Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
More Annotations
A complete backup of www.salon24.pl/u/maia14/1021544
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of www.jagran.com/punjab/bhatinda-shoe-polisher-sunny-hindustani-become-indian-idol-winner-and-celebration-in-
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of news.joins.com/article/23714664
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of www.sportingnews.com/au/league/news/world-club-challenge-sydney-roosters-st-helens-joey-manu-luke-thompson-
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/51607355
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of money.udn.com/money/story/5604/4368920
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Favourite Annotations
A complete backup of kevinfitzmaurice.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of trainerscity.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of miamiabdl.tumblr.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of pedroangelcorraliza.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
A complete backup of theoperacritic.com
Are you over 18 and want to see adult content?
Text
PODCASTS ARCHIVE
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views ofMATERIAL RELIGION
The study of religion and materiality is an important and fast-growing sub-discipline in the contemporary Religious Studies scene. According to the editors of the premier journal in this area, the aptly named ‘Material Religion‘, scholars in this area explore how religion happens in material culture – images, devotional and liturgical objects, architecture and sacred space, works of arts THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND RELIGION This podcast builds on a roundtable discussion released on the RSP in February 2017, featuring Beth, Chris, Michael Morelli, Vivian Asimos and Jonathan Tuckett, titled “AI and Religion: An Initial Conversation” and a special issue of the RSP journal Implicit Religion, co-edited by Dr Singler, on Artificial Intelligence andReligion
THE (DE-)MYSTIFICATION OF CHRISTIAN ORIGINS In her response to our episode on Ancient Christian Origins with Bill Arnal, Michelle Sdao cites the risks of "methodolatry" and highlights emerging scholarship and methods on the edges of the disciplinary divides among religious studies, textual criticism, New Testament Studies and other allied fields. THE INTERPLAY OF RELIGION AND POPULAR CULTURE IN In exploring the interstices running along the contours of religion and popular culture researchers must not neglect the embodiment and praxis of religious expression in popular culture and vice-versa. There was a time when the realms of popular culture and religion did not meet — at least in an academic or analytic sense. The space betwixt, between, around, and interpenetrating each was STUDYING TANTRA FROM WITHIN AND WITHOUT Working with Sundaramoorthy, Brooks was “within” a vibrant Hindu tradition. As he refined his work at Harvard Divinity School, however, Brooks articulated a critical, non-religiously invested perspective on Hinduism — in short, observing Tantra from “without,” treating the religion like any other secular subject worthy of study. RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies.PODCASTS ARCHIVE
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views ofMATERIAL RELIGION
The study of religion and materiality is an important and fast-growing sub-discipline in the contemporary Religious Studies scene. According to the editors of the premier journal in this area, the aptly named ‘Material Religion‘, scholars in this area explore how religion happens in material culture – images, devotional and liturgical objects, architecture and sacred space, works of arts THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND RELIGION This podcast builds on a roundtable discussion released on the RSP in February 2017, featuring Beth, Chris, Michael Morelli, Vivian Asimos and Jonathan Tuckett, titled “AI and Religion: An Initial Conversation” and a special issue of the RSP journal Implicit Religion, co-edited by Dr Singler, on Artificial Intelligence andReligion
THE (DE-)MYSTIFICATION OF CHRISTIAN ORIGINS In her response to our episode on Ancient Christian Origins with Bill Arnal, Michelle Sdao cites the risks of "methodolatry" and highlights emerging scholarship and methods on the edges of the disciplinary divides among religious studies, textual criticism, New Testament Studies and other allied fields. THE INTERPLAY OF RELIGION AND POPULAR CULTURE IN In exploring the interstices running along the contours of religion and popular culture researchers must not neglect the embodiment and praxis of religious expression in popular culture and vice-versa. There was a time when the realms of popular culture and religion did not meet — at least in an academic or analytic sense. The space betwixt, between, around, and interpenetrating each was STUDYING TANTRA FROM WITHIN AND WITHOUT Working with Sundaramoorthy, Brooks was “within” a vibrant Hindu tradition. As he refined his work at Harvard Divinity School, however, Brooks articulated a critical, non-religiously invested perspective on Hinduism — in short, observing Tantra from “without,” treating the religion like any other secular subject worthy of study. RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little RELIGIOUS STUDIES OPPORTUNITIES DIGEST Hello and welcome to this week’s Religious Studies Opportunities Digest! You will find four events, three fellowships and summer programs, one conference call for papers, and one job. Thank you to everyone who has generously supported the RSP through our Patreon and PayPal donation options! Our goal is to reach 100 patrons (currently42!) to
ON TANTRA, JAIN STYLE "The story that Dr. Gough is telling about the development of Jain tantra—the Jain adoption of mantra-practice, but rejection of antinomianism—thus seems to me to be a fundamentally noteworthy case-study," writes Anne Mocko on our interview with Ellen DISCOURSE! MAY 2020 WITH DAVID G. ROBERTSON, SUZANNE OWEN It's ideology, religion and conspiracy all the way in this month's Discourse! David G. Robertson is joined by Suzanne Owen and Craig Martin to discuss the Sun's mockery of pagans, problems with the Guardian's headline that people are returning to the Church, coronavirus conspiracies in India targetting Muslims, and how "idiology" (or one idiology, anyway) is pushing the religion out of AFTER THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM...? In this week's podcast, We discussed some of the problems with the World Religion paradigm, most notably its colonial heritage and Christocentrism. Given its dominance in the public perception of "Religion", however, can we as teachers get away from it? Is there a pedagogical approach which focusses on issues of power and domination, and challenges, rather than reinforces, THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is THE INSIDER/OUTSIDER PROBLEM The Insider/Outsider problem is one of the most perennial problems in the academic study of religion. This distinction, relating to where scholars position themselves relating to the subject matter (whatever that may be), permeates not only almost every aspect of academia, but has profound implications for each and every one of us conducts ourselves in relationship with the other people we BOUNDARY FORMATION ARCHIVES Twitter. Youtube. Facebook THE POLITICAL RELEVANCE OF THE SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION Following the lead of scholars such as Jose Casanova, Professor Turner brings the public and political role of religion into focus. By doing so, he argues, we can push the sociology of religion toward the realms of political theory, international relations, and race relations, thus creating an agenda in which the sociology of religion becomes increasingly mainstream and relevant to the world RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little INSIDER AND OUTSIDER: AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE Insider and Outsider: An Anthropological Perspective. "What my own position may speak to is the categorisation of "religion"; when talked of in isolation, "religion" remains something fixed and visible. But in fact it intersects heavily across cultural domains, and having been in this ‘piggy in the middle’ situation, it is interesting to HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies.PODCASTS ARCHIVE
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of RELIGIOUS STUDIES OPPORTUNITIES DIGEST Hello and welcome to this week’s Religious Studies Opportunities Digest! You will find four events, three fellowships and summer programs, one conference call for papers, and one job. Thank you to everyone who has generously supported the RSP through our Patreon and PayPal donation options! Our goal is to reach 100 patrons (currently42!) to
THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND RELIGION This podcast builds on a roundtable discussion released on the RSP in February 2017, featuring Beth, Chris, Michael Morelli, Vivian Asimos and Jonathan Tuckett, titled “AI and Religion: An Initial Conversation” and a special issue of the RSP journal Implicit Religion, co-edited by Dr Singler, on Artificial Intelligence andReligion
THE (DE-)MYSTIFICATION OF CHRISTIAN ORIGINS In her response to our episode on Ancient Christian Origins with Bill Arnal, Michelle Sdao cites the risks of "methodolatry" and highlights emerging scholarship and methods on the edges of the disciplinary divides among religious studies, textual criticism, New Testament Studies and other allied fields. THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is THE INTERPLAY OF RELIGION AND POPULAR CULTURE IN In exploring the interstices running along the contours of religion and popular culture researchers must not neglect the embodiment and praxis of religious expression in popular culture and vice-versa. There was a time when the realms of popular culture and religion did not meet — at least in an academic or analytic sense. The space betwixt, between, around, and interpenetrating each was RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies.PODCASTS ARCHIVE
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of RELIGIOUS STUDIES OPPORTUNITIES DIGEST Hello and welcome to this week’s Religious Studies Opportunities Digest! You will find four events, three fellowships and summer programs, one conference call for papers, and one job. Thank you to everyone who has generously supported the RSP through our Patreon and PayPal donation options! Our goal is to reach 100 patrons (currently42!) to
THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND RELIGION This podcast builds on a roundtable discussion released on the RSP in February 2017, featuring Beth, Chris, Michael Morelli, Vivian Asimos and Jonathan Tuckett, titled “AI and Religion: An Initial Conversation” and a special issue of the RSP journal Implicit Religion, co-edited by Dr Singler, on Artificial Intelligence andReligion
THE (DE-)MYSTIFICATION OF CHRISTIAN ORIGINS In her response to our episode on Ancient Christian Origins with Bill Arnal, Michelle Sdao cites the risks of "methodolatry" and highlights emerging scholarship and methods on the edges of the disciplinary divides among religious studies, textual criticism, New Testament Studies and other allied fields. THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is THE INTERPLAY OF RELIGION AND POPULAR CULTURE IN In exploring the interstices running along the contours of religion and popular culture researchers must not neglect the embodiment and praxis of religious expression in popular culture and vice-versa. There was a time when the realms of popular culture and religion did not meet — at least in an academic or analytic sense. The space betwixt, between, around, and interpenetrating each was RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little RELIGIOUS STUDIES OPPORTUNITIES DIGEST Hello and welcome to this week’s Religious Studies Opportunities Digest! You will find four events, three fellowships and summer programs, one conference call for papers, and one job. Thank you to everyone who has generously supported the RSP through our Patreon and PayPal donation options! Our goal is to reach 100 patrons (currently42!) to
DISCOURSE! MAY 2020 WITH DAVID G. ROBERTSON, SUZANNE OWEN It's ideology, religion and conspiracy all the way in this month's Discourse! David G. Robertson is joined by Suzanne Owen and Craig Martin to discuss the Sun's mockery of pagans, problems with the Guardian's headline that people are returning to the Church, coronavirus conspiracies in India targetting Muslims, and how "idiology" (or one idiology, anyway) is pushing the religion out of AFTER THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM...? In this week's podcast, We discussed some of the problems with the World Religion paradigm, most notably its colonial heritage and Christocentrism. Given its dominance in the public perception of "Religion", however, can we as teachers get away from it? Is there a pedagogical approach which focusses on issues of power and domination, and challenges, rather than reinforces, THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is THE INSIDER/OUTSIDER PROBLEM The Insider/Outsider problem is one of the most perennial problems in the academic study of religion. This distinction, relating to where scholars position themselves relating to the subject matter (whatever that may be), permeates not only almost every aspect of academia, but has profound implications for each and every one of us conducts ourselves in relationship with the other people we A NEW APPROACH TO FAITH DEVELOPMENT THEORY A New Approach to Faith Development Theory. By John Rymon Bailey, Henderson State University. Published by the Religious Studies Project, on 12 March 2013 in response to the Religious Studies Project Interview with Heinz Streib on Faith Development Theory (4 March 2013). Fowler’s Faith Development Theory has been most influentialin guiding
PSYCHOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF RELIGION "In practice, experimentation requires much effort, imagination, and resources. The subject of religion seems too complex and too ‘soft’ for the laboratory. It is filled with much fantasy and feelings, two topics which academic psychology finds hard to approach." Beit-Hallahmi, Benjamin, and Michael Argyle. The Psychology of Religious Behaviour, Belief and Experience. THE POLITICAL RELEVANCE OF THE SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION Following the lead of scholars such as Jose Casanova, Professor Turner brings the public and political role of religion into focus. By doing so, he argues, we can push the sociology of religion toward the realms of political theory, international relations, and race relations, thus creating an agenda in which the sociology of religion becomes increasingly mainstream and relevant to the world RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little INSIDER AND OUTSIDER: AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE Insider and Outsider: An Anthropological Perspective. "What my own position may speak to is the categorisation of "religion"; when talked of in isolation, "religion" remains something fixed and visible. But in fact it intersects heavily across cultural domains, and having been in this ‘piggy in the middle’ situation, it is interesting to HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies.PODCASTS ARCHIVE
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of RELIGIOUS STUDIES OPPORTUNITIES DIGEST Hello and welcome to this week’s Religious Studies Opportunities Digest! You will find four events, three fellowships and summer programs, one conference call for papers, and one job. Thank you to everyone who has generously supported the RSP through our Patreon and PayPal donation options! Our goal is to reach 100 patrons (currently42!) to
THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND RELIGION This podcast builds on a roundtable discussion released on the RSP in February 2017, featuring Beth, Chris, Michael Morelli, Vivian Asimos and Jonathan Tuckett, titled “AI and Religion: An Initial Conversation” and a special issue of the RSP journal Implicit Religion, co-edited by Dr Singler, on Artificial Intelligence andReligion
THE (DE-)MYSTIFICATION OF CHRISTIAN ORIGINS In her response to our episode on Ancient Christian Origins with Bill Arnal, Michelle Sdao cites the risks of "methodolatry" and highlights emerging scholarship and methods on the edges of the disciplinary divides among religious studies, textual criticism, New Testament Studies and other allied fields. THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is THE INTERPLAY OF RELIGION AND POPULAR CULTURE IN In exploring the interstices running along the contours of religion and popular culture researchers must not neglect the embodiment and praxis of religious expression in popular culture and vice-versa. There was a time when the realms of popular culture and religion did not meet — at least in an academic or analytic sense. The space betwixt, between, around, and interpenetrating each was RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies.PODCASTS ARCHIVE
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of RELIGIOUS STUDIES OPPORTUNITIES DIGEST Hello and welcome to this week’s Religious Studies Opportunities Digest! You will find four events, three fellowships and summer programs, one conference call for papers, and one job. Thank you to everyone who has generously supported the RSP through our Patreon and PayPal donation options! Our goal is to reach 100 patrons (currently42!) to
THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND RELIGION This podcast builds on a roundtable discussion released on the RSP in February 2017, featuring Beth, Chris, Michael Morelli, Vivian Asimos and Jonathan Tuckett, titled “AI and Religion: An Initial Conversation” and a special issue of the RSP journal Implicit Religion, co-edited by Dr Singler, on Artificial Intelligence andReligion
THE (DE-)MYSTIFICATION OF CHRISTIAN ORIGINS In her response to our episode on Ancient Christian Origins with Bill Arnal, Michelle Sdao cites the risks of "methodolatry" and highlights emerging scholarship and methods on the edges of the disciplinary divides among religious studies, textual criticism, New Testament Studies and other allied fields. THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is THE INTERPLAY OF RELIGION AND POPULAR CULTURE IN In exploring the interstices running along the contours of religion and popular culture researchers must not neglect the embodiment and praxis of religious expression in popular culture and vice-versa. There was a time when the realms of popular culture and religion did not meet — at least in an academic or analytic sense. The space betwixt, between, around, and interpenetrating each was RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little RELIGIOUS STUDIES OPPORTUNITIES DIGEST Hello and welcome to this week’s Religious Studies Opportunities Digest! You will find four events, three fellowships and summer programs, one conference call for papers, and one job. Thank you to everyone who has generously supported the RSP through our Patreon and PayPal donation options! Our goal is to reach 100 patrons (currently42!) to
DISCOURSE! MAY 2020 WITH DAVID G. ROBERTSON, SUZANNE OWEN It's ideology, religion and conspiracy all the way in this month's Discourse! David G. Robertson is joined by Suzanne Owen and Craig Martin to discuss the Sun's mockery of pagans, problems with the Guardian's headline that people are returning to the Church, coronavirus conspiracies in India targetting Muslims, and how "idiology" (or one idiology, anyway) is pushing the religion out of AFTER THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM...? In this week's podcast, We discussed some of the problems with the World Religion paradigm, most notably its colonial heritage and Christocentrism. Given its dominance in the public perception of "Religion", however, can we as teachers get away from it? Is there a pedagogical approach which focusses on issues of power and domination, and challenges, rather than reinforces, THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is THE INSIDER/OUTSIDER PROBLEM The Insider/Outsider problem is one of the most perennial problems in the academic study of religion. This distinction, relating to where scholars position themselves relating to the subject matter (whatever that may be), permeates not only almost every aspect of academia, but has profound implications for each and every one of us conducts ourselves in relationship with the other people we A NEW APPROACH TO FAITH DEVELOPMENT THEORY A New Approach to Faith Development Theory. By John Rymon Bailey, Henderson State University. Published by the Religious Studies Project, on 12 March 2013 in response to the Religious Studies Project Interview with Heinz Streib on Faith Development Theory (4 March 2013). Fowler’s Faith Development Theory has been most influentialin guiding
PSYCHOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF RELIGION "In practice, experimentation requires much effort, imagination, and resources. The subject of religion seems too complex and too ‘soft’ for the laboratory. It is filled with much fantasy and feelings, two topics which academic psychology finds hard to approach." Beit-Hallahmi, Benjamin, and Michael Argyle. The Psychology of Religious Behaviour, Belief and Experience. THE POLITICAL RELEVANCE OF THE SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION Following the lead of scholars such as Jose Casanova, Professor Turner brings the public and political role of religion into focus. By doing so, he argues, we can push the sociology of religion toward the realms of political theory, international relations, and race relations, thus creating an agenda in which the sociology of religion becomes increasingly mainstream and relevant to the world RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little INSIDER AND OUTSIDER: AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE Insider and Outsider: An Anthropological Perspective. "What my own position may speak to is the categorisation of "religion"; when talked of in isolation, "religion" remains something fixed and visible. But in fact it intersects heavily across cultural domains, and having been in this ‘piggy in the middle’ situation, it is interesting to HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies.PODCASTS ARCHIVE
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is A NEW APPROACH TO FAITH DEVELOPMENT THEORY A New Approach to Faith Development Theory. By John Rymon Bailey, Henderson State University. Published by the Religious Studies Project, on 12 March 2013 in response to the Religious Studies Project Interview with Heinz Streib on Faith Development Theory (4 March 2013). Fowler’s Faith Development Theory has been most influentialin guiding
THE INTERPLAY OF RELIGION AND POPULAR CULTURE IN In exploring the interstices running along the contours of religion and popular culture researchers must not neglect the embodiment and praxis of religious expression in popular culture and vice-versa. There was a time when the realms of popular culture and religion did not meet — at least in an academic or analytic sense. The space betwixt, between, around, and interpenetrating each was STUDYING TANTRA FROM WITHIN AND WITHOUT Working with Sundaramoorthy, Brooks was “within” a vibrant Hindu tradition. As he refined his work at Harvard Divinity School, however, Brooks articulated a critical, non-religiously invested perspective on Hinduism — in short, observing Tantra from “without,” treating the religion like any other secular subject worthy of study.DENISE CUSH
Denise Cush (BA Oxford, MA Lancaster, PhD Warwick) is currently Professor of Religion and Education at Bath Spa University. She has taught Religious Studies in a sixth form college, trained both primary and secondary teachers in religious education, and taught Study of Religions at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. MORMON, JESUITS, AND THE PAIN OF REPLICATION: A HISTORICAL In their interview dealing with the place of American religion in the world and ‘bodies in space’, Dan Gorman and Professor Laurie Maffly-Kipp cover a wide range of topics relevant to both American religious history and Mormon studies as they reflect on several important suggestions made by John McGreevy in his American Jesuitsand the World.
HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies.PODCASTS ARCHIVE
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is A NEW APPROACH TO FAITH DEVELOPMENT THEORY A New Approach to Faith Development Theory. By John Rymon Bailey, Henderson State University. Published by the Religious Studies Project, on 12 March 2013 in response to the Religious Studies Project Interview with Heinz Streib on Faith Development Theory (4 March 2013). Fowler’s Faith Development Theory has been most influentialin guiding
THE INTERPLAY OF RELIGION AND POPULAR CULTURE IN In exploring the interstices running along the contours of religion and popular culture researchers must not neglect the embodiment and praxis of religious expression in popular culture and vice-versa. There was a time when the realms of popular culture and religion did not meet — at least in an academic or analytic sense. The space betwixt, between, around, and interpenetrating each was STUDYING TANTRA FROM WITHIN AND WITHOUT Working with Sundaramoorthy, Brooks was “within” a vibrant Hindu tradition. As he refined his work at Harvard Divinity School, however, Brooks articulated a critical, non-religiously invested perspective on Hinduism — in short, observing Tantra from “without,” treating the religion like any other secular subject worthy of study.DENISE CUSH
Denise Cush (BA Oxford, MA Lancaster, PhD Warwick) is currently Professor of Religion and Education at Bath Spa University. She has taught Religious Studies in a sixth form college, trained both primary and secondary teachers in religious education, and taught Study of Religions at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. MORMON, JESUITS, AND THE PAIN OF REPLICATION: A HISTORICAL In their interview dealing with the place of American religion in the world and ‘bodies in space’, Dan Gorman and Professor Laurie Maffly-Kipp cover a wide range of topics relevant to both American religious history and Mormon studies as they reflect on several important suggestions made by John McGreevy in his American Jesuitsand the World.
