Arabs and Muslims in the Media: Race and Representation after 9/11

Arabs and Muslims in the Media
Race and Representation after 9/11

Evelyn Alsultany

http://nyupress.org/books/book-details.aspx?bookId=4103#.UQ_FVduBXMg

“A major, skillfully constructed, must-read book. It should be required reading for all Americans who care about and seek to eradicate injurious stereotypes of the evil Cultural Other.”
―Jack G. Shaheen, author of Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People

“This important book makes a significant contribution to the burgeoning scholarship on the post-9/11 cultural and political history of the United States. Drawing on a rich understanding of the representations of Arabs and Muslims in the last century, Alsultany helps us to understand what has changed, and what has not, in the last ten years.”
―Melani McAlister, George Washington University

After 9/11, there was an increase in both the incidence of hate crimes and government policies that targeted Arabs and Muslims and the proliferation of sympathetic portrayals of Arabs and Muslims in the U.S. media. Arabs and Muslims in the Media examines this paradox and investigates the increase of sympathetic images of “the enemy” during the War on Terror. Evelyn Alsultany explains that a new standard in racial and cultural representations emerged out of the multicultural movement of the 1990s that involves balancing a negative representation with a positive one, what she refers to as “simplified complex representations.” This has meant that if the storyline of a TV drama or film represents an Arab or Muslim as a terrorist, then the storyline also includes a “positive” representation of an Arab, Muslim, Arab American, or Muslim American to offset the potential stereotype. Analyzing how TV dramas such as West Wing, The Practice, 24, Threat Matrix, The Agency, Navy NCIS and Sleeper Cell have represented Arabs, Muslims, Arab Americans, and Muslim Americans during the War on Terror, this book demonstrates how more diverse representations do not in themselves solve the problem of racial stereotyping and how even seemingly positive images can produce meanings that can justify exclusion and inequality.
New York University Press
October 2012 239pp 9780814707326 PB £14.99

RC22 Call for Sessions, 2014 Congress

Call for RC22 Sessions at the ISA World Congress 2014

The Sociology of Religion
The RC22 Program Coordinators (Esmeralda Sanchez and Jim Spickard) invite session proposals for the 2014 ISA World Congress. We will be allowed 22 sessions, so we need your help. Please send us session proposals by March 7th, 2013. Send your proposals to both of us at:
· Esmeralda Sanchez: emysanchez2001@yahoo.com
· Jim Spickard: jim_spickard@redlands.edu

Your proposals should include:

· A proposed session title.

· The type of session you are proposing.
E.g.:
o An open session for which you are seeking papers
o A completely organized session, for which you invite specific participants.
o An author-meets-critics session.
o A round-table session.
o Etc. (See the list below).

· A 100-200 word abstract describing your session.

· A short biography of the proposed session organisers.

Session Organisers and Chairs are expected to be RC22 members.
Please do not send us paper abstracts now. Once we have formed sessions, we will send out a general call for papers to fill those sessions. First, however, we have to have sessions to fill.

Conference Theme
The overall ISA theme is “Facing an unequal world: Challenges for global sociology.”
The RC22 theme is “Religion and Social Inequality”.
We especially welcome session proposals that speak to these themes creatively. In addition, we are open to other topics that our RC typically addresses: religion and youth, religious identity, current religious trends, religion and ethnicity, religion and international development identity, new and old theory in the sociology of religion, and so on. We also welcome proposals on topics of current interest, especially those that speak to recent world events.

Types of Sessions
We welcome proposals for various types of sessions. Here are some possibilities:
1. Sessions that specify a topic area: these are open for individual paper presenters who will be sought with a later open Call for Papers.
2. Complete sessions with a fixed collection of papers dealing with a given topic. Those suggesting these sessions will submit a list of presenters, including a discussant if possible, who have agreed to participate.
3. Creative modes of presentation, such as:
a. Panels and roundtables
b. Moderated debates
c. Interactive workshops
d. Author-Meets-Critics
e. Film events
f. Etc.

We encourage session coordinators to create diverse panels and to include papers that cross national and other categorical boundaries. Some sessions can be nation-based or regionally specific, but we encourage comparative, cross-cultural sessions representing our Research Committee’s diversity.

Session organization
We expect those who propose sessions to coordinate them and possibly serve a Session Chair, though you should consult the ISA rule regarding “limited appearance in the Program,” below). You should also:
· Promote the session to the RC membership (and others)
· Select papers from among those submitted to you.
· Communicate regularly with the Program Coordinators, especially about program changes. A
ll presenters, including the session coordinators and chairs, are expected to register and pay to attend the conference in accordance with the general registration policy.

