On the Ethics of Studying Hate Speech: The Case of Medieval Arabic Polemics

Haines 39/Zoom

"Hate speech" is as contested as it is distressingly common in contemporary public discourse. It poses dilemmas that extend beyond political and legal debates about how it should be regulated. For professional historians - particularly scholars of religion in its historical dimensions - it also raises questions of classification and academic ethics. Is "hate speech"...

Study of Religion Student and Faculty Social

Kaplan 365

Please join the Study of Religion IDP on Thursday, February 6th, for a Student and Faculty Social! Refreshments will be served.   RSVP Below:  

Conscripting Bodies, Constructing Authority: The Museum of the Bible on the National Mall

Haines 39/Zoom

The Museum of the Bible on D.C.'s national mall was founded and funded by the billionaire owners of Hobby Lobby. From the start, the museum has been controversial in the national press and in the field of biblical studies. Through a close examination of the museum’s exhibits and its collection of archaeological and historical objects,...

Christianity, Race, Slavery: New Considerations for the Life Sciences

Haines 39/Zoom

The idea that so-called races reflect inherent biological differences between social groups has been a prominent aspect of Western thought since at least the Enlightenment. While there have been moments of refuting this way of thinking, fixed biological conceptions of race haunt new genetic technologies, where race is thought to be measurable at the molecular...

Le Monde Invisible: Art, Death and Vodou in Urban Haiti

Royce 243

In Haitian Vodou, one lwa (deity) is widely celebrated as the spirit of pèp la (the people). The lwa Gede is a trickster who resides over death and sexual regeneration. He embodies transgressive masculinity and carnivalesque freedom. This presentation explores how such a rogue became a national sign. It traces Gede’s rise in popularity to...

Canceled! Halakhah: The Rabbinic Idea of Law Canceled!

Royce 306

Canceled! Though typically translated as “Jewish law,” the term halakhah is not an easy match for what is usually thought of as law. This is because the rabbinic legal system has rarely wielded the political power to enforce its many detailed rules, nor has it ever been the law of any state. Even more idiosyncratically,...

Thinking About Religion: Langston Hughes and a Literary Approach to the Study of African American Religious History

Haines 39/Zoom

African American religious history has largely been written from the perspective of believers and belief. But what about the religious perspectives of skeptics, the doubtful, and unbelievers? What value can be gained from explorations of their views? Wallace Best answers these questions with a historical-literary analysis of the work of Harlem Renaissance writer, Langston Hughes....

Religion(s) in State(s) of Crisis

Zoom

Scholars of religion are not in the fortune telling business, but the comparative study of religion does provide multiple examples of how social, economic, and political crises have contributed to the transformation of cultural and religious systems in the past and can help us understand and anticipate how contemporary crises might be navigated in the...

Take Shelter: Teaching and Learning about the End Times, from Late Antiquity to Our Times

Zoom

In Jeff Nichols’s 2011 film Take Shelter, Michael Shannon portrays Curtis, a blue-collar family man who is haunted by terrifying prophetic visions of the end of the world. As he becomes obsessed with building a shelter in his backyard, convinced a storm is coming, Curtis’s relationships suffer and his life falls apart. How are we...