RELIGIOUS STUDIES OPPORTUNITIES DIGEST Hello and welcome to this week’s Religious Studies Opportunities Digest! You will find four events, three fellowships and summer programs, one conference call for papers, and one job. Thank you to everyone who has generously supported the RSP through our Patreon and PayPal donation options! Our goal is to reach 100 patrons (currently42!) to
PERSONS ARCHIVE
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Religious Studies Project or our sponsors.MATERIAL RELIGION
The study of religion and materiality is an important and fast-growing sub-discipline in the contemporary Religious Studies scene. According to the editors of the premier journal in this area, the aptly named ‘Material Religion‘, scholars in this area explore how religion happens in material culture – images, devotional and liturgical objects, architecture and sacred space, works of arts ISLAM, POLITICS, AND IDENTITY: THE (IM)POSSIBILITY OF Is the Islamic state simply a reaction against the modern secular nation-state, or is there more to it? Join us as Noah Salomon answers this question among many more as he talks about his book For Love of the Prophet: An Ethnography of Sudan's Islamic State. SEXUAL ETHICS AND ISLAM Sexual Ethics and Islam. Podcast with Kecia Ali (24 April 2017).. Interviewed by Christopher Cotter. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Chris Cotter (CC): Alongside the problematic dominant caricature of Islam as a violent religion, there’s perhaps no issue so problematic in contemporary Western discourse on Islam than discussions surrounding sexuality and gender. A NEW APPROACH TO FAITH DEVELOPMENT THEORY A New Approach to Faith Development Theory. By John Rymon Bailey, Henderson State University. Published by the Religious Studies Project, on 12 March 2013 in response to the Religious Studies Project Interview with Heinz Streib on Faith Development Theory (4 March 2013). Fowler’s Faith Development Theory has been most influentialin guiding
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND RELIGION This podcast builds on a roundtable discussion released on the RSP in February 2017, featuring Beth, Chris, Michael Morelli, Vivian Asimos and Jonathan Tuckett, titled “AI and Religion: An Initial Conversation” and a special issue of the RSP journal Implicit Religion, co-edited by Dr Singler, on Artificial Intelligence andReligion
CARL JUNG | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECT Carl Gustav Jung (1875-1961) was a Swiss psychiatrist. Initially a collaborator with Sigmund Freud, the two later split and Jung went on to found the Analytical Psychology school of psychotherapy. His approach focussed on what he called the process of individuation, RELIGION, THRESKEIA (ΘΡΗΣΚΕΊΑ) AND THE RETURN OF THE Ever since the publication of Wilfred Cantwell Smith’s The Meaning and End of Religion (1962), various scholars have engaged themselves with the issue of religion not being “a universally applicable first-order concept that matches a native discursive field in every culture across time and throughout history” (Nongbri 2013, p. 158).Nongbri’s approach to this issue is influenced by the ABIMBOLA A. ADELAKUN Abimbola A. Adelakun is an assistant professor in the Department of African/African Diaspora Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. She studies modern African culture through the disciplinary lenses of performance, gender, religion, Africana, and Yoruba studies. Her forthcoming book, Performing Power in Nigeria: Identity, Politics, and HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies. AMERICA'S CHANGING RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE The religious landscape of the United States is changing dramatically. Americans must consider what it means to govern a nation of religious minorities. We interview Dr. Robert P. Jones, the founding CEO of the Public Religion Research Institute. Jones discusses findings from PRRI's national surveys on religion and public life, many of which are represented in the American Values Atlas. WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is RELIGION, THRESKEIA (ΘΡΗΣΚΕΊΑ) AND THE RETURN OF THE Ever since the publication of Wilfred Cantwell Smith’s The Meaning and End of Religion (1962), various scholars have engaged themselves with the issue of religion not being “a universally applicable first-order concept that matches a native discursive field in every culture across time and throughout history” (Nongbri 2013, p. 158).Nongbri’s approach to this issue is influenced by theJONATHAN TUCKETT
Jonathan Tuckett. Dr Jonathan Tuckett is now an independent researcher, having just finished teaching fellowships with the Universities of Stirling and Edinburgh. He is a specialist in Theory and Method, and philosophical phenomenology. He graduated with his PhD from the University of Stirling in 2015 with a thesis critiquing ouridea of
INGVILD GILHUS
Ingvild Gilhus. Ingvild Sælid Gilhus is Professor of Religion at the University of Bergen, Norway. She is Vice-President of the International Association for the History of Religions (until 2015). She works in the areas of religion in late antiquity and new religious movements and her main publications include Laughing Gods, WeepingVirgins
DENISE CUSH
Denise Cush (BA Oxford, MA Lancaster, PhD Warwick) is currently Professor of Religion and Education at Bath Spa University. She has taught Religious Studies in a sixth form college, trained both primary and secondary teachers in religious education, and taught Study of Religions at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies. AMERICA'S CHANGING RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE The religious landscape of the United States is changing dramatically. Americans must consider what it means to govern a nation of religious minorities. We interview Dr. Robert P. Jones, the founding CEO of the Public Religion Research Institute. Jones discusses findings from PRRI's national surveys on religion and public life, many of which are represented in the American Values Atlas. WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is RELIGION, THRESKEIA (ΘΡΗΣΚΕΊΑ) AND THE RETURN OF THE Ever since the publication of Wilfred Cantwell Smith’s The Meaning and End of Religion (1962), various scholars have engaged themselves with the issue of religion not being “a universally applicable first-order concept that matches a native discursive field in every culture across time and throughout history” (Nongbri 2013, p. 158).Nongbri’s approach to this issue is influenced by theJONATHAN TUCKETT
Jonathan Tuckett. Dr Jonathan Tuckett is now an independent researcher, having just finished teaching fellowships with the Universities of Stirling and Edinburgh. He is a specialist in Theory and Method, and philosophical phenomenology. He graduated with his PhD from the University of Stirling in 2015 with a thesis critiquing ouridea of
INGVILD GILHUS
Ingvild Gilhus. Ingvild Sælid Gilhus is Professor of Religion at the University of Bergen, Norway. She is Vice-President of the International Association for the History of Religions (until 2015). She works in the areas of religion in late antiquity and new religious movements and her main publications include Laughing Gods, WeepingVirgins
DENISE CUSH
