates "proto-positivism" and "fideism" in the work of Richard Rorty who also proposed a "neat apartheid" between public and private spheres. This unfortunately, when co-opted by "new confessionalists" has served to insulate religious beliefs from challenges. Agents whose beliefs are determined intra-traditionally need not rebut the questions of outsiders who do not share their own basic beliefs. I will not only argue that Bernstein fairly amends Rorty but that John Dewey would have taken Bernstein's criticisms one step further.
Continuing the Argument: Tradition, Plurality, and Bernstein's "Engaged Pragmatism”
Deborah Whitehead, University of Colorado, Boulder
In this paper I first sketch out Richard Bernstein’s notion of an “engaged pragmatism” and outline some of its implications for how we conceptualize pragmatist tradition and history, indeed even the very definition of the term "pragmatism" itself. I then move to discuss some of the ways in which this notion can be applied to feminist critiques of pragmatism and feminist “argumentative retellings” of pragmatism’s origins. I argue that the Bernsteinian focus on plurality, diversity, and conflict in the interest of maintaining the vitality of the pragmatist tradition is helpful in destabilizing dominant forms of the tradition, but should be supplemented by critical feminist analysis in order to fully open up the tradition to address the complicated dynamics of gender, race, class, and other power dynamics in the construction of pragmatism.
Moral Realism, Metaphysics, and Pragmatism
Kevin Schilbrack, Wesleyan College
Jeffrey Stout and Franklin Gamwell are two contemporary religious ethicists whose accounts of moral realism are apparently diametrically opposed. Stout argues that moral realism does not require metaphysical claims about reality as it is in itself. In fact, “ethics without metaphysics” is one of Stout’s slogans. In contrast, Gamwell argues that moral convictions have no validity unless they are grounded in the ultimate nature of things. “No ethics without metaphysics” might be his slogan. This paper seeks to explore the extent to which these two views might be reconciled. This paper argues, first, that Gamwell's metaphysical approach actually is pragmatist, in the sense that for Gamwell metaphysics involves the reflection on the norms implicit in practices and, second, that Stout's critique of metaphysical realism does not apply to Gamwell's position. If the paper is successful, the end result is an understanding of moral realism that is both pragmatist and metaphysical.
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A17-121
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Religion and Popular Culture Group and Religion, Media, and Culture Group |
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Theme: Born Digital and Born Again Digital: Religion in Virtual Gaming Worlds |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Marriott Hall Salon 2
Gregory Grieve, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, Presiding
Theme: Born Digital and Born Again Digital: Religion in Virtual Gaming Worlds
Brian Moynihan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Born Digital
Vincent Gonzalez, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Born Digital
Rabia Gregory, University of Missouri, Columbia
Born Digital
Pamela Mullins Reaves, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Born Again Digital
Shanny Luft, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Born Again Digital
Anne Blankenship, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Born Again Digital
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Religion and Popular Culture Group and Religion, Media, and Culture Group
Theme: Born Digital and Born Again Digital: Religion in Virtual Gaming Worlds
To walk on water in a videogame is not a miracle, the imagination of game designers being the only natural law in these new worlds. A growing class of games, however, labors to harmonize their internal realities with religion, creating in-game situations that reward and impart religious training. The result is an interplay of discipline and belief affecting (and effecting) the player even after they turn off the game. This session includes two papers, and closes with an interactive arcade/poster session featuring several key games. The first paper, a diachronic study of evangelical Christian videogames, will investigate the ongoing negotiation of technologies and theologies which bring out-game realities in. The second, a synchronic study of three religious moments that emerged along with their media, will emphasize how individual religiosities are shaped by religious gaming, bringing in-game realities out.
Born Digital
Brian Moynihan, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
When religion is born under the constraints of new media, it manifests novel modalities of practice, text, and community. This paper presents a synchronic examination of three games which demonstrate new technological frames for imagining religion. The first case study investigates how technological and disciplinary practice functions in The Journey to Wild Divine, a meditation-based game that sacralizes biofeedback. The second explores kabbalah.com’s introductory courses as a previously unthinkable scripturality that crafts player dependence through embedded, interactive parables. The final study concerns the rhetoric of virtual holy war in multi-player gaming worlds. Often complete with “bibles” and liturgy, these discourses raise questions on what qualifies as “real” religion and religious community. The composite image of these new religious forms demonstrates how technology affects religion, and how technologized religion affects the religious, exploring both the player’s digital incarnation in new religious worlds and the technologies that make it possible.
Born Again Digital
Pamela Mullins Reaves, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
This three-part paper examines the scriptural basis of a series of evangelical Christian video games, including Wisdom Tree games, N’Lightning’s Catechumen, and Left Behind: Eternal Forces. Collectively, we characterize these games as “born-again digital.” After briefly considering the general development of these games over time, we explore the way these evangelical games employ scriptural material and thus reflect biblical literacy. By examining the function of scripture in each game, we evaluate how the features of the Christian gaming genre—including technological advancements and competition with secular counterparts—impact the potential significance of scripture in the games. We propose that as games become increasingly action and graphic oriented, the role of scriptural passages diminishes. While biblical material continues to inform the settings of the games, biblical literacy is not necessarily required. This transition leads us to reflect how, if at all, these games might be considered a form of religious practice.
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A17-122
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Religion in Latin America and the Caribbean Group and Pentecostal-Charismatic Movements Consultation |
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Theme: Research Sites, Opportunities, and Problems in Borderlands Pentecostalism |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Atlanta
New Program Unit
Nelson Maldonado-Torres, University of California, Berkeley, Presiding
Theme: Research Sites, Opportunities, and Problems in Borderlands Pentecostalism
Arlene Sanchez Walsh, Azusa Pacific University
Strangers at Our Gates: Latino Pentecostal Migrants and the Assemblies of God in the Borderlands
Daniel Ramirez, Arizona State University
Yanking Out the “Royal Telephone”: Borderlands Pentecostal Musics
Ethan Sharp, University of Texas, Pan American
Conjunto Conversions: Musical Adaptations in Mexicano Pentecostal Communities
Responding:
Jesse Miranda, Vanguard University
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Religion in Latin America and the Caribbean Group and Pentecostal-Charismatic Movements Consultation
Theme: Research Sites, Opportunities, and Problems in Borderlands Pentecostalism
Surveys of religious history in North America have given short shrift to Latina/o Pentecostalism and have forced most Latino religious history into westward and northward flows. Scholarship on Pentecostalism has not been exempt from this bias in its attention to movement centers and in its privileging of standard historical sources. In terms of both space and methodology, borderlands Pentecostalism has been relegated to the geographic and epistemic periphery. Similarly, the bulk of social scientific studies of pentecostalismo have been undertaken in Latin America, resulting in the foisting of extraneous templates upon U.S. Latina/o Pentecostals. This interdisciplinary panel seeks to situate the state of the question squarely within the U.S.-Mexico borderlands and to signal new directions for research. The vantage point at the interstices of two countries will allow for new mappings and soundings of a religious cartography that reflects people’s experience and movement through spaces both real and imagined.
Strangers at Our Gates: Latino Pentecostal Migrants and the Assemblies of God in the Borderlands
Arlene Sanchez Walsh, Azusa Pacific University
For the Assemblies of God, revisioning their relationship with Mexicano converts in the early years of the movement (1915-1935), the past must be usable, particularly when their early history is so rife with paternalism, racism, and anti-Catholicism. One way to accomplish this is to juxtapose Henry C. Ball, the missionary boss, with Alice Luce, the genteel matron. This is usable, but is it accurate? This paper contends that the growth of the Mexican Assemblies of God was more a product of the contemporary cultural milieu: anti-Catholic, premillenial dispensations that viewed the training of Mexican “laborers” necessary to contest Roman Catholicism and Communism—in Mexico, not the U.S.; that the Mexican Assemblies grew and thrived in the U.S., not as a product of evangelism, but rather church growth occurred by sheer demographic will, despite repatriation, despite marginalization, growth occurred in spite of attitudes, meager resources, and often from one Mexicano convert to another.
Yanking Out the “Royal Telephone”: Borderlands Pentecostal Musics
Daniel Ramirez, Arizona State University
This interdisciplinary study examines Pentecostal music as a tool for cultural maintenance, ideological resistance, and social solidarity in the U.S.-Mexico borderlands. The contemporary evangélico growth among Latino and Latin American populations requires a precise historicization that takes into account the experience of migration and the impact of migrating cultural and symbolic goods, including, especially, musical ones. The fecund production of early borderlands Pentecostal composers stands—and sounds—in stark aesthetic contrast to that of Mainline precursors. Their aesthetic choices allowed Pentecostals to capture the popular sonic sphere with a repertoire that reflected most of the popular musical genres of Mexican/Chicano society as well as the migrating and melancholic experience of a mobile proletariat and peasantry. The very peripheral nature of the borderlands afforded a measure of freedom and agency away from guardians of doctrinal and liturgical orthodoxy.
Conjunto Conversions: Musical Adaptations in Mexicano Pentecostal Communities
Ethan Sharp, University of Texas, Pan American
This paper considers some of the musical styles that Mexicano Pentecostals use and adapt for church services, from a perspective rooted in the disciplines of folklore, cultural anthropology and ethnomusicology. I evaluate the symbolic capacities of these styles, and engage scholarly discussions that attempt to determine ways in which Pentecostals are engaged in social changes associated with late capitalism, transnationalism and globalization. I argue that the diverse repertoire, including the consistent use of styles derived from the conjunto tradition, within Mexicano Pentecostal churches reveals not a contradictory or double consciousness, as some scholars have suggested, but an awareness of multiple subjectivities. (Through attention to multiple subjectivities, I relate my analysis to theories and commentary about lives on the border). Through conjunto, as well as "modern" styles of praise and worship, Pentecostals imagine and pursue diverse possibilities for relating to God, fellow believers, and the complex world outside the church building.
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A17-123
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Science, Technology, and Religion Group and Cultural History of the Study of Religion Consultation |
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Theme: Soap, Coal, and Rayon: Miraculous Elements of Modern Industry |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Molly A
Elizabeth A. Clark, Duke University, Presiding
Theme: Soap, Coal, and Rayon: Miraculous Elements of Modern Industry
Kathryn Lofton, Indiana University, Bloomington
Saving Suds: Soap Promotions and the Moral Culture of American Cleanliness
Richard J. Callahan, University of Missouri, Columbia
The Power of Coal: Development and Enchantment in Central Appalachia
Chad Seales, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Chemical Fluid to Rayon: The Miracle of Industrial Conversion in the Modern American South
Responding:
John Corrigan, Florida State University
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Abstract
Science, Technology, and Religion Group and Cultural History of the Study of Religion Consultation
Theme: Soap, Coal, and Rayon: Miraculous Elements of Modern Industry
This panel addresses the religious enchantment of modern industry in the United States. Each paper focuses on the production and consumption of a specific industrial element: soap, coal, or rayon. Presenters describe the language of industrial production, tracing a common grammar of miraculous conversion. The presenters then reflect on the theoretical and methodological implications of these material practices for the study of religion in America.
Saving Suds: Soap Promotions and the Moral Culture of American Cleanliness
Kathryn Lofton, Indiana University, Bloomington
Few objects encapsulate the ambivalent moral tenor of modernity better than soap. With the development of vegetable oils in the mid-nineteenth century, and the concomitant founding of Procter and Gamble in 1837, soap gained its promotional footing alongside the processes that define modern objectification. This paper is an analysis of the Protestant language embedded within the sale of soap, the ways Christian moral imperatives goaded soap into the stratosphere of modern business. Although “cleanliness is next to godliness” was an axiom popularized by Wesleyan itinerants in the antebellum period, it was not until the emergence of a diverse, immigrant-clogged industrial America that clergy became committed to a specifically accessorized moral cleanliness. Product placement in late-nineteenth century sermons, collaborations between Protestant social reformers and specific soap companies, as well as the formation of the Cleanliness Institute form the documentary basis for this exposition on the sudsy mission to an unwashed populace.
The Power of Coal: Development and Enchantment in Central Appalachia
Richard J. Callahan, University of Missouri, Columbia
This paper explores coal as a material substance that not only fired the furnaces of industry, but also fired the religious imagination. The discovery of coal under the Central Appalachian Mountains in the late nineteenth century and the development of industrial mining produced mythic as well as economic dreams. The source of electricity and economic potential, coal was imagined by industrialists, travel writers, missionaries, and others as an enchanted power that would unleash the progress of history and civilization that had been held back in the mountains, bringing education, religion, and material and cultural development to a “backwards” region. Examining coal as metaphor, promise, and transformational power by missionaries, industrialists, and journalists, this paper considers how ideas of religion, morality, civilization, and progress were bound together in the industrialization of Central Appalachia's coal fields. It further considers counter-meanings for mountain residents who experienced coal as a different symbol and reality.
Chemical Fluid to Rayon: The Miracle of Industrial Conversion in the Modern American South
Chad Seales, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Despite the abundance of religious and technological mixtures in the modern American South, such as the Old Time Gospel Hour, scholars have, with few exceptions, considered industrialization at odds with antebellum religious practices. Southern evangelicals, though, used industrial technology for more than just a vehicle to distribute the sacred. For some, industry itself was religiously enchanted. To illustrate this point, I focus on “Miracles of Supervision,” a keynote address delivered by Southern Baptist minister George D. Heaton to the Southern Industrial Relations Conference in 1949. In this speech, Heaton declared industrial conversion of elements to products, such as chemical fluid to rayon, “as miraculous a thing as modern life witnesses.” Such religious language suggests that industrial conversion was a southern Protestant equivalent of a Roman Catholic science of transubstantiation. If this is true, then the “real presence” of postbellum Protestantism is found in the factory, not in the congregation.
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A17-124
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Western Esotericism Group |
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Theme: Esotericism and Transgression |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Ford A
Allison P. Coudert, University of California, Davis, Presiding
Theme: Esotericism and Transgression
Wendy Rachele Terry, University of California, Davis
"Outside the Court of Your Secrets": Marguerite Porete's Transgression
Geoffrey McVey, Miami University, Ohio
Acceptable Transgressions: Mysticism and Esotericism at the Margins
Taylor Hines, University of California, Santa Barbara
Conservative Transgression: Swedenborgian Sectarianism in Unitarian Boston
Matthew Rogers, Northwestern University
Black Magic in British Columbia
Grant H. Potts, University of Pennsylvania
Creativity, Exchange, and Institutionalization in a Ritual Magic Lodge
The Western Esotericism Group's Business Meeting will be held Sunday, 6:30 pm-8:00 pm in the Program Unit Chair's Lounge (MM-Business Suite 1)
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Abstract
Western Esotericism Group
Theme: Esotericism and Transgression
Western esoteric currents are not infrequently depicted as "transgressive" with respect to the religious, social, and political standards of mainstream culture. This panel will focus on the forms that transgression can take in esoteric movements and the reasons for it. Papers will reflect on the theoretical possibilities for an alliance of esotericism and transgression. Others will examine specific historical cases where transgression is made manifest in the context of esoteric thinking.