Session structure
The language of the conference is English, but coordinators/presenters can arrange for translators or other ways of supporting linguistic diversity. The ISA has posted a list of suggestions at:
http://www.isa-sociology.org/congress2014/guidelines-program-coordinators-and-session-organizers.htm.
Each session will be 110 minutes. This leaves time for 3 to 4 presenters, plus the chair and a discussant. You should also accept 3-4 “distributed papers”, whose authors can step in to present if one or more of your regular presenters has to drop out at the last moment.

ISA Rules:
1. “Limited appearance in the Program: Participants may be listed no more than twice in the Program. This includes all types of participation – except being listed as Program Coordinator or Session Organizer. Program Coordinators and Session Organizers can organize a maximum of two sessions where their names will be additionally listed in the program.”
2. “A ‘participant’ is anyone listed as an author, co-author, plenary speaker, roundtable presenter, poster presenter, panelist, critic, discussant, session (co)chair, or any similar substantive role in the program. 
A participant cannot present and chair in the same session.”

UN APPEL A LA CANDIDATURE POUR BOURSES D’ETUDES SUISSES ( 2013-2014 )

PAR L’INTERMEDIAIRE DE LA COMMISSION FEDERALE DES BOURSES ETRANGERES (CFBE-SUISSE) , LE SECRETARIAT D’ETAT A L’ETUDE ET A LA RECHERCHE DE LA CONFEDERATION LANCE UN APPEL A LA CANDIDATURE POUR 500 BOURSES D’ETUDES SUISSES AU TITRE DE L’ANNEE ACADEMIQUE 2013 – 2014

CES BOURSES SONT DESTINEES AUX RESSORTISSANTS DES PAYS
DE LA CATEGORIE A
(pays industrialisés européens, et extra-européens)
ET CEUX DES PAYS DE LA CATEGORIE B
( pays en developpement, du tiers monde et extra – européens).

ELLES DOIVENT LEUR PERMETTRE DE POURSUIVRE LEURS ETUDES, DE PARFAIRE LEURS CONNAISSANCES POUR LES TRAVAUX DE RECHERCHES DANS LES DOMAINES AUXQUELS LES UNIVERSITES SUISSES ACCORDENT UNE ATTENTION PARTICULIERE.

SPECIFICITE DE LA BOURSE
– PAR L’OCTROI DES 500 BOURSES ETUDES EMPLOIS, LA CONFEDERATION SUISSE ENTEND FACILITER L’IMMIGRATION AUX PERSONNES DESIREUSES DE POURSUIVRE LEURS ETUDES ET D’OBTENIR DES DIPLOMES D’ETAT SUISSE.
– LES CANDIDATS RETENUS AU TERME DE LA SELECTION DE CANDIDATURES SERONT INSERES OUTRE LEUR ETUDE DANS LES SECTEURS SENSIBLES DE LA VIE ECONOMIQUE ET SOCIALE DE LA SUISSE : ( santé, droit, diplomatie, communication,finance, énergie, industrie, transport, agriculture..).

CETTE OPTION DE LA CONFEDERATION SUISSE VISE A DONNER UNE APTITUDE PROFESSIONNELLE AUX BOURSIERS POUR POUVOIR TRAVAILLER S’ILS LE DESIRENT EN SUISSE A LA FIN DE LEUR FORMATION.

DUREE DE LA BOURSE
LES BOURSES COUVRENT LA PERIODE D’UN CYCLE DE FORMATION OU AU MAXIMUM SIX (06) SEMESTRES .

FRAIS DE VOYAGE
LES BILLETS D’AVION ALLER-RETOUR ( PAYS DE PROVENANCE -GENEVE) , SONT PRIS EN CHARGE PAR LA COMMISSION FEDERALE DES BOURSES ETRANGERES.

CONDITIONS PREALABLES A LA CANDIDATURE
EN REGLE GENERALE, LES CANDIDATS AUX BOURSES ETRANGERES SUISSES DOIVENT:
– AVOIR AU MAXIMUM 18 ANS a 45 ANS ;
– COMPRENDRE ET PARLER CORRECTEMENT L’UNE DES LANGUES D’ENSEIGNEMENT EN SUISSE ( ESPAGNOL, ALLEMAND, ANGLAIS, ITALIE, FRANCAIS) ;
– AVOIR UN DIPLOME EQUIVALENT AU BREVET D’ETUDE DE PREMIER CYCLE D’ENSEIGNEMENT, AU BACCALAUREAT OU AU BREVET D’APTITUDE PROFESSIONELLE DES PAYS DE L’UNION EUROPEENNE.