Denise Cush (BA Oxford, MA Lancaster, PhD Warwick) is currently Professor of Religion and Education at Bath Spa University. She has taught Religious Studies in a sixth form college, trained both primary and secondary teachers in religious education, and taught Study of Religions at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little AMERICA'S CHANGING RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE The religious landscape of the United States is changing dramatically. Americans must consider what it means to govern a nation of religious minorities. We interview Dr. Robert P. Jones, the founding CEO of the Public Religion Research Institute. Jones discusses findings from PRRI's national surveys on religion and public life, many of which are represented in the American Values Atlas. RELIGION, THRESKEIA (ΘΡΗΣΚΕΊΑ) AND THE RETURN OF THE Ever since the publication of Wilfred Cantwell Smith’s The Meaning and End of Religion (1962), various scholars have engaged themselves with the issue of religion not being “a universally applicable first-order concept that matches a native discursive field in every culture across time and throughout history” (Nongbri 2013, p. 158).Nongbri’s approach to this issue is influenced by the THE (DE-)MYSTIFICATION OF CHRISTIAN ORIGINS In her response to our episode on Ancient Christian Origins with Bill Arnal, Michelle Sdao cites the risks of "methodolatry" and highlights emerging scholarship and methods on the edges of the disciplinary divides among religious studies, textual criticism, New Testament Studies and other allied fields. ARLENE SANCHEZ WALSH Arlene M. Sánchez-Walsh, Ph.D., is a professor of religious studies and the author of the award-winning book Latino Pentecostal Identity: Evangelical Faith, Self, and Society (Columbia University Press, 2003).She has authored more than a dozen articles and book chapters on the subject of Latino/a Pentecostalism, and has served as a media expert for outlets such as the New York Times, the Wall THOMAS J. COLEMAN III Thomas J. Coleman III graduated with a Master of Science in Psychology in August 2016 from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Currently, he is continuing his education as a Psychology Ph.D. student at Coventry University, as part of the Brain, Belief, and Behaviour Laboratory. He is an assistant editor for the journals Secularism & Nonreligion, and Secular Studies, and former GraduateANGELA PUCA
Angela Puca. I was born in Naples (Italy) where I also studied (University of Naples ‘L’orientale’) and achieved my BA and MA degrees in Philosophy. I’m now a Graduate Teaching Assistant at Leeds Trinity University and a Doctoral Researcher in the Department of Religious Studies at University of Leeds/Leeds Trinity University.LIAM SUTHERLAND
Liam Sutherland. Liam Sutherland is a first year PhD student at the University of Edinburgh looking at religious communities and constructions of Scottish national identity, although not leaving behind his Masters obsession with E.B. Tylor and the definition of religion. He has written and recorded a review of Graham Harvey’sFood, Sex and
MEREDITH MCGUIRE
Meredith McGuire. Dr. McGuire is Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas, now retired. She is the former President of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion and the Association for the Sociology of Religion. She is also a specialist in environmental sociology and in sociology ofhealth and
MARION BOWMAN
Marion Bowman. Dr Marion Bowman is Senior Lecturer in the Religious Studies department at the Open University, Vice President of the European Association for the Study of Religions, a former president of the BASR and of the Folklore Society, and serves on theSAKIN ÖZISIK
Sakin Özisik. Sakin Özisik is scientific assistant at the faculty of health sciences at Bielefeld University. He studied Islamic theology and history of religions. He was an exchange student at Bielefeld university`s department of protestant theology and completed his doctoral study with the supervisorship of HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies. AMERICA'S CHANGING RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE The religious landscape of the United States is changing dramatically. Americans must consider what it means to govern a nation of religious minorities. We interview Dr. Robert P. Jones, the founding CEO of the Public Religion Research Institute. Jones discusses findings from PRRI's national surveys on religion and public life, many of which are represented in the American Values Atlas. WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is RELIGION, THRESKEIA (ΘΡΗΣΚΕΊΑ) AND THE RETURN OF THE Ever since the publication of Wilfred Cantwell Smith’s The Meaning and End of Religion (1962), various scholars have engaged themselves with the issue of religion not being “a universally applicable first-order concept that matches a native discursive field in every culture across time and throughout history” (Nongbri 2013, p. 158).Nongbri’s approach to this issue is influenced by theJONATHAN TUCKETT
Jonathan Tuckett. Dr Jonathan Tuckett is now an independent researcher, having just finished teaching fellowships with the Universities of Stirling and Edinburgh. He is a specialist in Theory and Method, and philosophical phenomenology. He graduated with his PhD from the University of Stirling in 2015 with a thesis critiquing ouridea of
INGVILD GILHUS
Ingvild Gilhus. Ingvild Sælid Gilhus is Professor of Religion at the University of Bergen, Norway. She is Vice-President of the International Association for the History of Religions (until 2015). She works in the areas of religion in late antiquity and new religious movements and her main publications include Laughing Gods, WeepingVirgins
DENISE CUSH
Denise Cush (BA Oxford, MA Lancaster, PhD Warwick) is currently Professor of Religion and Education at Bath Spa University. She has taught Religious Studies in a sixth form college, trained both primary and secondary teachers in religious education, and taught Study of Religions at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies. AMERICA'S CHANGING RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE The religious landscape of the United States is changing dramatically. Americans must consider what it means to govern a nation of religious minorities. We interview Dr. Robert P. Jones, the founding CEO of the Public Religion Research Institute. Jones discusses findings from PRRI's national surveys on religion and public life, many of which are represented in the American Values Atlas. WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Worldviews and Ways of Life. Podcast with Ann Taves (21 May 2018).. Interviewed by David G. Robertson.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock.. Audio and transcript available at: Taves_-_Worldviews_and_Ways_of_Life_1.1 David Robertson (DR): It’s my pleasure to be joined here today by Professor Ann Taves from the Religious Studies Department and the University of California, Santa THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND The Brethren in Scotland. Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is RELIGION, THRESKEIA (ΘΡΗΣΚΕΊΑ) AND THE RETURN OF THE Ever since the publication of Wilfred Cantwell Smith’s The Meaning and End of Religion (1962), various scholars have engaged themselves with the issue of religion not being “a universally applicable first-order concept that matches a native discursive field in every culture across time and throughout history” (Nongbri 2013, p. 158).Nongbri’s approach to this issue is influenced by theJONATHAN TUCKETT
Jonathan Tuckett. Dr Jonathan Tuckett is now an independent researcher, having just finished teaching fellowships with the Universities of Stirling and Edinburgh. He is a specialist in Theory and Method, and philosophical phenomenology. He graduated with his PhD from the University of Stirling in 2015 with a thesis critiquing ouridea of
INGVILD GILHUS