"Outside the Court of Your Secrets": Marguerite Porete's Transgression
Wendy Rachele Terry, University of California, Davis
Marguerite Porete (d.1310) wrote a book “which sounds clearly of heresy”—“quod manifeste sonat in heresim,” and continued to circulate it after censure. Documentation of her and her self-appointed advocate Guiard de Cressonessart trials show that Guiard and Marguerite underwent similar prosecution. Guirad, who confessed, was imprisoned for life for teaching that there were two churches and denying papal primacy. Marguerite refused to confess and was executed. She was subsequently labeled a “pseudo-mulier,” literally fake woman. Her book, Mirror of Simple Souls, was quickly disassociated with her. Excerpts from the Mirror formed the foundation of condemnation against antinomianism at the Council of Vienne (1311-12) while the Mirror continued to circulate anonymously as an accepted spiritual treatise. Careful analysis of the Mirror taken in conjunction with Marguerite's proximity to Guiard demonstrates that her esoteric teachings, not just those which were ultimately labeled antinomian, were significant in her "transgression."
Acceptable Transgressions: Mysticism and Esotericism at the Margins
Geoffrey McVey, Miami University, Ohio
The boundaries between mysticism and esotericism are not a matter of content but of their acceptability within the discourse of religious studies. Both present methods of transgressing the limits or definitions of the self, but where mysticism has found a place within scholarship, esotericism has not. This paper is intended to demonstrate that the separation of the two categories is, despite very similar content, grounded the valuation of origins, and ultimately in the representation of the esoteric as a field defined by otherness.
Conservative Transgression: Swedenborgian Sectarianism in Unitarian Boston
Taylor Hines, University of California, Santa Barbara
This paper explores the changing status of a small group of elite Swedenborgian sectarians in Unitarian Boston from around 1815 through the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Originally labeled mentally unbalanced and subjected to petty persecution, the Swedenborgians went on to become extremely successful and well-respected. While in their first years this group implicitly challenged central epistemological planks in the early Unitarian synthesis, they also embraced many conservative doctrines, practices and concerns. By the 1840s and 50s they no longer seemed particularly radical, especially when placed next to the Transcendentalists whose revolt they had anticipated and fed.
Black Magic in British Columbia
Matthew Rogers, Northwestern University
The emic definition of “black magician” varies significantly from occultist to occultist, and often even within the works of a single writer. The acclaimed novelist Malcolm Lowry was a friend and pupil of the occultist Charles Stansfeld Jones, who was himself a disciple of Aleister Crowley. Lowry combined himself and Jones to develop the anti-hero of his magnum opus Under the Volcano, Geoffery Firmin, whose brother jokes about him, “Maybe he’s a black magician!” Not only the principal figures of this magical lineage, but related works of secondary scholarship engage the “black magic” distinction. Notions of “black magic” can profoundly illuminate the ethical and metaphysical dimensions of occult practice when used by magicians themselves and by those who study them. This paper explores that concept within the particular case history of magical filiation that eventuated in the tragic demise of Malcolm Lowry.
Creativity, Exchange, and Institutionalization in a Ritual Magic Lodge
Grant H. Potts, University of Pennsylvania
Based on a year of fieldwork on Portland, Oregon based Sekhet Maat Lodge of the Ordo Templi Orientis (OTO), this paper examines the question of integration and exchange in an esoteric fraternity on two levels, the liturgical and the institutional or bureaucratic. It looks at two rituals: the autumn equinox ritual performed at the lodge in September of 2006 and the ongoing weekly performance of Aleister Crowley’s Gnostic Mass. These rituals show two avenues through which integration takes place: the doctrine of signatures inherited from the esoteric tradition and an ideology against collective interpretation of practice that is coupled with a meticulous obsession with correct practice. The paper concludes by examining the relationship between the integration of religious information on a liturgical level and the integration of institutional practices from other religions and from secular institutions.
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A17-125
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Religions in Chinese and Indian Cultures: A Comparative Perspective Seminar |
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Theme: Rituals in Indian and Chinese Cultures |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Anaheim
Tao Jiang, Rutgers University, Presiding
Theme: Rituals in Indian and Chinese Cultures
Panelists:
Chakravarthi Ram-Prasad, Lancaster University
Frederick M. Smith, University of Iowa
Kathryn McClymond, Georgia State University
Thomas A. Wilson, Hamilton College
Paul R. Goldin, University of Pennsylvania
Tanya Storch, University of the Pacific
Business Meeting:
Chakravarthi Ram-Prasad, Lancaster University, Presiding
Tao Jiang, Rutgers University, Presiding
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Abstract
Religions in Chinese and Indian Cultures: A Comparative Perspective Seminar
Theme: Rituals in Indian and Chinese Cultures
This year the seminar theme is rituals in Indian and Chinese cultures. Our panelists will address aspects of rituals as follows: What in classical Indian and/or Chinese contexts do we identify as ritual and how does that affect any theory of ritual? What are the sources of ritual authority and how are they interpreted? What issues does the performance of rituals address? How are rituals articulated and presented?, etc. We are concentrating on ritual theory in the normative contexts of Vedic and Confucian ritual, as well as the meditative qualities apparent in the history of Buddhist ritual (but we quite understand the possibility of opening up the comparative understanding of ritual through more "popular" modes, while not being able to accommodate them here). A key feature of the seminar is to facilitate discussions among the panelists and with the audience at the conference.
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A17-126
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Animals and Religion Consultation |
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Theme: Visioning Animal-Human Relationships through the Religious Studies Looking Glass |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Madeleine C
Forrest Clingerman, Ohio Northern University, Presiding
Theme: Visioning Animal-Human Relationships through the Religious Studies Looking Glass
Sarah Pike, California State University, Chico
“Liberation’s Crusade Has Begun”: Hare Krishna Hardcore Youth and Animal Rights Activism
Michelene Pesantubbee, University of Iowa
"Bearly" Understandable: Transformation from Human to Bear and Man to Woman
Joanne Pierce, College of the Holy Cross
The “Rainbow Bridge”: Animals as Sharers in Human Immortality (or Eternal Life in Cyberspace)
Aaron Gross, University of California, Santa Barbara
The Animal, Critical Theory, and the Study of Religion
Responding:
Ines M. Talamantez, University of California, Santa Barbara
Business Meeting:
Laura Hobgood-Oster, Southwestern University, Presiding
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Abstract
Animals and Religion Consultation
Theme: Visioning Animal-Human Relationships through the Religious Studies Looking Glass
This session examines the multi-faceted implications of the human-animal relationship in religious experiences. From radical animal rights activism to seeking connections in the afterlife through the internet to understanding the bear in Cherokee traditions, the session deliberately attempts to cover the increasingly broad range of human-animal studies in religion.
“Liberation’s Crusade Has Begun”: Hare Krishna Hardcore Youth and Animal Rights Activism
Sarah Pike, California State University, Chico
In 2006, Hare Krishna hardcore band “108” contributed to a benefit for imprisoned animal rights activist Peter Young. This is just one of many examples of the connection between Krishna Consciousness, hardcore music, straight-edge youth culture and radical animal rights activism, a connection completely left out of scholarly literature on religion and animals, youth culture, and the animal rights movement, as well as news media accounts of animal rights terrorism. This paper explores the ways in which Krishna Consciousness has shaped hardcore youth culture and animal rights activism. Drawing on interviews with activists and Krishna hardcore musicians, music lyrics, fanzines, and MySpace band sites, I argue that the point of convergence of hardcore music, Krishna Consciousness and radical activism represents an important subculture within which young adults negotiate and construct religious and activist identities.
"Bearly" Understandable: Transformation from Human to Bear and Man to Woman
Michelene Pesantubbee, University of Iowa
This paper draws on images of bears through myth and song to provide insight into Cherokee historical responses to men who behaved like women. The issue of Cherokee traditional thought arises from an amendment made to the Cherokee Nation Marriage and Family Act in June 2004 that bans same-sex marriage. One council member who urged passage of the amendment stated that “The Tribunal has made it quite clear that it is the Council’s position to clarify what the Cherokee peoples [sic] traditions and beliefs are.” In response to the petition to ban same-sex marriages a Cherokee scholar argued that “there is overwhelming evidence for the historic and cultural presence of multiple gender roles and same-sex relations” including marriage between same-sex couples among the Cherokee. Bear stories and songs provide a lens by which to examine Cherokee understanding of humans who exist outside normative boundaries for human behavior.
The “Rainbow Bridge”: Animals as Sharers in Human Immortality (or Eternal Life in Cyberspace)
Joanne Pierce, College of the Holy Cross
The consideration of animals and their roles in human lives has often, in the past, raised the question of their sentience and participation in a human afterlife. Recently, I began a study of the internet phenomenon of religious narrative and funeral memorials of animals (usually pets) on a series of internet sites linked in a Webring: the Rainbow Bridge. This presentation will offer some analysis of the following points: the roots of the Rainbow Bridge narrative; the question of animal sentience and “salvation,” especially in connection with Christian tradition; the need (at least for some Americans) to ritualize the passing of a pet, and the form of this ritualization; thus, the content of memorial epitaphs and eulogies on the Rainbow Bridge; finally, the function of cyber space as a kind of “eternal life” or immortality.
The Animal, Critical Theory, and the Study of Religion
Aaron Gross, University of California, Santa Barbara
Though it is not generally acknowledged, certain ways of imagining animals and the human-animal border have been crucial to the theoretical basis of the field of religious studies since its inception. I critically analyze this under-examined theoretical heritage and consider how a perspective from the “animals and religion” discourse might challenge such foundational assumptions of the field. I highlight the broader theoretical significance of this question through a brief consideration and problematization of the thought of Emile Durkheim and later sociologists and historians of religion influenced by his conception of religion as an essentially human (and not animal) phenomena. I propose to explicate the limitations of this theorization of religion through a consideration of the question of the animal as it has emerged in critical theoretical discussions of subjectivity in the thought of Jacques Derrida and Giorgio Agamben.
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A17-127
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Childhood Studies and Religion Consultation |
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Theme: Children and Sacred Texts |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
MM-Manchester 1
Judith Gundry-Volf, Yale University, Presiding
Theme: Children and Sacred Texts
Jennifer E. Beste, Xavier University
Catholic Children's Encounter with the Bible through "Catechesis of the Good Shepherd"
Russell Dalton, Brite Divinity School
Children's Bible Texts of Terror: Abraham and Isaac, Jephthah's Daughter, and Elisha and the She-bears in U.S. Children's Bible Storybooks, 1860-2006
Laurel Koepf, Union Theological Seminary
Calling for Children: A Childist Interpretational Hermeneutic
Annemie Dillen, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Good News for Children? Towards a Biblical Hermeneutic of Texts of Terror
Responding:
John Carroll, Union Theological Seminary and Presbyterian School of Christian Education
Business Meeting:
Barbara Pitkin, Stanford University, Presiding
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Abstract
Childhood Studies and Religion Consultation
Theme: Children and Sacred Texts
Catholic Children's Encounter with the Bible through "Catechesis of the Good Shepherd"
Jennifer E. Beste, Xavier University
The purpose of this paper is to explore how Catholic children encounter and relate to the Christian Scriptures within the context of a faith formation program called "Catechesis of the Good Shepherd." The aim of this method is to provide sacred space to "fall in love" with God by allowing children to encounter Scripture on their own terms. Besides drawing on the literature by founder Sofia Cavalletti and other catechists, analysis will be based on my ethnographic field research observing three to five year olds in a Catholic parish every Sunday and six to eight year olds at a Catholic Montessori school. The second main section of this paper will contrast this method of encountering Scripture with the more widespread traditional religion class that relies on a textbook with Scripture stories. I will draw on my field research observing four traditional second grade religion classes as a point of contrast.
Children's Bible Texts of Terror: Abraham and Isaac, Jephthah's Daughter, and Elisha and the She-bears in U.S. Children's Bible Storybooks, 1860-2006
Russell Dalton, Brite Divinity School
Children’s bible storybooks have been among the most popular and influential types of religious publications in the United States over the past 125 years, providing many with their first impressions of Bible stories. These storybooks lend insight into the American church’s changing assumptions about the lessons children need to learn and the nature of the Bible. This paper focuses on the ways that three troubling stories about children, Abraham and Isaac, Jephthah’s daughter, and Elisha and the she-bears, have been retold for children. The stories of Isaac and Jephthah’s daughter, for example, are often revised in ways that celebrate their obedience and total submission to their fathers, even to the point of passively allowing their fathers to kill them without complaint. The story of forty-two children being mauled by bears is retold to teach children a variety of lessons. Illustrations from these storybooks will be shown and discussed as well.
Calling for Children: A Childist Interpretational Hermeneutic
Laurel Koepf, Union Theological Seminary
Increasingly, methodologies for the interpretation of sacred texts recognize and value the presence of the interpreter’s voice in her or his interpretation, as well as the ways in which his or her voice is influenced by social location. Largely though, the diversity of interpretational voices has been limited to those of adults. The voices of children as interpreters of sacred texts must be recognized as a part of the plurality of interpretational voices and brought into conversation with other methodologies for textual interpretation. To do so without disempowering children, it is necessary not only to search for the presence and voices of children in sacred texts, but also to seriously engage children as interpreters in their own right. These two elements of childist interpretation are used to engage 1 Samuel 3:1-4:1. The methodologies employed by three children of different ages are considered in a child-centered interpretation of the text.
Good News for Children? Towards a Biblical Hermeneutic of Texts of Terror
Annemie Dillen, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
After all the recent research about images of children in the Bible, the question now is how can we deal with texts about children that raise moral questions in our contemporary context. I distinguish three ways of dealing with problematic texts about children, namely diabolization, banalization and ethicization. Diabolization means considering scriptural texts as absolutely bad. Banalization means relativizing the meaning and the relevance of these scriptural passages. Ethicization refers to an attitude whereby the content of the scriptural texts is interpreted in a new way so that these texts take on a more positive meaning. At the end I will provide building blocks of a liberating biblical hermeneutic, referring to the method of "resistant reading." The models of reasoning developed can also be applied to other difficult biblical texts, and therefore also offer us insights into possible positive ways to make and deal with children’s Bibles.