PROCEDURE DE SELECTION
– RETIRER AUPRES DE LA COMMISSION FEDERALE DES BOURSES ETRANGERES SUISSEs(CFBES)LE FORMULAIRE DE DEMANDE DE BOURSE VIA

A LEUR ADRESSE EMAIL: cfbesavis@ovi.com

– REMPLIR ET ENVOYER PAR PIECE JOINTE LE FORMULAIRE.

– LA COMMISSION FEDERALE DES BOURSES ETRANGERES FERA ETUDIER VOTRE DOSSIER PAR LA REPRESENTATION SUISSE DELEGUEE DE VOTRE ZONE ET CATEGORIE DE PAYS.

– LES CANDIDATS RETENUS RECEVRONT UNE ATTESTATION DU SECRETARIAT D’ETAT A L’ETUDE ET A LA RECHERCHE POUR NOTIFICATION DE LA BOURSE.

LES CANDIDATS DESIREUX DE PARTICIPER AUX BOURSES D’ETUDES 2013 – 2014 DOIVENT RETIRER LEUR FORMULAIRE A REMPLIR AUPRES DE LA CFBES:

A LEUR ADRESSE EMAIL: cfbesavis@ovi.com

DATE LIMITE DE DEPÖT DES DOSSIERS
LA DATE LIMITE DE DEPÖT DES DOSSIERS EST PREVUE POUR LE 15 Mars 2013. CEPENDANT, LA COMMISSION FEDERALE DES BOURSES ETRANGERES SUISSEs(CFBES) SE RESERVE LE DROIT DE CLOTURER L’OCTROI DES BOURSES A CONCURRENCE DES BOURSES DISPONIBLES.

Being a Pious in the Age of Facebook, YouTube and Twitter

Call for Paper
“Being a Pious in the Age of Facebook, Youtube and Twitter”
Symposium, April 18-19th, 2013, KU Leuven

With
Kelly Askew (UMichigan)
Charles Hirschkind (UCBerkeley)
Dorothea Schulz (University of Cologne)

September 2012, YouTube postings of the film “Innocence of Muslims” sparked manifestations of indignation all over the world, many African cities included. While at times, the demonstrations were peaceful, Reuters mentioned that Shi’ite Muslims in the Nigerian town of Katsina burned U.S., French and Israeli flags, and a religious leader called for protests to continue until the makers of the film and cartoons are punished. The Islamic Movement in Nigeria organized a protest march in Kano, northern Nigeria, in which thousands marched peacefully. On 21 September 2012, thousands of Muslims rallied through the roads after Friday prayers in Dar es Salaam where different speeches, which condemned the film, were provided. Men, women children and even elders, together made a peaceful march. Elsewhere, like in Cairo, riots occurred and people were killed. The reactions did not only reflect a concern about respect for Islam communities. Rather, the protests themselves became moments in which local state actions gained meaning as well. Authorities in Cairo, for example, are said to have ordered the arrest of seven US-based Egyptian Coptic Christians for their alleged involvement in the anti-Islam video. In Bamako, on the other hand, protests were scheduled to take place in front of the American Embassy, but in the end were canceled. According to rumors, protesters feared that violent interventions by the national army would offer the government the occasion to mobilize respect for and support of “the US”.

These events trigger questions concerning the imagination of the West; the representation of Islam and religion in general; and the dialectics between politics and social media. We want to invite three prominent anthropologists who have done extensive fieldwork on media and popular forms of mobilization in three different African countries where Islam is important: Egypt, Mali and Tanzania.

During a roundtable session, the scholars will address the two following questions:
1. “What does it mean to be Muslim and pious in the global media age?” How do media representations, media practice and media use influence piety, faith and the public manifestation of one’s religious identity?
2. And, how do the public manifestations (sometimes violent, sometimes peaceful) by believers and triggered by media influence their daily interactions with other religious practitioners? How are these mobilizations inscribed within local conversations with other religious groups? And, how are these also transformed by inter-religious encounters?
3. What kinds of moral communities are being created throughout the media? To which extent do new media provide a platform for shaping pious self-understandings and can religious groups draw on these new technologies to establish and create new collectivities or counter-publics?

From Representation to Mobilization

Anthropologists are turning more and more to the significance of social media. In particular, compelling research deals with how new media platforms impact lifestyles, construct “imagined communities” or ethical communities, and shape agency, fantasies and expectations.

Influential scholars that have set the theoretical background for an anthropology of social media are Benedict Anderson and Arjun Appadurai. In Imagined Communities (1983), Anderson analysed how the formation of nations depend to a high degree on innovations in communication technologies, in particular the print press. By reading journal articles that discuss issues of “common interest”, “national publics” came into being. Newspapers were written in a language its readers shared, and enabled the emergence of a national consciousness.