Ingvild Gilhus. Ingvild Sælid Gilhus is Professor of Religion at the University of Bergen, Norway. She is Vice-President of the International Association for the History of Religions (until 2015). She works in the areas of religion in late antiquity and new religious movements and her main publications include Laughing Gods, WeepingVirgins
DENISE CUSH
Denise Cush (BA Oxford, MA Lancaster, PhD Warwick) is currently Professor of Religion and Education at Bath Spa University. She has taught Religious Studies in a sixth form college, trained both primary and secondary teachers in religious education, and taught Study of Religions at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO Religious change in Japanese Shinto. In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little AMERICA'S CHANGING RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE The religious landscape of the United States is changing dramatically. Americans must consider what it means to govern a nation of religious minorities. We interview Dr. Robert P. Jones, the founding CEO of the Public Religion Research Institute. Jones discusses findings from PRRI's national surveys on religion and public life, many of which are represented in the American Values Atlas. RELIGION, THRESKEIA (ΘΡΗΣΚΕΊΑ) AND THE RETURN OF THE Ever since the publication of Wilfred Cantwell Smith’s The Meaning and End of Religion (1962), various scholars have engaged themselves with the issue of religion not being “a universally applicable first-order concept that matches a native discursive field in every culture across time and throughout history” (Nongbri 2013, p. 158).Nongbri’s approach to this issue is influenced by the THE (DE-)MYSTIFICATION OF CHRISTIAN ORIGINS In her response to our episode on Ancient Christian Origins with Bill Arnal, Michelle Sdao cites the risks of "methodolatry" and highlights emerging scholarship and methods on the edges of the disciplinary divides among religious studies, textual criticism, New Testament Studies and other allied fields. ARLENE SANCHEZ WALSH Arlene M. Sánchez-Walsh, Ph.D., is a professor of religious studies and the author of the award-winning book Latino Pentecostal Identity: Evangelical Faith, Self, and Society (Columbia University Press, 2003).She has authored more than a dozen articles and book chapters on the subject of Latino/a Pentecostalism, and has served as a media expert for outlets such as the New York Times, the Wall THOMAS J. COLEMAN III Thomas J. Coleman III graduated with a Master of Science in Psychology in August 2016 from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Currently, he is continuing his education as a Psychology Ph.D. student at Coventry University, as part of the Brain, Belief, and Behaviour Laboratory. He is an assistant editor for the journals Secularism & Nonreligion, and Secular Studies, and former GraduateANGELA PUCA
Angela Puca. I was born in Naples (Italy) where I also studied (University of Naples ‘L’orientale’) and achieved my BA and MA degrees in Philosophy. I’m now a Graduate Teaching Assistant at Leeds Trinity University and a Doctoral Researcher in the Department of Religious Studies at University of Leeds/Leeds Trinity University.LIAM SUTHERLAND
Liam Sutherland. Liam Sutherland is a first year PhD student at the University of Edinburgh looking at religious communities and constructions of Scottish national identity, although not leaving behind his Masters obsession with E.B. Tylor and the definition of religion. He has written and recorded a review of Graham Harvey’sFood, Sex and
MEREDITH MCGUIRE
Meredith McGuire. Dr. McGuire is Professor of Sociology and Anthropology at Trinity University, San Antonio, Texas, now retired. She is the former President of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion and the Association for the Sociology of Religion. She is also a specialist in environmental sociology and in sociology ofhealth and
MARION BOWMAN
Marion Bowman. Dr Marion Bowman is Senior Lecturer in the Religious Studies department at the Open University, Vice President of the European Association for the Study of Religions, a former president of the BASR and of the Folklore Society, and serves on theSAKIN ÖZISIK
Sakin Özisik. Sakin Özisik is scientific assistant at the faculty of health sciences at Bielefeld University. He studied Islamic theology and history of religions. He was an exchange student at Bielefeld university`s department of protestant theology and completed his doctoral study with the supervisorship of HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies. WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Ann Taves joins us to discuss her work arguing that we should study religions under the broader rubric of "worldviews" and "ways of life". This ambitious interdisciplinary project aims to place a micro-level analysis of individual worldviews into a broader evolutionaryperspective.
THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
AUTISM, RELIGION, AND IMAGINATION spectrum represent a unique population of study in the cognitive and psychological sciences of religion. Because religious cognition stems from normal social-cognitive capacities, which are altered for individuals on the spectrum, researchers also expect variation in how they think about supernatural agents. THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is based upon,INGVILD GILHUS
podcast "Unruly Angels": An Interview with Ingvild Gilhus. Angels seem always to break boundaries. Neither human nor god, male nor female, whether Christian or otherwise, angels seem always to have functioned as representatives of an unruly popular religious impulse which seems to sit just below the elite constructions with which the study of religion has traditionally concerned itself.JONATHAN TUCKETT
Dr Jonathan Tuckett is now an independent researcher, having just finished teaching fellowships with the Universities of Stirling and Edinburgh. He is a specialist in Theory and Method, and philosophical phenomenology. He graduated with his PhD from the University of Stirling in 2015 with a thesis critiquing our idea of "social science" in the study of religion. RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little attention from scholars. In thisweek's podcast,
ANGELA PUCA
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Religious Studies Project or our sponsors.DENISE CUSH
Denise Cush (BA Oxford, MA Lancaster, PhD Warwick) is currently Professor of Religion and Education at Bath Spa University. She has taught Religious Studies in a sixth form college, trained both primary and secondary teachers in religious education, and taught Study of Religions at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. HOME | THE RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECTABOUT THE RSPOPPORTUNITIESSUPPORT USRESOURCESHIGHER EDUCATIONSPIRITUALITY The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organization devoted to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporary study of religion.. Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise in religious studies. WORLDVIEWS AND WAYS OF LIFE Ann Taves joins us to discuss her work arguing that we should study religions under the broader rubric of "worldviews" and "ways of life". This ambitious interdisciplinary project aims to place a micro-level analysis of individual worldviews into a broader evolutionaryperspective.
THE WORLD RELIGIONS PARADIGM There can’t be many listeners who haven’t come into contact with the “World Religions” paradigm, either through the podcast or in their own undergraduate studies. Although, C. P. Tiele defined “World Religions” as those which had spread outside of their original cultural context, today the term is taken to mean the “BigFive”.