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A17-128
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Death, Dying, and Beyond Consultation |
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Theme: Continuing Bonds with the Dead |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Edward D
Kathleen Garces-Foley, Marymount University, Presiding
Theme: Continuing Bonds with the Dead
Stephen Potthoff, Wilmington College
Refreshment and Reunion in Paradise: Near-Death Experiences as Vehicles of Individual and Communal Healing in Early North African Christianity
Robert Ross, University of Massachusetts, Boston
The Dead among the Living: The Presence of Ancestors in the Music of a Culture
Melissa Kelley, Weston Jesuit School of Theology
Continuing Bonds and Attachment to God
Rhon Manigault, Wake Forest University
Talking to the Dead: Performative Memory as Living Practice among Gullah/Geechee Women
Business Meeting:
Christopher Moreman, St. Francis Xavier University, Presiding
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Abstract
Death, Dying, and Beyond Consultation
Theme: Continuing Bonds with the Dead
Refreshment and Reunion in Paradise: Near-Death Experiences as Vehicles of Individual and Communal Healing in Early North African Christianity
Stephen Potthoff, Wilmington College
Throughout human history, religious systems have served to provide hope and meaning in the face of death. From the third through the seventh centuries CE, early Christians in the North African city of Carthage embraced hope and meaning at life’s boundary through the construction of a paradisal realm for the departed in the cemetery. Early Christian martyrs, whose tombs attracted the graves of ordinary Christians seeking the postmortem company and protection of the martyrs in paradise, had embarked in the darkness of prison on visionary otherworld journeys, during which they visited resplendent gardens and partook of paradisal banquets. Such visions of paradise, in many ways the internal counterpart to the imaginative act of creating a paradisal realm in the cemetery, provided blueprints and images from the spirit realm, which stonemasons sculpted into a culturally shared sacred landscape where all Christians could experience healing and hope across the boundary of death.
The Dead among the Living: The Presence of Ancestors in the Music of a Culture
Robert Ross, University of Massachusetts, Boston
This presentation examines how the power of ancestors makes its presence known through distinctive themes in the music of Creole-Zydeco and Cajun cultures of Southwest Louisiana. Both the music itself, and various social rituals expressed in the music, become vehicles through which there is established a continuing bond between the living and the dead. The presentation is dynamic and interactive, including both a theological analysis of the role of the dead in the religious and ‘folk religious’ practices of these cultures, and live performances of the representative music discussed.
Continuing Bonds and Attachment to God
Melissa Kelley, Weston Jesuit School of Theology
This paper will present the concept of attachment to God as an important consideration for the ongoing study of continuing bonds with the deceased. While attachment theory is a familiar frame for considering the experience of grief, including continuing bonds with the deceased, the area of attachment to God is still largely neglected. After an overview of current conceptual and empirical work in attachment to God, this paper will explore ways that one’s style of attachment to God may influence both the nature and the function of one’s continuing bonds with the deceased. Important questions for future theorizing, empirical research, and strategies of care will be proposed.
Talking to the Dead: Performative Memory as Living Practice among Gullah/Geechee Women
Rhon Manigault, Wake Forest University
Women in the South Carolina low-country profess to “talk to the dead all the time,” a practice of ongoing communication between the living and the deceased. This paper explores the layered meanings of this practice and engages the ways talking to the dead challenges literal appropriations of the terms “talking” and “dead.” In one of its specific formations, talking to the dead is the transmission of communal memory through ritual performance. This performative memory is readily featured in multiple practices in low-country culture – the creation of sweetgrass baskets, the use of folklore by local storytellers, and the performance of sacred music. For women of the low-country, the deceased, though physically transitioned, are very much alive.
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A17-129
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Rethinking the Field Consultation |
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Theme: Religion, Theology, and the Arts |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-28E
Davina C. Lopez, Eckerd College, Presiding
Theme: Religion, Theology, and the Arts
Part 1: A Dynamic Method in Religious and Theological Aesthetics
Part 2: Theology and Film: Challenging the Sacred/Secular Divide
Panelists:
Cecilia Gonzalez-Andrieu, Loyola Marymount University
Naoko Frances Hioki, Graduate Theological Union
Bobbi Dykema Katsanis, Graduate Theological Union
John Handley, Graduate Theological Union
Jenny Patten Gargiulo, Graduate Theological Union
Frank Burch Brown, Christian Theological Seminary
Alejandro Garcia-Rivera, Jesuit School of Theology, Berkeley
Sara Anson Vaux, Northwestern University
Christopher Deacy, University of Kent
Gaye Williams Ortiz, Augusta State University
Maia Kotrosits, Union Theological Seminary
Responding:
S. Brent Plate, Texas Christian University
Business Meeting:
Bradley L. Herling, Marymount Manhattan College, Presiding
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Abstract
Rethinking the Field Consultation
Theme: Religion, Theology, and the Arts
Part 1: A Dynamic Method in Religious and Theological Aesthetics
Part 2: Theology and Film: Challenging the Sacred/Secular Divide
This year's Rethinking the Field session examines Religion, Theology, and the Arts by bringing together two inter-related panels. The first is devoted to developing a method that brings theology and critical theory together around common criteria. The panel will urge scholars in the arts and in religion to work across a number of disciplines, allowing the theological insights embedded in artistic expression to shine through. The second focus of the session will be religion, theology, and film: the panel will attempt to advance the conversation within this subdiscipline by stimulating awareness of a range of methodological and theoretical issues that go along with examining filmic texts. In particular, these speakers will suggest that film provides a necessary and vital element in the dialogue between theology and popular culture, particularly when it is pursued in a positive, enthusiastic, yet critical manner.
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A17-135
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Søren Kierkegaard Society |
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Theme: Kierkegaard in Dialogue with Non-Christian Religions |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-26B
Tamara Monet Marks, Florida State University, Presiding
Theme: Kierkegaard in Dialogue with Non-Christian Religions
K. Brian Soderquist, Søren Kierkegaard Center, University of Copenhagen
Kierkegaard's Understanding of Non-Christian Religions
Andrew J. Nicholson, State University of New York, Stony Brook
Hinduism-Buddhism: Skillful Means and Bold Assertions
Karen C. Carr, Lawrence University
Daoism: Sin, Spontaneity, Nature, and God
Jennifer Pouya, Texas Christian University
Kierkegaard and the Jewish Shadow
Adam Buben, University of South Florida
Background for a Congruence: Kierkegaard and the Samurai
Abrahim Khan, University of Toronto
Kierkegaard and Muhammad Iqbal on Becoming a Self
Responding:
Erik Ziolkowski, Lafayette University
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A17-136
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La Communidad/The Community |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Maggie
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A17-137
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North American Association for the Study of Religion |
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Theme: Taxonomies in the Study of Religion |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-28A
Theme: Taxonomies in the Study of Religion
Craig Martin, Syracuse University
Strategic Uses of "Religion": Taxonomy and Metonymy in Political Discourse
Leah Payne, Vanderbilt University
Time on Their Side: Using Philosophy of Time to Understand Distinctions between Early American Pentecostals and Fundamentalists
Thomas B. Ellis, Appalachian State University
Spirituality Redescribed, Self-esteem Misrecognized
Responding:
Aaaron Hughes, University of Calgary
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A17-138
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Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-30C
9:00 am 2007 Presidential Address
Stephanie Paulsell, Harvard University
Lost in the Mystery of God: Childhood and the History of Christian Spirituality
10:30 am Business Meeting
Mary Frohlich, Catholic Theological Union, President-elect, Presiding
All are welcome. For more information, please contact Anita Houck at ahouck@saintmarys.edu.
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A17-139
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Person, Culture, and Religion Group |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-29B
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A17-140
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North American Paul Tillich Society and Polanyi Society |
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Theme: How Tillich’s Recently Retrieved Paper, “Participation and Knowledge: Problems of an Ontology of Cognition,” Engages Polanyi’s Thought |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Oxford
Walter Gulick, Montana State University, Billings, Presiding
Theme: How Tillich’s Recently Retrieved Paper, “Participation and Knowledge: Problems of an Ontology of Cognition,” Engages Polanyi’s Thought
Co-Presenters:
Durwood Foster, Pacific School of Religion
Richard Gelwick, Bangor Theological Seminary
Responding:
Donald Musser, Stetson University
Robert Russell, Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences
11:15 am Business Meeting:
Walter Mead, Illinois State University, Presiding
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A17-141
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Karl Barth Society of North America |
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Theme: Discusson of Alyssa Lyra Pitstick, Light in Darkness: Hans Urs von Balthasar and the Catholic Doctrine of Christ's Descent into Hell (Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2007) |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
CC-26B
George Hunsinger, Princeton Theological Seminary, Presiding
Theme: Discusson of Alyssa Lyra Pitstick, Light in Darkness: Hans Urs von Balthasar and the Catholic Doctrine of Christ's Descent into Hell (Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2007)
Panelists:
Paul J. Griffiths, University of Illinois, Chicago
David Lauber, Wheaton College
John Webster, Aberdeen University
Responding:
Alyssa Lyra Pitstick
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A17-142
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Society for Hindu-Christian Studies |
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Theme: (Re-)Constructing Advaita: Rambachan's The Advaita Worldview and Thatamanil's The Immanent Divine in Conversation |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 9:00 am-11:30 am
GH-Mohsen B
Michael McLaughlin, Presiding
Theme: (Re-)Constructing Advaita: Rambachan's The Advaita Worldview and Thatamanil's The Immanent Divine in Conversation
9:00 am Panel and Discussion
Panelists:
Michelle Voss Roberts, Rhodes College
Michael McLaughlin, St. Leo University
Joseph Prabhu, California State University
Responding:
Anantanand Rambachan, St. Olaf College
John J. Thatamanil, Vanderbilt University
11:30 am Business Meeting
Corinne Dempsey, Presiding
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A17-130
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San Diego Zoo Tour |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 9:30 am-1:00 pm
Offsite
Sponsored by the Science, Technology, and Religion Group
Separate registration required.
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Show Abstract |
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Abstract
San Diego Zoo Tour
Sponsored by the Science, Technology, and Religion Group
The San Diego Zoo is a world-famous destination with more than 4,000 animals and 800 species in residence. The tour offers a great mini-introduction to the zoo’s mammal, bird, and plant collections. It includes a 90-minute private bus tour and one off-exhibit area. The tour is led by a zoo guide and is appropriate for ages 3 and up. Tour fee includes zoo ticket, transportation, and special behind-the scenes access to the zoo.
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A17-131
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San Diego Chinese Historical Museum Walking Tour |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 10:30 am-1:00 pm
Offsite
Sponsored by the Chinese Religions Group
Separate registration required.
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Show Abstract |
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Abstract
San Diego Chinese Historical Museum Walking Tour
Sponsored by the Chinese Religions Group
The San Diego Chinese Historical Museum is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to collect, preserve, and share the Chinese-American experience and Chinese history, culture, and art to educate the community and visitors. The museum was founded in 1996 by the San Diego Chinese Historical Society. Since opening, the museum has presented more than thirty-nine exhibits highlighting the rich tradition of Chinese culture and history in San Diego and the world. The museum also features a library on Chinese culture and a tranquil garden with a koi pond.
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A17-132
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Plenary Address |
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Theme: The Covenant with Black America |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 11:45 am-12:45 pm
CC-20D
Eddie S. Glaude, Princeton University, Presiding
Theme: The Covenant with Black America
Panelists:
Tavis Smiley, Los Angeles, CA
Responding:
Emilie M. Townes, Yale University
Cornel West, Princeton University
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Abstract
Plenary Address
Theme: The Covenant with Black America
From his celebrated conversations with world figures, to his work to inspire the next generation of leaders, as a broadcaster, author, advocate, and philanthropist, Tavis Smiley continues to be an outstanding voice for change. Smiley hosts the late night television talk show, Tavis Smiley on PBS, and radio show, The Tavis Smiley Show on Public Radio International, making him the first American ever to simultaneously host signature talk shows on both public television and public radio. He also created the Tavis Smiley Foundation, whose mission is to enlighten, encourage and empower black youth, as well as Tavis Smiley Presents, a subsidiary of The Smiley Group, Inc., that brings ideas and people together through symposiums, seminars, forums, and town hall meetings. In addition, he has authored ten books, and he made publishing history when the book he edited, The Covenant with Black America, reached #1 on the New York Times bestseller list.
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A17-133
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Special Topics Forum |
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Theme: ATLA Career Alternatives Luncheon: Focus on Religion and Journalism |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 11:45 am-1:00 pm
GH-Manchester E
Sponsored by the Graduate Student Committee and American Theological Library Association
Kimberly Bresler, St. Joseph's University, Presiding
Theme: ATLA Career Alternatives Luncheon: Focus on Religion and Journalism
Panelists:
Debra Mason, Religion Newswriters Association
Jason Byassee, The Christian Century
Sandi Dolbee, San Diego Union-Tribune
Separate registration is required at www.aarweb.org/Meetings/Annual_Meeting/Current_Meeting/RSVP/ATLA/.
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Abstract
Special Topics Forum
Theme: ATLA Career Alternatives Luncheon: Focus on Religion and Journalism
Sponsored by the Graduate Student Committee and American Theological Library Association
Students in religion and theology often find creative and rewarding career alternatives to the life of a professor. This year, our ongoing Career Alternatives series focuses on the intersection of religion and the media: what career opportunities exist for people interested in both religion and communicating ideas about religion using the expanding varieties of news media? Come listen to talented and experienced writers about their lives in religion and journalism.
AAR student members interested in attending must RSVP online ASAP (first-come, first-served basis) at www.aarweb.org/ Meetings/ Annual_Meeting/ Current_Meeting/ RSVP/ATLA/.Online registration deadline is noon on Wednesday, November 15.
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A17-200
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Special Topics Forum |
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Theme: Introduction to the AAR |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
GH-Betsy A
Sponsored by the Graduate Student Committee
Kimberly Bresler, St. Joseph's University, Presiding
Theme: Introduction to the AAR
Panelists:
Richard Amesbury, Claremont School of Theology
Davina C. Lopez, Eckerd College
Bradley L. Herling, Marymount Manhattan College
Maurice Lee, Harvard University
Myesha D. Jenkins, American Academy of Religion
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Abstract
Special Topics Forum
Theme: Introduction to the AAR
Sponsored by the Graduate Student Committee
The American Academy of Religion sponsors a broad umbrella of programs, affiliations, and sub-groups: the Theological Programs Initiative, mentoring programs for women and ethnic minorities, the Graduate Student Committee and Student Liaison Group, a multitude of associated regional meetings, the Employment Information Service, and various publishing enterprises, to name just a few. If you're confused by the AAR's alphabet soup (TPI, REM, SWP, GSC, SLG, EIS, and more) or if you've ever wondered what else the AAR does besides the annual meeting, come hear about the wide range of programs and opportunities for service offered to all AAR members.