Apart from the formation of national groups, media of all kinds are fundamental in the creation and consolidation of religious groups and the mobilization of transcendental powers as well (Meyer and Moors 2006). Challenging for students of contemporary society is that innovations in communication technologies such as radio, television and, especially social media, give rise to various kinds of new communities and publics, new forms of attachment and belonging, and novel ways of experimenting with collective and private identities. In particular, social media bring to the fore the participatory element of “the public”. Writing comments on e-platforms, sharing images and photo-shopping them, blogging or updating one’s online status are practices that bring out the agency of members of these new publics, and that can induce mass actions.

Appadurai’s elaboration (1990) on the mediascape draws our attention to the trajectories of print and electronic media. These travel along fluid and irregular “global cultural flows”, which cross local and global boundaries, and produce new realities. Probably best known about the contemporary Muslim mediascape, because of the widespread media coverage, are the Mohammed cartoons published in Danish newspapers and, recently, the anti-Islam film produced in the US. These images, originating in Western “Christian” societies but immediately dialoguing with Islam leaders and practices of faith mobilize feelings of anger, frustration, hatred and disgust; they inspire violent confrontations and peaceful dialogues; they force Muslims and non-Muslims to reflect about the worlds they inhabit, and to take position. These forms of mobilization may be new; yet, they also stand in local histories of community formation, public dialogue and registers of faith expression.

We are inviting three high-profile anthropologists who work on African urban spaces and who address the interaction between Islam and media or popular culture and political mobilization in societies where Islam reigns hegemonic. They will situate local engagements with global images and address political mobilization, connectivity in local, transnational and global networks, and social and religious subjectivities within local communicative spaces.

Invited speakers:

. Prof. Dr. Kelly Askew, associate Professor at the University of Michigan (USA)
Kelly Askew has pursued extensive fieldwork in East Africa along the Swahili Coast of Tanzania and Kenya on topics relating to music and politics, media, performance, nationalism, socialism, and postsocialism. In addition to academic work, she is actively involved in film and television production, having worked in various capacities on two feature films and a number of documentary films. Her publications include two edited volumes, African Postsocialisms (coedited with M. Anne Pitcher, Edinburgh University Press, 2006) and The Anthropology of Media: A Reader (co-edited with Richard R. Wilk, Blackwell Publishers, 2002), articles on topics ranging from nationalism to gender relations to Hollywood film production, and a book on music and politics in Tanzania entitled Performing the Nation: Swahili Music and Cultural Production in Tanzania (University of Chicago Press, 2002).

. Prof. Dr. Charles Hirschkind, associate professor at the University of California, Berkeley (USA)
Charles Hirschkind’s research interests concern religious practice, media technologies, and emergent forms of political community in the Middle East, North America, and Europe. Taking contemporary developments within the traditions of Islam as his primary focus, he has explored how various religious practices and institutions have been revised and renewed both by modern norms of social and political life, and by the styles of consumption and culture linked to global mass media practices. His first book, The Ethical Soundscape: Cassette Sermons and Islamic Counterpublics (Columbia 2006), explores how a popular Islamic media form-the cassette sermon-has profoundly transformed the political geography of the Middle East over the last three decades. Also see his article”New Media and Political Dissent in Egypt,” Revista de Dialectologia y Tradiciones Populares 65, 1 (2010): 137-153, in which he situates the Tahrir manifestations within a longer history of political mobilization and transformations in the Cairene public sphere.

. Prof. Dr. Dorothea Schulz, professor at the University of Cologne(Germany)
Dorothea Schulz’ research, publications, and teaching are centered on the anthropology of religion, political anthropology, Islam in Africa, gender studies, media studies, and public culture. She has extensive field research experience in West Africa, particularly in urban and rural Mali and has recently embarked on a new research project in Eastern Uganda that deals with Muslim politics of education as well as with intra-Muslim debate over burial rituals and proper religious practice. Her new book Muslims and New Media in West Africa: Pathways to God (Indiana University Press, 2011) analyzes Muslim revivalist groups in Mali that draw inspiration from transnational trends of Muslim moral reform and promote a relatively new conception of publicly enacted religiosity (significantly displayed in feminized signs of piety).

Call for Papers
We are inviting doctoral and postdoctoral researchers who work on the topics of Islam, religion and/or social media. Interested participants are invited to submit a short abstract of their work (maximum 250 words) and write a short resume about themselves and the reason why they want to participate to this workshop. They should also indicate how their work connects with any of the invited speakers. Nine applicants will be selected to present their ongoing work in PhD seminars, while other applicants will be invited to participate to the discussions and the conference at Leuven.