AUTISM, RELIGION, AND IMAGINATION spectrum represent a unique population of study in the cognitive and psychological sciences of religion. Because religious cognition stems from normal social-cognitive capacities, which are altered for individuals on the spectrum, researchers also expect variation in how they think about supernatural agents. THE BRETHREN IN SCOTLAND Gardenstoun is a fishing village in the North-East of Scotland with a population of only 700 and six churches, four of which are branches of the Plymouth Brethren. Anthropology "at home" - within our own culture, rather than that of some exotic Other - undermines many of the assumptions that the study of religion is based upon,INGVILD GILHUS
podcast "Unruly Angels": An Interview with Ingvild Gilhus. Angels seem always to break boundaries. Neither human nor god, male nor female, whether Christian or otherwise, angels seem always to have functioned as representatives of an unruly popular religious impulse which seems to sit just below the elite constructions with which the study of religion has traditionally concerned itself.JONATHAN TUCKETT
Dr Jonathan Tuckett is now an independent researcher, having just finished teaching fellowships with the Universities of Stirling and Edinburgh. He is a specialist in Theory and Method, and philosophical phenomenology. He graduated with his PhD from the University of Stirling in 2015 with a thesis critiquing our idea of "social science" in the study of religion. RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN JAPANESE SHINTO In this week's podcast, Hans Van Eyghen sits down with Professor Michael Pye to discuss the various historical, political, and social factors that have impacted Japanese Shinto. Though Shinto is widely known as the indigenous religion of Japan, it is rarely discussed in detail and has attracted little attention from scholars. In thisweek's podcast,
ANGELA PUCA
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Religious Studies Project or our sponsors.DENISE CUSH
Denise Cush (BA Oxford, MA Lancaster, PhD Warwick) is currently Professor of Religion and Education at Bath Spa University. She has taught Religious Studies in a sixth form college, trained both primary and secondary teachers in religious education, and taught Study of Religions at undergraduate and postgraduate levels. ROUNDTABLE: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF RELIGIOUS STUDIES? Liam Sutherland is a Religious Studies Postgraduate student at Edinburgh University undertaking a Masters by Research, on the relevance of E.B Tylor for the contemporary theory of religion, defining religion and modern scholars with a ‘Neo-Tylorian’ influence or affinity. He is a native of Edinburgh where he also completed his undergraduate degree in 2009, producing a dissertationon
AMERICA'S CHANGING RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE The religious landscape of the United States is changing dramatically. Americans must consider what it means to govern a nation of religious minorities. We interview Dr. Robert P. Jones, the founding CEO of the Public Religion Research Institute. Jones discusses findings from PRRI's national surveys on religion and public life, many of which are represented in the American Values Atlas. ISLAM, POLITICS, AND IDENTITY: THE (IM)POSSIBILITY OF Is the Islamic state simply a reaction against the modern secular nation-state, or is there more to it? Join us as Noah Salomon answers this question among many more as he talks about his book For Love of the Prophet: An Ethnography of Sudan's Islamic State. STUDYING TANTRA FROM WITHIN AND WITHOUT Studying Tantra from Within and Without. Podcast with Douglas R. Brooks. Interviewed by Daniel Gorman Jr.. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock. Audio and transcript available at: Brooks – Studying Tantra from Within and Without 1.1 Daniel Gorman (DG): Professor Brooks, welcome to the Religious Studies Project.. Douglas Brooks (DB): Thanks for having me.. DG: Could you tell us, briefly, what drew RELIGION, THRESKEIA (ΘΡΗΣΚΕΊΑ) AND THE RETURN OF THE Ever since the publication of Wilfred Cantwell Smith’s The Meaning and End of Religion (1962), various scholars have engaged themselves with the issue of religion not being “a universally applicable first-order concept that matches a native discursive field in every culture across time and throughout history” (Nongbri 2013, p. 158).Nongbri’s approach to this issue is influenced by the ARLENE SANCHEZ WALSH Arlene M. Sánchez-Walsh, Ph.D., is a professor of religious studies and the author of the award-winning book Latino Pentecostal Identity: Evangelical Faith, Self, and Society (Columbia University Press, 2003).She has authored more than a dozen articles and book chapters on the subject of Latino/a Pentecostalism, and has served as a media expert for outlets such as the New York Times, the Wall RETHINKING NARRATIVES OF 'AMERICAN VALUES' IN THE US Jessica Cooperman writes that Stahl's work demonstrates how racism shapes religious institutions and argues that "it points to the necessity of re-examining American narratives of religious freedom through the analytical lenses of both race and gender."MARION BOWMAN
Marion’s Publications include Vernacular Religion in Everyday Life: Expressions of Belief (2012) co-edited with Ulo Valk; Beyond the New Age: Exploring Alternative Spiritualities (2000) co-edited with Steve Sutcliffe; and recently ‘”He’s My Best Friend”: Relationality, Materiality, and the Manipulation of Motherhood in Devotion to St Gerard Majella in Newfoundland’ in Terry Woo THOMAS J. COLEMAN III Thomas J. Coleman III graduated with a Master of Science in Psychology in August 2016 from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Currently, he is continuing his education as a Psychology Ph.D. student at Coventry University, as part of the Brain, Belief, and Behaviour Laboratory. He is an assistant editor for the journals Secularism & Nonreligion, and Secular Studies, and former GraduateDALE B. MARTIN
Dale Martin is Woolsey Professor of Religious Studies, Director of Graduate Studies at Yale University, specialising in New Testament and Christian Origins, including attention to social and cultural history of the Greco-Roman world.* Home
* About the RSP
* Opportunities
* Support Us
* Resources
__ Menu
* Home
* About the RSP
* Opportunities
* Support Us
* Resources
Twitter __
Youtube __
Facebook __
Linkedin __
Rss __
__ Search
Twitter __
Youtube __
Facebook __
Rss __
__ Search
* ABOUT
* CONTRIBUTE
* OPPORTUNITIES
* RESOURCES__
* podcasts
* responses
* playlists
__ Menu
* ABOUT
* CONTRIBUTE
* OPPORTUNITIES
* RESOURCES__
* podcasts
* responses
* playlists
__ Search
* ABOUT
* CONTRIBUTE
* OPPORTUNITIES
* RESOURCES__
* podcasts
* responses
* playlists
__ Menu
* ABOUT
* CONTRIBUTE
* OPPORTUNITIES
* RESOURCES__
* podcasts
* responses
* playlists
> Exploring contemporary issues in the > academic study of religion through podcasts. The RELIGIOUS STUDIES PROJECT is a Scottish Charitable IncorporatedOrganization (SCIO)
devoted
to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporarystudy of religion.
Since 2012, our weekly podcast and written response essays have featured hundreds of scholars sharing their research and expertise inreligious studies.
__ Use our resources including new playlists to help you pursue some of the major questions in religious studies. __ Explore our archive of 300 podcasts. Listen or read transcripts. Go deeper with scholarly responses. __ Make a donation to support our open-access work.OUR LATEST PODCAST
The Religious Studies Project Podcasts and Resources on the Contemporary Social-Scientific Study ofReligion
Listen On Apple Podcast Listen On Google PodcastListen On Spotify
Show Menu
PODCAST SUBSCRIPTION MENU* Visit Website
* RSS Feed
Audio Player
The Religious Studies Project On Human Remains | Discourse! May 2021 (with video) Change Playback Rate1x
* 0.5
* 1
* 1.2
* 1.5
* 2
Go to previous episodeSkip Backward
Play Pause
Jump Forward
Skip to next episodeDownload
Share This Episode
* Download
00:00
00:00
00:00
On Human Remains | Discourse! May 2021 (with video) It’s a bumper episode of Discourse this month, as four (count them, four!) RSP editors sit down to discuss how the media are talking about religion this month. First, Breann Fallon,
David G. Robertson
,
and Dave McConeghy
introduce Andie Alexanderas
the RSP’s new Managing Editor, before we discuss mass COVIDcremations in India
, a
new synagogue at the site of a Nazi massacre in the Ukraine , protests over a new telescope in Hawaiʻi,
and the scandal over the remains of the victims of the MOVE bombing inPhiladelphia
.