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A17-201
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Special Topics Forum |
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Theme: Sustainable Theological Education |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
MM-Marina G
Sponsored by the AAR Academic Relations Committee, AAR Theological Education Steering Committee, and SBL
David Rhoads, Lutheran School of Theology, Chicago and Laurel D. Kearns, Drew University, Presiding
Theme: Sustainable Theological Education
Panelists:
John B. Cobb, Claremont School of Theology
Rosemary R. Ruether, Claremont Graduate University
Calvin DeWitt, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Sallie McFague, Vancouver School of Theology
Norman Habel, Flinders University
Larry Rasmussen, Union Theological Seminary, New York
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Abstract
Special Topics Forum
Theme: Sustainable Theological Education
Sponsored by the AAR Academic Relations Committee, AAR Theological Education Steering Committee, and SBL
As the declining health of the earth reaches a critical point, religious people from a wide variety of traditions are beginning to respond. It has been forty years since Lynn White issued what many saw as a wake up call. Institutions of theological education should be providing vigorous, visionary leadership on this issue, but are they? Six of the prophetic voices that have encouraged both churches and seminaries to address the worsening ecological crisis have been asked to reflect on the significant role of theological education in leading the faith community to respond. What leadership can seminaries provide through scholarship, academic programs, community life, building and grounds, and institutional practices? What unique opportunities and challenges does theological education face in meeting the environmental challenge? Ample time will be allowed for discussion. See www.webofcreation.org for more on this session and what some schools are already doing.
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A17-202
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Religious Implications of Extreme Longevity Wildcard |
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Theme: Radical Life Extension: Implications for Eschatological Visions of the Religions |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
CC-25A
New Program Unit
Calvin Mercer, East Carolina University, Presiding
Theme: Radical Life Extension: Implications for Eschatological Visions of the Religions
Panelists:
Aubrey de Grey, Methuselah Foundation
Shawn Arthur, Appalachian State University
Ronald S. Cole-Turner, Pittsburgh Theological Seminary
Derek Maher, East Carolina University
Terence L. Nichols, University of St. Thomas
Arvind Sharma, McGill University
Brent Waters, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary
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Abstract
Religious Implications of Extreme Longevity Wildcard
Theme: Radical Life Extension: Implications for Eschatological Visions of the Religions
Advances in medical sciences raise the possibility that biomedical technology could indefinitely extend healthy human life. The most optimistic predictions envision significant breakthroughs within two or three decades. If the science of “arrested aging” or “practical immortality,” sometimes referred to with the more technical and operational term “engineered negligible senescence,” were realized, it could have implications more radical than any other development in human history. Calls for dialogue and debate about the implications for society of extreme longevity -- the indefinite extension of healthy human life -- are being heard from several quarters (e.g., President’s Council on Bioethics, Hastings Center, leading scientists). The panel will open with a summary presentation by a scientist who is conversant with current scientific research. A panel of experts, from various religious traditions, will examine how the eschatological visions of religions might be impacted by the development and widespread use of radical life-extension technology.
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A17-204
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Arts, Literature, and Religion Section |
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Theme: Images and Narratives of Violence |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
MM-Torrey 3
Jonathan Ebel, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, Presiding
Theme: Images and Narratives of Violence
S. T. Campagna-Pinto, California State University, Bakersfield
Veiled Perception: Religion and Violence in Photographic Images from the Revolutionary Association of Women of Afghanistan
Kathryn Reklis, Yale University
"Torture Education" and the Imagination of Redemption: Suffering Heroism in 24
J. Cayenne Claassen-Luttner, Emory University
Pure and Violated Female Bodies: Martyrdom Images, Pornography, and Imitation
Alexei Khamin, Drew University
Ignatius of Antioch: A Postcolonial Reading
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Abstract
Arts, Literature, and Religion Section
Theme: Images and Narratives of Violence
The Arts, Literature, and Religion Section’s session on "Images and Narratives of Violence" analyzes the relationship between representations of violence and religious beliefs and practices. Discussing images ranging from photographs from the Revolutionary Association of Women in Afghanistan to the television show 24, and representations of martyrdom, crucifixion, and torture in genres ranging from accounts of the saints to pornography, presenters think about the complex ways in which humans represent and respond to images of suffering bodies and violence, and how religion shapes our viewing and responses to such images.
Veiled Perception: Religion and Violence in Photographic Images from the Revolutionary Association of Women of Afghanistan
S. T. Campagna-Pinto, California State University, Bakersfield
The RAWA photo exhibit “Under the Veil” presents documentation of the violence and oppression experienced by the women and men of Afghanistan under siege from Islamic Fundamentalists and American military saviors. The subjects of these photographs are real persons suffering torture and death; the enormity of their dignity and value go far beyond the documentation of their suffering. These real human persons cannot be aware of the interpretive gyrations of an audience reposing in the comfort of reflection. Thus the relationship of revelation to images of violence displays the veiled perception that works to obscure rather than reveal engagement with the oppressed. Photography as representation of human suffering thus gives knowledge but fails to create acknowledgement of "the neighbor with an unconscious." The religious dimensions of these photographs thus rests in their creation and not in their viewing, in their critique of those who gaze.
"Torture Education" and the Imagination of Redemption: Suffering Heroism in 24
Kathryn Reklis, Yale University
Once a week over 10 million Americans watch Jack Bauer, the hero of the Fox television show 24, lead a disturbing trend in post-9/11 television: the use of torture as a terrorist-fighting device. Amnesty International's Alistair Hodgett claims that 24 provides "torture education" to an otherwise naive audience. I want to suggest that the education provided can be understood, in theological terms, as opening a fantastic space where the horror of torture is not only tolerated, but even desired as a site of redemption through the creation of Jack as a suffering hero. Jack's redemptive suffering, however, stems from his ability to inflict pain on others, and only secondarily from his ability to suffer it himself. A theological tradition that has at its heart a crucified savior is poised both to reveal the account of redemption found in the suffering body of a torturer, and also to challenge it.
Pure and Violated Female Bodies: Martyrdom Images, Pornography, and Imitation
J. Cayenne Claassen-Luttner, Emory University
Since the earliest accounts of the Acta Martyrum, images and narratives of Roman Catholic martyrs have often had an erotic component. This pattern has continued through the twentieth century, becoming radically apparent in the martyrdom narratives of Saint Maria Goretti, who was canonized in 1950. In this paper I contrast several Catholic representations of sexual violence as martyrdom: authoritative narratives of Saint Maria Goretti, pietistic images of Goretti, the role of pornography in narratives about Goretti’s sexual assault, and Sue Coe’s 1984 collage entitled “Wisconsin Rape.” My paper points out the overlapping relationship between representations that enact dehumanization (and are thought to morally disable the viewer), and those holy representations that are meant to inspire empathetic identification and faithful imitation.
Ignatius of Antioch: A Postcolonial Reading
Alexei Khamin, Drew University
Postcolonial inquiry provides additional layers of insight into the letters of Ignatius of Antioch, a second century Christian martyr. Ignatius, who is eager to die in Rome, recognizes it as the universal center of colonial power, but in his letters he attempts to de-center and interrogate this power. Ignatius’s presentation of his journey as a triumphant procession is a case of colonial mimicry and even mockery. Ignatius uses his authority of a martyr-to-be to construct the novel Christian identity, Christianismos via separation from and opposition to what Ignatius calls Ioudaismos, Jewishness, which is a fluid identity in this period. This strategy involves the construction of the Other as a source of one’s identity, which is defined in opposition to the Other. Yet this strategy is a source of ambivalence, instability and fear of adulteration because the new identity, Christianismos, finds its being in the gaze of the Other.
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A17-205
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Buddhism Section |
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Theme: Chinese Scholarship on the Dunhuang Manuscripts: New Perspectives on Buddhism |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
MM-Torrance
Stephen F. Teiser, Princeton University, Presiding
Theme: Chinese Scholarship on the Dunhuang Manuscripts: New Perspectives on Buddhism
Panelists:
Chunwen Hao, Capital Normal University
Victor Mair, University of Pennsylvania
Xin Yu, Fudan University
Responding:
Paul Copp, University of Chicago
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Abstract
Buddhism Section
Theme: Chinese Scholarship on the Dunhuang Manuscripts: New Perspectives on Buddhism
The cache of more than 40,000 manuscripts discovered near Dunhuang (Gansu province, northwestern China) in the early 1900s casts new light on the complex religious life of a large Buddhist community on the Silk Road that flourished between 400 and 1000 C.E. Despite a century of study, the Dunhuang corpus remains under-studied, even by specialists in Chinese Buddhism. Since 1980, a new generation of scholars in China has pushed the field in new directions. This panel takes the Dunhuang region as an example of one particular Buddhist cultural formation in the medieval period, asking what it can tell us about the study of Buddhism elsewhere. Specific topics include Buddhist congregations of laypeople organized by local monks acting as priests, concepts of morality and karmic retribution that filtered into secular poetry written in the vernacular language, and the intermixing of Buddhist deities and gods deriving from the local pantheon.
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A17-206
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Christian Systematic Theology Section |
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Theme: Cross Examinations: Interrogating the Cross and Atonement for Their Meaning Today |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
MM-Coronado
Kathlyn A. Breazeale, Pacific Lutheran University, Presiding
Theme: Cross Examinations: Interrogating the Cross and Atonement for Their Meaning Today
Panelists:
S. Mark Heim, Andover Newton Theological School
Joanne Marie Terrell, Chicago Theological Seminary
J. Denny Weaver, Bluffton University
Cynthia Moe-Lobeda, Seattle University
Rita Nakashima Brock, Faith Voices for the Common Good
Responding:
Marit Trelstad, Pacific Lutheran University
Business Meeting:
Cynthia Rigby, Austin Theological Seminary, Presiding
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Abstract
Christian Systematic Theology Section
Theme: Cross Examinations: Interrogating the Cross and Atonement for Their Meaning Today
Based on the volume Cross Examinations: Readings on the Meaning of the Cross Today (Fortress, 2006), this panel presents theologians whose recently published books have helped define the conversation concerning atonement and redemption as they have addressed the role of the cross in racial and gender oppression, in human or environmental experiences of suffering, and lastly, as tool of imperialism, violence and peace. In the past thirty years, the cross has been both heralded and critiqued by Christian theologians. Critics claim that the cross reinforces victim passivity and violent oppression. Other theologians claim that a theology of the cross is crucial because it encourages one to know reality through suffering and respond to the world compassionately. The panel includes both perspectives and considers atonement theories and the cross as symbol. All in all, this conversation signals emerging models of atonement and reveals common assumptions that inform current “cross examination.”
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A17-207
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Ethics Section |
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Theme: Innovative Methods in Religious Ethics: Social Scientific Perspectives |
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Show Session Details |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
MM-Solana
Ronald Green, Dartmouth College, Presiding
Theme: Innovative Methods in Religious Ethics: Social Scientific Perspectives
Ulla Schmidt, Centre for Church Research
Understanding “Religious Ethics”: A Case-Study of the Relevance of Social Scientific Perspectives to Religious Ethics
John Senior, Emory University
What to Do with Practice? Interpreting Ethnographic Data in Constructive Theological Ethics
Kerry Danner-McDonald, Graduate Theological Union
How Cognitive Linguistics Supports a Virtue Method
John Teehan, Hofstra University
Religious Ethics: An Evolutionary Analysis
Business Meeting:
Jane Hicks, Colgate Rochester Crozier Divinity School, Presiding
Miguel A. De La Torre, Iliff School of Theology, Presiding
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Abstract
Ethics Section
Theme: Innovative Methods in Religious Ethics: Social Scientific Perspectives
Understanding “Religious Ethics”: A Case-Study of the Relevance of Social Scientific Perspectives to Religious Ethics
Ulla Schmidt, Centre for Church Research
This paper uses an empirical, social scientific study of moral communication among informants identifying with a protestant, Lutheran context as a case for discussing the relevance of social scientific perspectives to religious ethics. It claims that not only morality, but also (religious) ethics can be viewed as a practice and therefore meaningfully subjected to social scientific studies, and that the results of such studies might inform theoretical accounts of religious ethics. This is exemplified by showing how informants engage their religious tradition in ways that resonate with a question prominent in current debate: how to understand the notion and phenomenon of “religious ethics” (exemplified in W. Schweiker’s and S. Hauerwas’s / Wells’ introductions to Blackwell companions on religious respectively Christian ethics). This example is used as a basis for a general discussion of possible connections between social scientific insights into ethics as a practice, and theoretical approaches to ethics.
What to Do with Practice? Interpreting Ethnographic Data in Constructive Theological Ethics
John Senior, Emory University
There is growing interest in the use of ethnographic research methods as an approach to constructive religious ethics. But there hasn’t been much sustained reflection on what work different empirical models actually do (or don’t do) for the constructive theological ethicist. I offer an example of an incarnational theological framework informed by three sociological approaches to religious experience. My first section is a critical one in which I respond to the influence of the virtue ethics of Alasdair MacIntyre on constructive practical theology. In the second section, I begin on the level of human experience, drawing on Michael Jackson’s existential anthropology. In the third section, I move to the level of culture and social institution, looking to Ann Swidler and Pierre Bourdieu. In conclusion, I move back into a theological framework which juxtaposes these moments as necessary for thinking about the incarnational presence of God in the world.
How Cognitive Linguistics Supports a Virtue Method
Kerry Danner-McDonald, Graduate Theological Union
Jesus rarely provided clear-cut answers to moral issues. Rather, he told stories and parables that were insightful to the degree the listener examined/engaged their personal and cultural inferences and images. Findings from cognitive linguistics provide a way to cull out the patterns embedded in Scripture, our various cultures, and individual discourse. This paper brings these insights to bear on a virtue ethics approach. Framing, conceptual metaphors systems, prototype effects of categorization, and conceptual blending help decipher the complex interaction of patterns of Scripture, individuals, and culture(s) that shape moral vision, character and give substance to virtues. An analysis of the story of the Good Samaritan, informed by cognitive linguistics, demonstrates various ways one story may be personally appropriated. Looking at how these patterns interact fosters moral growth and points toward increased dialogues with cognitive scientists and social scientists.
Religious Ethics: An Evolutionary Analysis
John Teehan, Hofstra University
The thesis of this presentation is that religious ethical traditions can be understood as cultural expressions of underlying evolutionary processes. It begins with a discussion of elements of evolutionary accounts of morality, specifically kin selection, reciprocal altruism and commitment theory, and then discusses some recent work on the evolution of religion, setting out those features of religion that prepare it to take on a moral function in society. In order to support this thesis the theoretical framework will be used to analyze the Decalogue as a cultural expression of an evolved moral psychology— focusing on the prohibitions against murder and adultery. Suggestions will be made as to how this framework may be applied to Christianity and its implications for understanding religious violence.
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A17-208
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History of Christianity Section |
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Theme: Contested Texts and Contexts: Exegesis in the History of Christianity |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
MM-Carlsbad
Teresa M. Shaw, Claremont Graduate University, Presiding
Theme: Contested Texts and Contexts: Exegesis in the History of Christianity
Russell C. Kleckley, Augsburg College
Following the Star: Matthew 2 as Guiding Light in Early Modern Theology and Natural Philosophy
Franklin Harkins, Valparaiso University
Inscribing Supersessionism into the Scriptural Text: Esau and Jacob in the Glossa Ordinaria
Ariel Bybee Laughton, Duke University
Avoiding the Bridegroom: Negotiating Masculinity in Ambrose of Milan's De Isaac vel Anima
Cameron Partridge, Harvard University
Teleios Anthropos and “No Male and Female”: The Exegesis of Galatians 3:28 in Maximus the Confessor
Jeffrey W. Barbeau, Oral Roberts University
Thoughts “Too Refined to be Popular”: Sara Coleridge, Biblical Exegesis, and Theological Method
Business Meeting:
Teresa M. Shaw, Claremont Graduate University, Presiding
Nathan Baruch Rein, Ursinus College, Presiding
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Abstract
History of Christianity Section
Theme: Contested Texts and Contexts: Exegesis in the History of Christianity
Following the Star: Matthew 2 as Guiding Light in Early Modern Theology and Natural Philosophy
Russell C. Kleckley, Augsburg College
Early modern theologians and natural philosophers alike looked to the star of Bethlehem of Matthew 2 as a sign of God’s action in the past and as a precedent for continuing divine communication through the “book of nature.” While existing knowledge of nature informed interpretations of the text, the text also shaped assumptions about the order of nature and its relationship to God and humanity. Theologians such as David Chytraeus and Matthias Hafenreffer, along with mathematicians and astronomers such as Tycho Brahe and Johannes Kepler, used the star as a point of reference in their own understanding of the theological and natural significance of the cosmos. Their perspectives anticipated the emerging worldview of the modern period while illuminating the thinking and faith of their own time.
Inscribing Supersessionism into the Scriptural Text: Esau and Jacob in the Glossa Ordinaria
Franklin Harkins, Valparaiso University
From the early twelfth through the sixteenth century, the Glossa Ordinaria was the definitive reference edition of the Bible used in the schools and universities throughout Western Europe. Surely because the Glossa Ordinaria is largely a compilation of patristic and early medieval interpretations, scholars of medieval exegesis have paid relatively little attention to the hermeneutics of the Glossa. The proposed paper aims to begin to fill this scholarly lacuna by investigating the exegetical practice revealed in the glosses on Esau and Jacob (Gen. 25 and 27, and Rom. 9). We will argue that the glossators or editors of the Glossa on Genesis and Romans, by adopting and adapting patristic and early medieval commentaries, not only read Esau and Jacob allegorically as the Jewish people and the church, respectively, but in so doing also inscribed supersessionism into the very text of Scripture.
Avoiding the Bridegroom: Negotiating Masculinity in Ambrose of Milan's De Isaac vel Anima
Ariel Bybee Laughton, Duke University
Following Marcia Colish’s assertion that Ambrose of Milan’s treatises on the patriarchs functioned to instruct baptismal candidates in appropriate social behaviors, this paper argues that they also served to reinforce proper Greco-Roman conceptions of masculinity among catechumens as they prepared to become part of the church at Milan. This is manifest most clearly in On Isaac or the Soul where Rebecca becomes a dominant figure in Ambrose’s allegorical exposition of the soul’s moral progress toward unity with Christ. Ambrose heavily draws upon imagery from the Song of Songs to compensate for the lack of detail concerning the life of Isaac in the Genesis account, but preserves Isaac from emasculating bridal language by employing Rebecca as a type for the soul in passages where the soul must act passively toward the Bridegroom. Thus Ambrose is able to preserve Isaac as an exemplar of Roman virtue and masculinity for his audience.
Teleios Anthropos and “No Male and Female”: The Exegesis of Galatians 3:28 in Maximus the Confessor
Cameron Partridge, Harvard University
In this paper I argue that the seventh century C.E. Byzantine theologian Maximus the Confessor’s exegesis of Galatians 3:28 takes up the early Christian topos of "becoming male." He elaborates this process by arguing that the human person "shakes out of nature in every way the distinctive, natural properties of male and female" (Ambiguum 41). To Maximus, however, this state of "no male and female" does not equal the end result of "becoming male," however. Rather, it unfolds a process explicitly of "becoming human." This humanizing process is the first step in a fulfilling the unique human vocation of unifying the entire cosmos. Ultimately, although this abolition of sexual difference appears to trouble Maximus’ characteristically integrative, unity-with-distinctions methodology, the Confessor’s vision of the human person as a “laboratory” and “bond” of the entire created whole carries forward this vision in a consistent manner.
Thoughts “Too Refined to be Popular”: Sara Coleridge, Biblical Exegesis, and Theological Method
Jeffrey W. Barbeau, Oral Roberts University
Sara Coleridge (1802–1852) remains almost wholly unknown in studies of modern Christian history and theology. Overshadowed by her famous father S. T. Coleridge, titanic figures of the age such as John Henry Newman, and prominent friends whose published writings set the tone of Victorian theology (including F. D. Maurice), Sara Coleridge concealed her reflections on the Bible and the Christian faith by limiting her productions to brief notes and long appendixes to editions of her father’s works in the 1840s. In this paper, I recover Sara Coleridge’s unique work on the Bible. Sara develops a critique of historic conceptions of biblical authority and explores a full account of the nature of redemption through careful exegesis of the Apostle Paul. Sara Coleridge’s private correspondence, defense of her father’s writings on the Bible, and extended treatise On Rationalism reveal her distinct contribution to the history of biblical interpretation.
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A17-209
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Study of Islam Section |
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Theme: Women's Religious Authority, Islam, and Agency |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
GH-Manchester B
Dorothea Kahena Viale, Claremont Graduate University, Presiding
Theme: Women's Religious Authority, Islam, and Agency
Zahra Ayubi, Atlanta, GA
“Of All the Lawful Acts the Most Detestable to Allah Is Divorce”: American Muslim Women Challenging Traditional Views and Reinterpreting Islamic Divorce
Bahar Davary, University of San Diego
A Twentieth-Century Shi’a Mujtahida: Images and Self Images
Jamillah Karim, Spelman College
American Muslim Youth Networks: Negotiating Sisterhood, Gender, and Generation
Sara Omar, Harvard University
Al-Qubaysiyyat: A Female Religious Authority in Damascus
Joni Podschun, Wesley Theological Seminary
Diverse Sisterhood: Ethnographic Research with Muslim Women in Central Arkansas
Responding:
Juliane Hammer, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
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Abstract
Study of Islam Section
Theme: Women's Religious Authority, Islam, and Agency
Common impressions of Islam include assumptions of patriarchal domination in many domains of Islamic discourses, particularly those of law and theology. In this panel, the speakers present multiples sites of contestation in which Muslim women, some scholars and some lay, are asserting their own agency to contest interpretations of Islam through authoritative discourses of their own.
“Of All the Lawful Acts the Most Detestable to Allah Is Divorce”: American Muslim Women Challenging Traditional Views and Reinterpreting Islamic Divorce
Zahra Ayubi, Atlanta, GA
Drawing on my field interviews with divorced American Muslim women, I discuss a range of experiences that reveal ways Muslim women in the US incorporate Islamic law into their lives and negotiate legal, religious, and social aspects of their divorces. In the absence of Islamic courts in the US, some immigrants tightly hold onto family law, marriage and divorce practices of their home countries, while others, including many mainstream Muslim leaders, consult traditional fiqh to determine the permissibility of divorce and Islamic divorce terms. In doing so, imams, community elders, and sometimes people from women’s social circles discourage or prevent female initiated divorce, while implicitly supporting men’s unrestricted ability to pronounce talaq. Driven by belief in gender justice in Islam and having access to Islamic legal debates and egalitarian interpretations of scripture, some women re-define Islamic divorce for themselves and challenge traditional, patriarchal practices.
A Twentieth-Century Shi’a Mujtahida: Images and Self Images
Bahar Davary, University of San Diego
It is often cited that women have had little share in developing the textual tradition of Islam, that their voices have been marginalized, and that if women were interpreting the law, things would have been different. These assertions raise some questions: How would things be different if women were to interpret the law? Would their interpretations be radically different? A twentieth century Shi’a woman, known as Banoo Amin composed a fifteen-volume commentary on the Qur’an. Her expertise in fiqh and usul earned her the title Mujtaheda, the only one known in the recent history of Ja’fari law. How is her commentary different than that of her male counterparts? To what extent is her representation of Shi’a woman affected by the views of male commentators? Does this have any bearings on Shi’a women’s assessment of their own self-worth and role within the private and public domains?
American Muslim Youth Networks: Negotiating Sisterhood, Gender, and Generation
Jamillah Karim, Spelman College
In this paper I portray the experiences and voices of African American and South Asian Muslim women college students. The ideal of Islamic sisterhood creates a space for these young women to cross ethnic boundaries; but it means navigating gender expectations and parents’ expectations. On college campuses, Muslim women are often exposed to a range of possibilities for interethnic friendship and marriage. Exposed to these possibilities more than their parents, young Muslims rethink and challenge many of their parents’ expectations at the same time that they accommodate some of their expectations. As Muslim women form interethnic friendships, they also encounter different gender norms. Different gender norms between cultures sometimes challenge cross-ethnic friendships or relationships; other times, they function as the space for interethnic exchange.
Al-Qubaysiyyat: A Female Religious Authority in Damascus
Sara Omar, Harvard University
The continued ascendance of Islamic revivalist groups throughout the Muslim world poses two important research questions: How do these new groups establish their religious authority when founding their groups? And, do they claim exclusive adherence to medieval Islamic thought, reinterpret canon, or exercise a mixture of these two approaches as a means of gaining such authority? This study will apply these questions to one of the most influential revivalist groups in Syria, known as al-Qubaysiyyat. Based in Damascus, the group is exclusive to women, and attracts a transient student body from throughout the world. While their subject of study and outward appearance may appear to conform to a highly taqlid-oriented approach, they are also highly unusual within the context of traditional Islamic revivalist groups. As an entirely female group, they escape traditional understandings of gendered authority and are consequently able to organize themselves in novel and innovative ways.
Diverse Sisterhood: Ethnographic Research with Muslim Women in Central Arkansas
Joni Podschun, Wesley Theological Seminary
Drawing on anthropology and feminist theory, I add ethnographic detail to the study of women in Islam by focusing on the participants of an English-speaking halaca (or Sisters' Circle) in a Little Rock mosque. The halaca provides a shared space for the study and practice of Islam for a diverse group of women. Despite the similarities they share as practicing Muslims, the women's choices and beliefs about appropriate dress, marital relationships, women in the labor force, parenting, other religions, and American culture differ dramatically. The juxtapose profiles of two sisters demonstrate the diversity of faith within the halaca and the Little Rock Muslim community as a whole. Secondly, I elucidate the ideology and hermeneutic of the halaca. My research demonstrates that the women's activities and views, though diverse, serve as an example of their agency as they reevaluate their practices, Qur'anic reading, and learning within the framework of patriarchal Islam.
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A17-210
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Augustine and Augustinianisms Group |
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Theme: Augustine and Psychology |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
MM-Point Loma
Kim Paffenroth, Iona College, Presiding
Theme: Augustine and Psychology
Rachel Sophia Baard, Villanova University
Ubuntu and Augustine's Understanding of the Self: A Comparative Exploration
Nathan Hieb, Princeton Theological Seminary
The Great Physician: Augustine’s Soteriology in Dialogue with Modern Psychology
John Penniman, Emory University
Pilgrims in the Valley of Weeping: Augustine and the Function of Sorrow in the Life of Faith
Howard B. Rhodes, University of Iowa
Augustinian Moral Psychology and the Purposes of Law: A Reading of Augustine's De Trinitate
Business Meeting:
Robert P. Kennedy, St. Francis Xavier University, Presiding
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Abstract
Augustine and Augustinianisms Group
Theme: Augustine and Psychology
Ubuntu and Augustine's Understanding of the Self: A Comparative Exploration
Rachel Sophia Baard, Villanova University
The purpose of this paper is to point to similarities between Augustine’s perspectives on the self and the African concept of ubuntu. Interpretations of Augustine’s view of the self in terms of the individual’s “inward journey” fail to notice the fact that, imbedded especially in his view of the moral agent in the doctrine of original sin, there is a view of the self that is strikingly similar to African views of the imbedded and relational self. This self exists in solidarity with other living humans in their separation from the divine, and is tied to an ancestral heritage that goes back to our common human origins. Such a view of the self calls the faithful to a deeper responsibility than is possible in individualistic moralism: within such a moral vision, it is not possible to live life without reference to others.
The Great Physician: Augustine’s Soteriology in Dialogue with Modern Psychology
Nathan Hieb, Princeton Theological Seminary
Augustine’s soteriology employs two models that display convergence with the contemporary psychological fields of object relations theory and trauma theory. Through a deepened understanding of the relation of these conceptual frameworks, the resources possessed by theology for interdisciplinary dialogue may be demonstrated. First, Augustine speaks of the healing of our inner wound of pride through the incarnation of Jesus Christ. Second, Augustine describes our healing as the lifelong journey of ascent towards God culminating in the visio Dei and the perfection of our internal imago Dei. Patterns of convergence emerge between Augustine’s thought and psychology based upon similar dialectical movements regarding the interiority and exteriority of the healing process of the self. This paper argues that Augustine’s first soteriological image shares such a pattern with object relations theory and that the second does so with trauma theory.
Pilgrims in the Valley of Weeping: Augustine and the Function of Sorrow in the Life of Faith
John Penniman, Emory University
The function of grief in Augustine’s theology has garnered increasing attention recently. Much of this scholarship looks almost exclusively to the Confessions. While the Confessions may represent a first word on the subject of sorrow, it is certainly not the last. This paper suggests that Augustine’s most poignant words on Christian sorrow may be found within his sermons on the “Psalms of Ascent.” In dialogue with the previous scholarship, we will examine how grief – particularly a threefold grief rooted in the inevitability of death, the persistence of sin, and the obscured vision of the life of faith – emerges in Augustine’s Expositions of the Psalms as an essential disposition of the Christian life. Ultimately we will consider how Augustine not only allows for sorrow within the life of faith, but baptizes it as the affection which most fully embodies Christian growth in eschatological hope.