It’s not our most lighthearted episode. WATCH THE VIDEO OF THE EPISODE: RELEVANT LINKS FOR THE DISCUSSION * “‘This is huge’: black liberationist speaks out after her 40years in prison
,”
_The Guardian_
* “About MOVE ,” _On a Move_ * Documentary on the MOVE Bombing, _Let the Fire Burn_ * “City of Philadelphia should thoroughly investigate the MOVE remains’ broken chain of custody | Opinion,”
_The Philadelphia Inquirer_ * Babyn Yar Synagogue * “Why the world must witness pictures of India’s mass Covid-19cremations
,”
_Vox_
* “Why Native Hawaiians are fighting to protect Maunakea from atelescope
,”
_Vox_
* “Why Are Native Hawaiians Protesting Against a Telescope?”
_New York Times_
Search Episodes Clear Search On Human Remains | Discourse! May 2021 (with video)June 1, 2021
Masculinity and the Body Languages of CatholicismMay 24, 2021
Conspiracy Theories, Public Rhetoric, and PowerMay 17, 2021
Manifestos and the Academic Study of ReligionMay 10, 2021
Power and Diversity in 4th Century Martyr ShrinesMay 3, 2021
Load More
Search Results placeholderPrevious Episode
Show Episodes List
Next Episode
Listen On Apple Podcast Listen On Google PodcastListen On Spotify
Show Menu
PODCAST SUBSCRIPTION MENU* Visit Website
* RSS Feed
Show Podcast Information ON HUMAN REMAINS | DISCOURSE! MAY 2021 (WITH VIDEO) It's a bumper episode of Discourse this month, as four (count them, four!) RSP editors sit down to discuss how the media are talking about religion this month. First, Breann, David, and Dave introduce Andie as the RSP's new Managing Editor, before we discuss mass COVID cremations in India, a new synagogue at the site of a Nazi massacre in the Ukraine, protests over a new telescope in Hawaiʻi, and the scandal over the remains of the victims of the MOVE bombing in Philadelphia. It's not our most lighthearted episode.Read More
__ Burial Sites
-
Commodification
- Death
- Discourse
- Ritual
MORE PODCASTS
BROWSE OUR EPISODE ARCHIVE 300+ episodes about religious studiesClick Here
Explore
EXPLORE POPULAR TAGSacademia
America
American religion
anthropology
Atheism
belief
Buddhism
christianity
cognitive
science of religion
colonialism
Critical theory
Definition
Discourse
Ethics
ethnography
europe gender
Higher Education
History
Identity Islam
Japan
Material Religion
media
methodology
methods
New Religious
Movements
Nonreligion
pedagogy
Politics
Popular Culture
Power
Psychology of
Religion
Psychology of ReligionRace religion and
politics
Religious Studies
Ritual Sacred
Secularism
Secularization
Sociology of Religion Sociology of ReligionSpirituality
theory
MASCULINITY AND THE BODY LANGUAGES OF CATHOLICISM From counting money to lifting four-ton statues, Italian Catholics in Brooklyn have a robust, embodied language to express their masculine devotion says Prof. Maldonado-Estrada in this interview about her new book, Lifeblood of the Parish.Read More »
CONSPIRACY THEORIES, PUBLIC RHETORIC, AND POWER “You don’t go to religious studies conferences with the title of the conference being ‘The Problem with Religion,'” so why do we use that rhetoric to talk about conspiracy theories? Listen in to Andie Alexander’s interview with RSP co-founder David G. Robertsonto find out why!
Read More »
MANIFESTOS AND THE ACADEMIC STUDY OF RELIGION What are manifestos? How are they employed in society? What can the academic study of religion offer to help understand them? The faculty and students in the Dept. of Studies in Religion at the University of Sydney have a few thoughts on that. Tune in to learn more!Read More »
POWER AND DIVERSITY IN 4TH CENTURY MARTYR SHRINES How were 4th century Christian martyr shrines locations for the negotiation of power and diversity? In this interview, Nathaniel Morehouse explains the contested nature of these shrines.Read More »
OUR LATEST RESPONSE
RETHINKING NARRATIVES OF ‘AMERICAN VALUES’ IN THE US MILITARY Jessica Cooperman writes that Stahl's work demonstrates how racism shapes religious institutions and argues that "it points to the necessity of re-examining American narratives of religious freedom through the analytical lenses of both race and gender."Read More
__ Categorization
- gender
- narrative
- Race
- Religion
- US Military
BROWSE OUR ARCHIVE OF RESPONSES Sharing scholarly dialogue about our podcastsClick Here
Explore
EARLIER RESPONSES
SOVEREIGNTY, HISTORICAL MEMORY, AND THE IMPORTANCE OF ALIITEWORLDVIEWS
May 28, 2021
“The processes by which the Aliites imagine their history reveal much about how state sanctioned ideas and institutions gain and maintain seeming natural validity,” writes Chernoh Sesay, Jr., in response to our interview with Spencer Dew on the Aliites.Read More »
IS CLIMATE DENIAL ‘BAD RELIGION’?May 21, 2021
“Climate change demands intellectual adaptation by scholars of all disciplines, religious studies included,” writes Evan Berry in response to our interview with Robin Veldman on evangelical oppositionto climate action.
Read More »
THE PROBLEM OF CONTEXTUALITY IN GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL DISCOURSESMay 14, 2021
Decolonizing ecological studies or environmental humanities forces us to “return to the problem of context,” writes Rosemary Hancock in this response to our interview with Anna Gade.Read More »
MEET RECENT FIRST-TIME CONTRIBUTORSBORIS BRIONES SOTO
NOAH SALOMON
CHERNOH SESAY, JR.
JESSICA COOPERMAN
ALLISON ISIDORE
EVAN BERRY
SPONSORED BY
ABOUT THE RSP
* Our Mission
* History
* Constitution
* Team
* Contributors
OUR WORK
* Podcasts
* Playlists
* Essays
* Opportunities
* Resources
SUPPORT US
* Become a Patron
* Donate
* Join the team
CONTACT US
* editors@religiousstudiesproject.com GET PODCASTS, RESPONSES & OPPORTUNITIES BY EMAIL The RSP straight to your inbox!Sign up below.
Subscribe
The Religious Studies Project is a Scottish Charitable IncorporatedOrganization (SCIO)
devoted
to producing engaging and accessible resources for the contemporarystudy of religion.
Twitter __
Youtube __
Facebook-f __
Rss __
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial- NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. The views expressed in podcasts, features and responses are the views of the individual contributors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Religious Studies Project or our sponsors. The Religious Studies Project is produced by the Religious Studies Project Association (SCIO), a Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation (charity number SC047750).Details
Copyright © 2024 ArchiveBay.com. All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | DMCA | 2021 | Feedback | Advertising | RSS 2.0