Augustinian Moral Psychology and the Purposes of Law: A Reading of Augustine's De Trinitate
Howard B. Rhodes, University of Iowa
Augustine’s conception of moral psychology is often interpreted in such a way that it reserves no role for public law to aid in the proper formation of the self. This judgment is well-supported by passages from Augustine’s City of God and other works. However, this paper will argue that recent studies of the masterful work of Augustine’s maturity, De Trinitate, point toward an appreciation of the “public dimensions” of Augustinian selfhood in a way that invites new considerations of the pedagogical purposes of public law. Can the directives of public law make a valuable contribution to the reformation of the self as the imago dei? Focusing on De Trinitate, this paper will offer a revised Augustinian account of the place of law in the journey of the self from deficiency and deformity to perfection. The argument addresses debates over Augustinian moral psychology, liberalism, and religious coercion.
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A17-211
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Buddhist Critical-Constructive Reflection Group |
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Theme: Methods for the Study of Women and Buddhism |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
CC-23A
Frances Garrett, University of Toronto, Presiding
Theme: Methods for the Study of Women and Buddhism
Danielle Lefebvre, University of Toronto
In and Out of Feminism: Defining the Terms for the North American Study of Women in Buddhism
Alice Collett, York St. John University
Contextual, Rhetorical, and Unbecoming Hermeneutics: Interpretive Strategies in the Study of Women in Buddhist Literature
Sarah Jacoby, Columbia University
Reading Tibetan Women’s Religious Auto/biography: Reflections on Methodology
Karma Lekshe Tsomo, University of San Diego
Ethnology and Activism: Reassessing Methodologies for the Study of Women and Buddhism
Responding:
Janet Gyatso, Harvard University
Business Meeting:
John J. Makransky, Boston College, Presiding
Roger Jackson, Carleton College, Presiding
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Abstract
Buddhist Critical-Constructive Reflection Group
Theme: Methods for the Study of Women and Buddhism
This panel consists of four papers presenting new research on methods for the study of women and Buddhism, offering a timely critical analysis of changing methods in this fluid and relatively new field. The presentations address feminist influences on methods for the study of women in Buddhism in North America, hermeneutical strategies that have been or could be utilized in an assessment of Buddhist texts concerned with women, the use of biographical and autobiographical sources as a bridge between doctrinal and ethnographic research methodologies, and the combination of classical approaches to ethnography and phenomenology with Buddhist typologies and social activism. The panel will conclude with a response from one of the major figures in this field, an author whose own work will have been discussed in several of the papers.
In and Out of Feminism: Defining the Terms for the North American Study of Women in Buddhism
Danielle Lefebvre, University of Toronto
Is the study of women in Buddhism necessarily a feminist one? Are there methodological tools and theoretical perspectives that, while rooted in specific feminist discourses, now occupy positions outside of explicit feminist projects? In this paper I will trace feminist influences on the developing methods for the study of women in Buddhism in North America. Reflecting on this relationship, I will draw attention to an often assumed connection between feminism and the study of women in Buddhism and suggest that explicit ties to feminist discourses, while frequently found in earlier contributions to the field, are becoming more problematic.
Contextual, Rhetorical, and Unbecoming Hermeneutics: Interpretive Strategies in the Study of Women in Buddhist Literature
Alice Collett, York St. John University
In this paper I will look briefly at eight hermeneutical strategies which have been, are or could be utilized in our assessment of Buddhist texts concerned with women. The eight strategies are: a hermeneutics of resonance; a hermeneutics of affection/devotion; a hermeneutics of value; (the denial of) a hermeneutics of agency; a hermeneutics of suspicion; comparativist hermeneutics; synchronic and diachronic hermeneutics and revisionist hermeneutics. I will structure my exploration of these interpretive strategies around a fourfold classification of: those that have been utilized in the past but are problematic; those that have been utilized in the past and are problematic but have sound underlying presuppositions that could easily be transmuted into something more thoroughly useful; those that have been used successfully in the past; and, lastly, those not yet utilized – i.e. new strategies.
Reading Tibetan Women’s Religious Auto/biography: Reflections on Methodology
Sarah Jacoby, Columbia University
This paper seeks to evaluate the ways in which biographies written by and about Tibetan Buddhist women have been and should be read as resources contributing to understanding the status of women in Tibetan Buddhism. I suggest that analysis of biographical and autobiographical sources can serve as a bridge between doctrinal and ethnographic research methodologies that have tended to hypostasize the scriptural ideal and often disappointing reality of Tibetan women’s religious opportunities. My analysis of methodological approaches to the study of women in Tibetan Buddhism through the lens of auto/biographical writing draws on insights gained from interdisciplinary studies on hagiography and autobiography. In particular, the paper will focus on the Treasure revealer Sera Khandro’s (1892-1940) previously overlooked autobiography as well as the current interest in publishing women’s biographies in Tibetan areas.
Ethnology and Activism: Reassessing Methodologies for the Study of Women and Buddhism
Karma Lekshe Tsomo, University of San Diego
Research methodologies developed in the fields of anthropology and sociology are frequently applied to the study of women in religion, with little input from scholars of women in religion. Recognizing the limitations of uncritically applying categories across cultures suggests that other ways of interpreting data may be equally valuable for understanding Buddhist women’s lives and religious experience; for example, methodologies and theoretical categories derived from Buddhist thought and the lives of actual Buddhist women. In this paper, I will explore new possible directions for the study of women in Buddhism and argue that, rather than imposing theoretical structures derived from cultures and eras, categories useful for an understanding of Buddhist women today may emerge on their own. To this end, I will consider a range of theoretical and empirical research methods, as well as the possibility of combining classical approaches to ethnography and phenomenology with Buddhist typologies and social activism.
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A17-212
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Confucian Traditions Group |
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Theme: The Power of “Religion” in China |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
GH-Edward D
Mark Halperin, University of California, Davis, Presiding
Theme: The Power of “Religion” in China
T. J. Hinrichs, Cornell University
Northern Song (960-1126 CE) Policies to Transform Southern Peoples
Sarah Schneewind, University of California, San Diego
The Religious Vocabulary of Local Honors for Ming Magistrates
Ya-pei Kuo, Tufts University
Before the Term: Confucianism, "Religion," and Redefinition of Orthodoxy, 1890-1911
Rebecca Nedostup, Boston College
Contesting Ritual in the Age of Chinese Mass Politics
Responding:
Robert Campany, University of Southern California
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Abstract
Confucian Traditions Group
Theme: The Power of “Religion” in China
In its most basic sense, “ordering the world” is a shared goal of neo-Confucian officials and bureaucrats of the modern nation-state, even if that goal proceeds from radically different premises. It is therefore not surprising to find across Chinese history a superficial resemblance in state-sponsored projects to categorize and demonize religious “others” in the name of enhancing governmental power and fostering social cohesion. It is the aim of this panel to compare four examples from the Song to the Republic in order to look beyond surface commonalities and discover why, at certain critical moments, political actors rewrite religious categories and ritual actions as a way of creating new power relationships and forming new political identities. By discussing these cases collectively we seek to bridge the putative divide posed by “modernity” and the appearance of the vocabulary of “religion,” while keeping historical context in mind.
Northern Song (960-1126 CE) Policies to Transform Southern Peoples
T. J. Hinrichs, Cornell University
The first century of the Northern Song (960-1126 C.E.) saw the development of concerted official efforts to educate diverse southern peoples and “transform their customs and mores.” Most prominent among these were improper marriage and mourning rituals, and preference for “shamanic” healing over medicine. Local officials and the court sought to bring these into accord with, and in the process demarcate central imperial norms. Besides posting exhortations to the local populace, officials destroyed “demonic” shrines, rounded up and flogged the “shamans” who cared for them, and produced and distributed ritual and medical texts. Officials constructed new operational conceptions of orthopraxy and deviance in family ritual, healing, geography, and, for want of a better term, ethnicity. These policies further reconfigured and extended Confucian strategies of transformative governance and reconstituted elite identity.
The Religious Vocabulary of Local Honors for Ming Magistrates
Sarah Schneewind, University of California, San Diego
In the high Ming (roughly 1470-1550), about a hundred magistrates and prefects, attacked popular religious institutions. Surprisingly, some destroyers, according to both local gazetteers and the official Ming history, were locally honored. Locals wept along the roads when they left; petitioned for their return; sent money to their families decades later; sang ditties praising them; and enshrined them both before and after death. This project explores how local subjects passed judgment on their rulers using shrines, reports of omens and portents, and popular ditties. I will explore whether the relationships these signs suggest between locals and magistrates have political implications within the county and central bureaucracy; but also why specific forms of honor were chosen in specific contexts. How, and at which political levels, were local ritual gestures understood? Even if expressions of popular approval were falsified, Why one kind of shrine, one kind of omen, rather than another? Is there any precision in the ritual grammar of public approval?
Before the Term: Confucianism, "Religion," and Redefinition of Orthodoxy, 1890-1911
Ya-pei Kuo, Tufts University
This paper examines emergence of the modern construction of "religion" in late Qing China (1890-1911). Going beyond the "term question," I argue that the basic characteristics of the construction took shape under the shadow of Christianity, and situate its beginning in the re-encounter between China and the expanding Christian world in the late nineteenth century. Before the term zongjiao, the modern Chinese term for religion, was formally coined at the turn of the twentieth century, the process of construction had started. The story of religion in China is not complete without this prehistory.
Contesting Ritual in the Age of Chinese Mass Politics
Rebecca Nedostup, Boston College
In China, the introduction of “religion” (zongjiao) and “superstition” (mixin) as discrete categories of analysis was attended by the rise of mass politics and the de-legitimation of the imperial system and its cosmological underpinnings. The redefinition of religious practice therefore occurred simultaneously with the redefinition of the polity and the political roles of both persons and rituals. Such transitions were difficult, however, as manifested in the linked efforts of the Nationalist Party during the 1920s and 1930s to eradicate “superstitious” rites such as the spring and autumn sacrifices to Confucius and install in their stead secularized ceremonies honoring the Sage as one of an array of national heroes. Reactions included traditionalist outrage, iconoclast derision, assaults on local officials and a variety of appearances of new national symbols in local ritual repertoires. Together these reveal that new categories of political and religious practice inspired not ritual hegemony but new ritual conversations.
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A17-213
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Ecclesiological Investigations Group |
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Theme: Communion and Otherness: Contemporary Challenges of "Impaired Communion" |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
CC-28D
Michael A. Fahey, Boston College, Presiding
Theme: Communion and Otherness: Contemporary Challenges of "Impaired Communion"
Travis Ables, Vanderbilt University
Other and Not-Other: On the Logic of Western Pneumatology and the Communion Ecclesiology of John Zizioulas
Radu Bordeianu, Duquesne University
Communion Ecclesiology as a Response to Eucharistic Ecclesiology: Zizioulas and Staniloae
Eddy Van der Borght, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Ethnicity and "Impaired Communion": an Evaluation of the Work of Miroslav Volf
Richard Clutterbuck, Edgehill Theological College
The Irish Churches and the Possibilities for Koinonia in the Midst of Otherness
Wendy Dackson, Ripon College
Integrity, Alternative Aggressions, and Impaired Communion
Brian Flanagan, Boston College
Jean-Marie Tillard's Communion Ecclesiology as a Resource for Intradenominational Otherness
Georgia M. Keightley, St. Anselm College
The "Otherness" of the Church's Laity: "Gifts that Differ" or Source of Division?
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Abstract
Ecclesiological Investigations Group
Theme: Communion and Otherness: Contemporary Challenges of "Impaired Communion"
Communion as an ecumenical challenge between churches and an ecclesiological challenge within churches - with a focus on constructive proposals for the present. Papers are also included which critically assess recently published studies such as Zizioulas’ Communion and Otherness.
Other and Not-Other: On the Logic of Western Pneumatology and the Communion Ecclesiology of John Zizioulas
Travis Ables, Vanderbilt University
This paper will offer a critical evaluation of the communion theology of John Zizioulas. Taking Zizioulas’ main claim to be that the distinctive contribution of Orthodoxy theology to ecclesiology is that of a communion ecclesiology grounded in an ontology of person-in-relation, as based upon Cappadocian trinitarian personalism, I will seek to respond to Zizioulas’ thought with pneumatology as the guiding thread to this complex of ideas. Countering his claim that Augustinianism is to blame for Western individualism and ecclesial fracturing, I will argue that the notion of person-in-relation perpetuates the modern problem of individualistic subjectivity and will suggest that Augustinian theology offers precisely the resources for a robust pneumatological anthropology that grounds a vision of church as communion. Contra Zizioulas’ claim that the Western self forecloses the possibility of a robust pneumatological ecclesiology, I will argue instead that it is in fact its condition of possibility.
Communion Ecclesiology as a Response to Eucharistic Ecclesiology: Zizioulas and Staniloae
Radu Bordeianu, Duquesne University
In his eucharistic ecclesiology, Afanassieff contends that the local eucharistic assembly is fully autonomous and represents the Church in its fullness. Both Catholic and Orthodox churches celebrate the same Eucharist—a sign of their already-existing unity despite canonical disunity—and therefore Afanassieff suggests the practice of intercommunion. In response, Zizioulas’ communion ecclesiology criticizes intercommunion and maintains the inseparability among Eucharist, communion among bishops, and unity of teaching, emphasizing especially the role of the bishop. In Communion and Otherness, Zizioulas attempts to further Afanassieff’s work. Also in response to eucharistic ecclesiology, Staniloae argues that the Orthodox and Catholic churches, although both having a valid Eucharist, cannot have eucharistic communion because they do not share in the same faith, especially concerning papal primacy. He concentrates on achieving doctrinal unity through open sobornicity, a task of the ordained and non-ordained alike. I conclude by analyzing the strengths and weaknesses in Afanassieff, Zizioulas, and Staniloae.
Ethnicity and "Impaired Communion": an Evaluation of the Work of Miroslav Volf
Eddy Van der Borght, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
As a contribution to the study of ethnic factors in impaired communities, I offer to present a paper in two parts. The first part will provide an overview of traditional Protestant and ecumenical approaches to ethnicity as a marker for church identity. The second part of the paper will evaluate whether the Protestant theologian with Croatian roots, Miroslav Volf, offers new perspectives about this issue in his publications that deal with the problem of ethnicity and church identity — Exclusion and Embrace: A Theological Exploration of Identity, Otherness, and Reconciliation (1996), Trinität und Gemeinschaft: eine ökumenische Ecclesiologie (1996), and, recently, The End of Memory: Remembering Rightly in a Violent Word (2006)—or whether it is merely a repetition of the traditional Protestant stance on this issue.
The Irish Churches and the Possibilities for Koinonia in the Midst of Otherness
Richard Clutterbuck, Edgehill Theological College
The social context of Irish Churches makes koinonia particularly elusive. This paper will address this challenge in four steps: first, by describing the ecclesiology of the main Irish Churches, secondly, by critiquing the Eucharistic theology and practice that hinders rather than facilitates a move to closer communion, and third by employing a Eucharistic theology of "mediated otherness" to re-envision the link between Eucharist and koinonia. The fourth and final step will be to identify signs of growing communion in some recent developments in Ireland and to propose theological and practical resources to enable churches in Ireland to make the Eucharist a fuller witness to Koinonia.
Integrity, Alternative Aggressions, and Impaired Communion
Wendy Dackson, Ripon College
First and foremost, this is not a paper about sexuality. The paper is a discourse analysis of what it means to be in or out of communion with churches of the same theological tradition, focusing on recent and current concerns in the Anglican Communion. Discourses examined will be the 2003 Windsor Report, theories of alternative aggressions, explorations of what it means to have theological integrity, and coping with difference within a single ecclesiastical tradition. The focal post-Windsor event is the January 2007 Primates Meeting in Tanzania. Questions of who/what constitute an ecclesial "communion" will be raised, as well as the "on the ground" implications for actions and decisions taken at the highest and most public levels of a body of Christians claiming to be international but without a centralised focus of authority parallel to that of Roman Catholicism.
Jean-Marie Tillard's Communion Ecclesiology as a Resource for Intradenominational Otherness
Brian Flanagan, Boston College
The argument of this paper is that the use of communion in ecclesiology to negotiate questions of ecumenical diversity and otherness in the twentieth century provides theoretical and practical resources for addressing questions of intradenominational diversity today. First, it summarizes the experience of otherness as divisive within Christian denominations in North America and globally. Secondly, the understanding of communion developed in response to interdenominational ecumenical disunity, primarily as advanced by Jean-Marie Tillard, O.P., serves as a foundation for analyzing and responding to intradenominational diversity and division. Tillard’s “unified theory” of ecclesial communion was a theoretical tool for analyzing ecclesial diversity both ecumenically and within his own Roman Catholic church. The third and final section of the paper follows this trajectory of Tillard’s thought by exploring how the practical skills and institutions developed in the ecumenical movement can be of use in addressing intradenominational otherness.
The "Otherness" of the Church's Laity: "Gifts that Differ" or Source of Division?
Georgia M. Keightley, St. Anselm College
Following the distinction J. Zizioulas makes between “otherness” as a creative difference and “otherness” as a source of division, this paper proposes that since the term “laity” actually functions to divide the church, it can no longer be a useful term for ecclesiology. The argument is made by exploring church documents and practices that confirm that the laity constitute a different class of Catholic and thus “other”. By removing “laity” as a term of reference in ecclesiology, however, creative new approaches to naming/describing ecclesial reality become possible.
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A17-214
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Gay Men's Issues in Religion Group |
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Theme: Virtual Sex, Virtual Identities: New Erotics and Religious Perspectives in the Age of the Internet |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
CC-28E
Donna Berman, Charter Oak Cultural Center, Presiding
Theme: Virtual Sex, Virtual Identities: New Erotics and Religious Perspectives in the Age of the Internet
Panelists:
Paul J. Gorrell, Stockton, NJ
King Mott, Seton Hall University
Peter Savastano, Seton Hall University
Terry Todd, Drew University
Responding:
Mark D. Jordan, Emory University
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Abstract
Gay Men's Issues in Religion Group
Theme: Virtual Sex, Virtual Identities: New Erotics and Religious Perspectives in the Age of the Internet
This panel explores the possibilities created by the internet for shifting notions of sexual identity, sexual practice, religious identity and experience. We will analyze the impact of the internet on identity and practice, both sexual and religious -- unstable and constantly shifting as they may be -- thanks to the emergence of the worldwide web. The internet has had an important impact, at the microcosmic level, on religious and sexual identity. Numerous chat-rooms and web-portals have made it possible for individuals to deconstruct and reconstruct their sexual/gender and religious identities, along with other markers of identity such as age, race, ethnicity, biological sex, profession, and geographical location. As a result, the word "performance" has taken on a new meaning as it pertains to identity. Identity, once seen as being somewhat consistent over time, has now morphed into a temporary inhabitation, a momentary performance dependent upon the context.
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A17-215
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Latina/o Religion, Culture, and Society Group |
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Theme: Teologías en Conjunto: A Fiestaschrift Celebrating the Work of Orlando Espín |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
GH-Madeleine AB
Carmen Marie Nanko-Fernandez, Catholic Theological Union, Presiding
Theme: Teologías en Conjunto: A Fiestaschrift Celebrating the Work of Orlando Espín
Panelists:
Alejandro Garcia-Rivera, Jesuit School of Theology, Berkeley
Daisy L. Machado, Lexington Theological Seminary
Jorge A. Aquino, University of San Francisco
Nestor Medina, University of Toronto
M. Shawn Copeland, Boston College
Robert J. Schreiter, Catholic Theological Union
Maria Clara Lucchetti Bingemer, Pontifícia Universidade Católica, Rio de Janeiro
Responding:
Orlando Espin, University of San Diego
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Abstract
Latina/o Religion, Culture, and Society Group
Theme: Teologías en Conjunto: A Fiestaschrift Celebrating the Work of Orlando Espín
Roberto Goizueta observes that for Latinos/as fiesta functions “as a thanksgiving for having received life.” Fiesta “reflects and expresses a profound sense of the human in relationship to the Sacred.” The provocative, indeed pioneering, work of Orlando Espín frames important challenges for the ongoing agenda of theological and religious studies both within and beyond Latino/a contexts. His attention to the faith of the people, his insights on the development of intercultural and ecumenical theologies, his understanding of the implications and responsibilities of hybridity, his re-imagining of traditioning are among the key contributions he brings forward. This panel will explore the trajectories explicitly articulated by and implicit within the corpus of Espín’s scholarship.
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A17-216
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Mysticism Group |
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Theme: Art and Music in Mysticism |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
CC-24A
Laura Weed, College of Saint Rose, Presiding
Theme: Art and Music in Mysticism
Ann M. Caron, St. Joseph College
Devotion to the Face of Christ and the “Veronica”: Image and Word
Thomas Cattoi, Jesuit School of Theology, Berkeley
Bodies of Perfection: Byzantine Representations of Theosis and Tibetan Visualization Practices
Arianne Conty, University of California, Santa Barbara
The Medieval Icon: Showing the Invisible
Patricia Margaret Alice Davis, Graduate Theological Union
The Mystcal Gift of Songs in Dreams
Business Meeting:
June McDaniel, College of Charleston, Presiding
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Abstract
Mysticism Group
Theme: Art and Music in Mysticism
This session will examine the roles of art and music as media for expression of mystical insights and understandings. Each of the four papers will explore the use of some artistic or musical technique either to induce religious experiences or to attempt to record, communicate or explain them. The first paper discusses devotion to the face of Christ in the spirituality of four women mystics: Mechtild of Hackeborn, Gertrud of Helfta, Julian of Norwich and Therese of Lisieux. The second compares Tibetan and Byzantine visualizations of divinity, through meditation on Tantric Buddhist deities and the use of icons. The third analyses the creation of sacred space in medieval icons through altered perspectives and horizons, and the fourth considers mystical dreams as sources of music and song.
Devotion to the Face of Christ and the “Veronica”: Image and Word
Ann M. Caron, St. Joseph College
This essay will examine devotion to the face of Christ in the spirituality of four women mystics: Mechtild of Hackeborn, Gertrud of Helfta, Julian of Norwich and Therese of Lisieux. The paper has three parts: (1) a brief overview of the history of the Veronica before the thirteenth century, (2) an analysis and discussion of selections from the women's writings and (3) conclusions that highlight changes in interpretation of the image and so in spirituality.
Bodies of Perfection: Byzantine Representations of Theosis and Tibetan Visualization Practices
Thomas Cattoi, Jesuit School of Theology, Berkeley
The purpose of this paper is to highlight the points of contact as well as the differences between the theology of icon veneration as developed by the Christian East and the Tantric tradition of deity visualization as practiced in Tibetan Buddhism. My discussion will begin with an overview of the Antirrheticus and the treatise On the Holy Icons by Theodore the Studite (758-826), a Byzantine thinker who construes the pictorial representation of Christ as an intimation of the eschatological deification of humanity. The Tibetan understanding of deity visualization will then be introduced through the work of Bokar Rinpoche, a contemporary Tibetan master of the Kagyu School known for his Chenrezig: Lord of Love. A joint reading of these two authors will show how analogous, yet distinct theologies of the sacred image reflect and sustain different theologies of the role and purpose of the body in spiritual practice.
The Medieval Icon: Showing the Invisible
Arianne Conty, University of California, Santa Barbara
This article sets out to rehabilitate the medieval icon as a visual paradigm, seeing it not as a primitive attempt at painterly perspective and the verisimilitude it sought to achieve, but as a sophisticated symbolic system with an entirely different intention, one that will be compared to the apophatic nature of certain mystical texts. The "inverse perspective" that typifies the icon creates the impression of a figure actively gazing out of the frame at the viewer, calling him or her to witness an intention that is not depicted on the panel but that haunts it from an invisible dimension beyond. Seeing this intention requires that the witness be able to move by means of contemplation beyond the pigment and egg-yolk of the panel toward the invisible archetype. Finally, I hope to show that this invisible iconic movement provides a valid alternative to the stasis of our postmodern saturation of visibility.
The Mystcal Gift of Songs in Dreams
Patricia Margaret Alice Davis, Graduate Theological Union
It is generally assumed that historical Christian religious texts that identify dreams or visions as the origins of particular religious music are pious fictions created to enhance authority. However, current research on the dreams of contemporary musicians supports the possibility of dreams as the source of original musical compositions. In addition, current research on the dreams of contemporary British school children documents the experience of auditory messages received in dreams, which the children perceived as being of divine origin. In this paper, the monk Bede’s description of the origins of the song attributed to 7th century Anglo-Saxon Caedmon of Whitby is used as a case study and presented and explored in conjunction with the current research. While the paper cannot resolve the question of divine source, it does underscore the need to reevaluate scholarly assumptions regarding this category of mystical experience.
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A17-217
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Nineteenth-Century Theology Group |
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Theme: Nineteenth-Century Interpretations of Earliest Christianity |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
MM-Cardiff
Lori K. Pearson, Carleton College, Presiding
Theme: Nineteenth-Century Interpretations of Earliest Christianity
Darrell Jodock, Gustavus Adolphus College
Albrecht Ritschl's Portrait of the New Testament and the Early Church
Claudia Setzer, Manhattan College
"A Pinch of Common Sense": Nineteenth-Century Feminist Biblical Interpretation
James Swan Tuite, Bates College
Friedrich Nietzsche's Uses of Jesus, Paul, and Priestly Judaism in Der Anti-Christ
Ward Blanton, University of Glasgow
Provincializing Europe’s Damascus Road: Modernity’s Paul as a Response to Nascent Globalization
The annual business meeting of the Nineteenth-Century Theology Group will be held Sunday morning at 7:00 am in the Program Unit Chairs Lounge (MM-Business Suite 1). Please bring your own breakfast; coffee will be provided.
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Abstract
Nineteenth-Century Theology Group
Theme: Nineteenth-Century Interpretations of Earliest Christianity
Albrecht Ritschl's Portrait of the New Testament and the Early Church
Darrell Jodock, Gustavus Adolphus College
In 1850 Albrecht Ritschl published a study of the first three centuries of Christianity, utilizing the configuration of parties developed by Ferdinand Christian Baur. In a revised edition seven years later Ritschl abandoned these categories and developed a new interpretive framework. Instead of two ideationally based parties, Ritschl located a mainstream religious consensus, exhibiting the sociological differences of a Jewish or a Gentile setting. Whereas Baur had assumed history was propelled forward by the interplay of conflicting and reconciling ideas, Ritschl portrayed it as a perpetual interplay of a religious vision and varying contexts. The vision needed to be embodied, but each embodiment threatened to trap it in a penultimate form. This paper analyzes Ritschl's portrait and seeks to assess its significance as a turning point, redirecting study away from the ideational emphasis of the early nineteenth century toward the socio-historical emphasis of the latter part of the century.
"A Pinch of Common Sense": Nineteenth-Century Feminist Biblical Interpretation
Claudia Setzer, Manhattan College
This paper will look at ways in which nineteenth century advocates of women's equality employed the Bible; how they dealt with Jesus' relative silence regarding women, Paul's multiple, mixed statements, and took the occasional anti-Jewish turn in exegesis by absolving Jesus and Paul of patriarchal attitudes by blaming their Jewish or Pharisaic backgrounds. Interpreters like Sarah Grimké, Frances Willard, and the editors of the Women's Bible varied in their evaluation of the Bible, but shared certain bibliocentric attitudes and methods. Working at the same time that "higher criticism" was developing, they showed little direct awareness of it, but paralleled these developments in their awareness of different sources, an anti-literalist perspective, and a recognition of the effect of culture on interpretation.
Friedrich Nietzsche's Uses of Jesus, Paul, and Priestly Judaism in Der Anti-Christ
James Swan Tuite, Bates College
In Der Anti-Christ, Friedrich Nietzsche offers his most detailed conceptions of Jesus, Paul, and their connections to priestly Judaism on major themes such suffering, decadence, and broader comparison of Christianity and Buddhism. Drawing on this late conception of Paul, this paper suggests that in Der Anti-Christ Nietzsche modifies his notorious account of ressentiment from essay one of Zur Genealogie der Moral. Where Zur Genealogie der Moral presents ressentiment as creative cultural innovation that revalues good/bad as good/evil, Der Anti-Christ emphasizes the socio-cultural continuities between priestly Judaism and Paul’s invention and re-narration of Jesus as "the crucified." In adding this back story to the origin of Christian ressentiment, Nietzsche uses Jesus, Paul, and priestly Judaism as a narrative background to illuminate his conception and critique of Christian morality and its secular analogues.
Provincializing Europe’s Damascus Road: Modernity’s Paul as a Response to Nascent Globalization
Ward Blanton, University of Glasgow
Extending an analysis of the role played by modern New Testament scholarship started in Displacing Christian Origins: Philosophy, Secularity, and the New Testament, this presentation will sketch major trends within the nineteenth-century history of this field, showing how the interpretive trends relied for their performative force on a transformed sense of place due to new markets and unprecedented mass media.
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A17-218
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Reformed Theology and History Group |
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Theme: Open Table: Cheap Grace or Gospel Imperative? |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
MM-Columbia 2
Robert Sherman, Bangor Theological Seminary, Presiding
Theme: Open Table: Cheap Grace or Gospel Imperative?
David Stubbs, Western Theological Seminary
The “Gospels” behind the Arguments: Biblical Arguments for and against Allowing Communion before Baptism
Oliver Crisp, University of Bristol
Jonathan Edwards and the Closing of the Table: Must the Eucharist be Open to All?
Robert Vosloo, University of Stellenbosch
The Welcoming Table? Reforming Body Practices
Gordon S. Mikoski, Princeton Theological Seminary
On the Pedagogical Implications of Moving the Fence: From Unfinished Reforms to Mystagogical Catechesis in the PCUSA
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Abstract
Reformed Theology and History Group
Theme: Open Table: Cheap Grace or Gospel Imperative?
For nearly five centuries Reformed communities have debated lay access to the Lord’s Supper. What led to these various positions on how closed or open the Table should be? Does the history of restricted or fenced tables influence contemporary practice? How might modern churches ritually integrate past confessional stipulations or the perspectives of access to and efficacy of this sacrament articulated by various Reformed theologians? What about children’s participation in communion? Should “closed” practices and beliefs be “reformed” or remain binding? This session's papers will address many of these issues.
The “Gospels” behind the Arguments: Biblical Arguments for and against Allowing Communion before Baptism
David Stubbs, Western Theological Seminary
To gain traction in debates concerning allowing those not baptized to participate in the Lord’s Supper, proponents for and against such a practice analyze biblical passages that suggest central meanings of Baptism and Eucharist and their relationship to one another. In analyzing recent contributions to this debate, I identify two primary “tellings of the gospel” that partially determine which biblical passages are used and what “meanings” are emphasized. The primary difference between them surrounds the role and visibility of the church and what its holiness entails. I argue for the telling of the gospel that suggests the norm for church practice should be Baptism before Eucharist. But based on the biblical insights of those for an “open table,” I suggest a principle for adjudicating faithful exceptions to the norm that can inform our definition of regular practice and guide possible exceptions to it.
Jonathan Edwards and the Closing of the Table: Must the Eucharist be Open to All?
Oliver Crisp, University of Bristol
One of the most important, but least explored contributions made by Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758) pertains to the communion controversy that erupted in the Northampton church, were he ministered for much of his career. Edwards argued, amongst other things, that the "half-way covenant" introduced by his grandfather, Solomon Stoddard, was not tenable, and that communion must be restricted to members of the Church, which must comprise only those who have made a profession of faith. This controversy, and Edwards’s position, raises important issues for contemporary theology. These have to do with whether, or to what extent the Eucharist should be "open" to those who have not necessarily professed faith but are in the church community. But it also raises wider, ecclesiological issues, to do with whether a "closed" communion table is tenable for churches that have a parish system, or something functionally equivalent as arguably Edwards’s situation did, despite being Congregationalist.
The Welcoming Table? Reforming Body Practices
Robert Vosloo, University of Stellenbosch
This paper discusses Michael Welker’s claim that the Lord’s Supper is an event of unconditional acceptance for all the participants, asking the question of how we relate this hospitable event to church practices that seek to protect the integrity of the meal through modes of “exclusion.” This paper investigates this tension, particularly against the backdrop of the divisive role the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper played in the Dutch Reformed church family in South Africa. The main body of the paper engages with Michael Welker’s discussion of how the misuse of the meal can be prevented in light of the unconditional acceptance of all participants, as well as with Calvin’s discussion of the relation between church discipline and the Lord’s Supper. The last section of the paper affirms the importance to protect the integrity of the Lord’s Supper by making the unity of the body visible through disciplined practices.
On the Pedagogical Implications of Moving the Fence: From Unfinished Reforms to Mystagogical Catechesis in the PCUSA
Gordon S. Mikoski, Princeton Theological Seminary
The Presbyterian Church (USA) affirms that baptized children - under certain circumstances - may be admitted to Communion prior to a public profession of faith. With this 1970s shift in Presbyterian practice, the longstanding knowledge requirement – which effectively fenced the Table for baptized children – was significantly reframed. Inasmuch as this change significantly altered the baptism-instruction-Communion pattern of formation derived from John Calvin’s pedagogical vision, this shift should have been accompanied by fundamental rethinking of the character and position of the church’s educational ministry. Instead, confusion now reigns in the PCUSA as there are three answers given in the polity to the question of when and under what circumstances baptized children should be admitted to the Lord’s Table. I argue for pushing the relocation of the fence to its logical conclusions and I call for and outline a concomitant rethinking of the theory and practice of the church’s educational ministry.
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A17-219
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Religion, Media, and Culture Group |
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Theme: Sleeper Cell: Viewing Religion, Race, and Terrorism in a Post-9/11 World |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
GH-Manchester G
Diane Winston, University of Southern California, Presiding
Theme: Sleeper Cell: Viewing Religion, Race, and Terrorism in a Post-9/11 World
Panelists:
Kamran Pasha, Santa Monica, CA
Horace Newcomb, University of Georgia
Amir Hussain, Loyola Marymount University
Anthea Butler, University of Rochester
Business Meeting:
Gordon Lynch, Birkbeck, University of London, Presiding
Sean McCloud, University of North Carolina, Charlotte, Presiding
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Abstract
Religion, Media, and Culture Group
Theme: Sleeper Cell: Viewing Religion, Race, and Terrorism in a Post-9/11 World
"Until you make peace with Islam ... on our terms." The tagline for the Showtime series, Sleeper Cell is a provocative entree into the world of a group of Los Angeles-based extremist Muslims and the FBI agent assigned to infiltrate them. Drawing on contemporary events, the show animates discussions on religious freedom and religious fears. Kamran Pasha, co-producer and writer for Sleeper Cell, will be joined by television and religious studies scholars to discuss the series' history and development, as well as the politics of religious and racial representation. Questions which the panel will explore include: How does the series contribute to the discourse on Islam and terrorism? Does it simply project the fears of its audience? Or does it offer a chance for dialogue? What role does television play in shaping public attitudes and civil religious debate, especially in relation to hot-button issues such as the War on Terror?
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A17-220
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Religions, Social Conflict, and Peace Group |
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Theme: Revolutionary Approaches to International Peace-Making |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
GH-Annie
Marla J. Selvidge, University of Central Missouri, Presiding
Theme: Revolutionary Approaches to International Peace-Making
James L. Rowell, Flagler College
An Islamic Gandhi
Mita Cut, Florida International University
Mixing Religious Rituals and Mystical Experience with Modern Democracy: Indonesia, Sultan, and Religious Peace and Tolerance
Devin Kuhn, Claremont Graduate University
Making Peace Trendy: Fashion and Material Culture as Modes of Resistance
Paul Alexander, Azusa Pacific University
Praise the Lord but Don’t Pass the Ammunition: Pentecostal Pacifism and Resistance to Imperialism
Lane Van Ham, University of Arizona
Sanctuary Revisited: Central American Refugee Assistance in the History of Faith-based Immigrant Advocacy
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Abstract
Religions, Social Conflict, and Peace Group
Theme: Revolutionary Approaches to International Peace-Making
This session contains diverse and creative papers on peace-making that cross national and denominational boundaries. We have encouraged presenters to deliver their papers in a Power Point or visual format.
An Islamic Gandhi
James L. Rowell, Flagler College
Can the twenty-first century be witness to the first “Islamic Gandhi?” In the midst of a great conflict between Islam and the West, the emergence of “an Islamic Gandhi”, who could criticize the powers and conscience of the West, while simultaneously inspiring Muslims to a higher moral level, would be an invaluable stepping-stone towards peace. Gandhi’s non-violent satyagraha was practiced also by Martin Luther King Jr., but are the religious resources of Islam amenable to non-violence at this current stage in history? How was Gandhi’s own legacy received by prominent Muslims of his day, such as Muhammad Ali Jinnah, and the non-violent Pathan Muslim Abdul Ghaffar Khan? Asking this question is of incalculable importance to defusing the crisis and opening the door to new and more powerful alternatives to Islamist Jihad. Islam is capable of supporting a non-violent political ethic, and current historical factors make this difficult, but not impossible.
Mixing Religious Rituals and Mystical Experience with Modern Democracy: Indonesia, Sultan, and Religious Peace and Tolerance
Mita Cut, Florida International University
Religion is the most divisive, even violent, issue dividing Indonesians both in the past and today. Nevertheless, my research explains how the western-educated Sultan’s mystical experiences and religious rituals were used as tools for creating democratic traditions, preserving peace and religious tolerance in religiously diverse Yogyakarta, the national educational center. As the Muslim King and reigned the Mataram kingdom from 1940-1988, Sultan strived to combine elements of rationality with both his Muslim faith and Javanese mysticism. He primarily invoked traditional Javanese ethics and mysticism, rather than Islamic orthodoxy, to appeal to the cultural legacy of the indigenous citizenry, and invoked western democratic values to reassure the Indonesians from other provinces and foreigners engaged in Yogyakarta's colleges and universities. Research findings explain how the Sultan shared the particular worldview with many educated/uneducated persons, in which there is no conflict between modern scientific education and a traditional religious worldview and practice.
Making Peace Trendy: Fashion and Material Culture as Modes of Resistance
Devin Kuhn, Claremont Graduate University
This paper examines the relationship between material culture and peacemaking through a framework of antimilitarist, social change and feminist theories, highlighting some of the tensions between a consumer-driven and highly militarized society and creative ways to challenge such a scenario. However, by focusing on the material culture of CODEPINK, this paper demonstrates the ways in which employing fashion and material culture as forms of activism can also be a form of Butlerian gender play that subverts militarization while embracing an activist ethic of joyful resistance.
Praise the Lord but Don’t Pass the Ammunition: Pentecostal Pacifism and Resistance to Imperialism
Paul Alexander, Azusa Pacific University
First, I employ historical evidence garnered from primary sources to suggest that early Pentecostals held to pacifist theology and practice to a greater degree than is often believed. My primary dialogue partner is Grant Wacker of Duke University. Second, I interpret the theological rationale for the Pentecostal peace witness by identifying three key elements: a Christocentric hermeneutic, reliance on spirit empowerment, and radical egalitarianism. Third, Pentecostal Christianity (with six hundred million mostly non-American adherents) is primarily a religion of the urban poor, possibly “because it resists the unjust structures of global capitalism, and glossolalia is the language of such resistance.” Early twentieth Pentecostal pacifists resisted nationalism and war; twenty-first century Pentecostals in the majority world are resisting imperialism. Since Pentecostal tongues-speech and majority world resistance to unjust structures is often “castigated as mad,” I hope my analysis encourages and strengthens ecumenical and interfaith cooperation on justice and peace-building initiatives.
Sanctuary Revisited: Central American Refugee Assistance in the History of Faith-based Immigrant Advocacy
Lane Van Ham, University of Arizona
The Sanctuary movement of the 1980s has been seen as part of liberal religious resistance to the Reagan-Bush administrations’ policy in Central America. In this paper I draw on fieldwork among immigrant advocates in the birthplace of Sanctuary, Tucson, Arizona to argue that Sanctuary was not just a self-contained phenomenon of the ‘80s, but also contributed to the development of a greater trajectory that can be called faith-based immigrant advocacy. Previous to Sanctuary, the immigrant work churches and religious organizations carried out merely involved providing services to state-sanctioned political refugees. A manifold of current advocacy efforts, though, provide material aid to undocumented immigrants and actively critique government policy. In tracing the history of faith-based immigrant advocacy, Sanctuary indexes a transformation whereby churches and other organizations sought to complement their charitable activities with demands for systemic change.
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A17-221
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Roman Catholic Studies Group |
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Theme: Catholicism in Asia: Historical and Theological Engagements |
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Saturday - 1:00 pm-3:30 pm
GH-Windsor
Daniel Speed Thompson, Saint Mary's University, Presiding
Theme: Catholicism in Asia: Historical and Theological Engagements
Adam Darlage, University of Chicago
Mass Conversions or "Going Native?": The Missionary Strategies of St. Francis Xavier in India, Indonesia, and Japan (1542-1551)
David Grumett, University of Exeter
De Lubac, Christ, and the Buddha
Naoko Frances Hioki, Graduate Theological Union
Wu Li (1632-1718) and the Beginning of Chinese Catholic Poetry in the Early Qing China
Paul Crowley, Santa Clara University
Transcendental Thomism and the Pacific Rim: Rahner Revisited
Business Meeting:
Vincent J. Miller, Georgetown University, Presiding
Daniel Speed Thompson, Saint Mary's University, Presiding
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Abstract
Roman Catholic Studies Group
Theme: Catholicism in Asia: Historical and Theological Engagements
Mass Conversions or "Going Native?": The Missionary Strategies of St. Francis Xavier in India, Indonesia, and Japan (1542-1551)
Adam Darlage, University of Chicago
Francis Xavier’s voyage to Japan in 1549 and his missionary activity until 1551 has been lauded not only as the first sustained western contact with the Japanese but also as the inauguration of a new Jesuit strategy of mission and conversion. Many scholars depict Xavier as a forerunner, a pioneer in new mission techniques that Matteo Ricci would perfect in practice a generation later. This new strategy was that of acculturation and adaptation, or “going native,” all ideas that signify a new level of respect for the non-Christian other. This paper seeks a more balanced appraisal of Xavier's work by comparing his Indian and Indonesian missions with this later Japanese mission. I conclude that Francis Xavier was in many respects a typical Christian missionary of the sixteenth century, because although many of his strategies were new, he still shared many assumptions and goals with the conquistadors in the New World.
De Lubac, Christ, and the Buddha
David Grumett, University of Exeter
De Lubac’s groundbreaking studies of Buddhism have received scant scholarly attention. In fact, they mark an important phase in his intellectual development and in the growth of Catholic-Buddhist Studies. He regards Amidism (Pure Land Buddhism) as the variety of Buddhism with greatest affinity to Christian belief, particularly in its conception of human personality. De Lubac argues that Christian-Buddhist encounter is necessarily an encounter between historic Western culture and Buddhism, in the course of which their boundaries are defined, dissolved and redefined. He nevertheless defends the universality | |