Applications should not exceed 1000 words and should be sent to Leuvenconference2013@gmail.com by February 10th, 2012. Acceptances will be notified by the end of February.
Organising commitee:
Katrien Pype (IARA – KU Leuven)
Nadia Fadil (IMMRC – KU Leuven)
Jori De Coster (IMMRC – KU Leuven)
Sponsored by IARA (www.iara.be), IMMRC (www.immrc.be) & Gülen Chair for Intercultural Studies (KU Leuven) _________________________________________

Religions and Social Innovation

Religions and Social Innovation
An International Conference at the University of St. Michael’s College, Toronto, Canada
27-29 October 2013

We are seeking proposals for papers and poster sessions that highlight the various ways that religious traditions and religiously-inspired movements have served and continue to serve as forces for social innovation. We are seeking proposals from scholars, practitioners, activists and leaders of Non-Governmental Organizations and other social initiatives. We welcome any proposal exploring the contribution of religiously-affiliated or religiously-inspired organizations, movements or initiatives in any area of social innovation.

The full CFP, including specifications for proposals, is available here:
http://stmikes.utoronto.ca/doc/callForPapers_w_logo.pdf

Because this Call is directed to different kinds of participants, who are bound by different schedules, we will be accepting proposals for paper and poster sessions in two rounds.

*To be considered in the first round of adjudication, proposals must be submitted no later than 15 February 2013.
*To be considered in the second round of adjudication, proposals must be submitted no later than 3 May 2013.
For more information, please download the full CFP (http://stmikes.utoronto.ca/doc/callForPapers_w_logo.pdf) or contact Monica Phonsavatdy, m.phonsavatdy@utoronto.ca, phone: 416.926.7256, or 416.926.1300×3306.

Power/Religion: A Revanche of Reaction or a Metaphor of Revolution?

Call for Papers
Power/Religion: A Revanche of Reaction or a Metaphor of Revolution?

Venues: Helsinki (University of Helsinki) St Petersburg (European University at St Petersburg and Russian Christian Academy for Humanities)
Date: September 10–15, 2013

Paper proposals due May 1, 2013
After a short-lived belief in the secularization of societies, religion has returned to the political arena with a vengeance. It is one of the most controversial but also determining political issues in today’s world. The majority of contemporary wars and terrorist attacks are religiously laden. The age of theocracies is by no means over. European secular countries are trying to tackle with the issue of religious symbols in the public sphere. Religious words such as blasphemy have reappeared in political vocabulary. While the Lutheran State-Church is reduced to insignificance, in Orthodox countries the Church and the State have entered into a
mutual partnership legitimizing each other’s power claims against secular reformists. Overtly secular intellectuals in the West have turned to religious discourses in their quest for tools of cultural and political criticism in order to fight capitalism and neoliberal hegemony. Not Marx or Lenin but the Apostle Paul and Thomas Müntzer are leading revolutionary figures today.

But is religion a reactionary force or does it involve revolutionary potentiality? Or is religion, particularly the Abrahamic religions, fundamentally twofold, originally based on a revolutionary event but developed into a power system of the Church. Or is the very power of the Church based on the fidelity to the revolutionary event in its origin? What about religious doctrines? In the Epistle to the Romans, the Apostle Paul proclaims that every person should be subject to the governing authorities (Romans 13), while in the same letter he observes that we are “not under law but under grace” (Romans 6:14). Further, in Acts 5:29 we may read the Apostles’ collective reply to the high priest who charged them not to preach in the name of Christ: “We must obey God rather than men.” Indeed, does not religion open up a transcendent dimension of freedom within the immanence of political order? Or is it precisely this transcendent dimension of freedom – but also that of secrecy (arcana) – that is needed in order to legitimize clerical and political power? Presumably, there is no definitive answer to these questions, for it is quite obvious that we have to take into account historical contexts: it is probable that same religious principles that empower revolutionary militants can be used by the established Churches in order to suppress them. Or is it? This two-day conference addresses these and related questions. Papers may deal with perennial, historical or contemporary issues. Both theoretical and empirical approaches are welcome.

Schedule
Tuesday September 10
Arrival at Helsinki
19:00 Get together party / dinner
Wednesday September 11
Venue: Collegium for Advanced Studies (University of Helsinki)
9:15 – 11:45 five papers
11:45 – 13:15 lunch
13:15 – 15:45 five papers
19:00 Departure from Helsinki (Ferry to St Petersburg) Thursday September 12
9:30: Arrival at St Petersburg
14:00 – 17:30 five papers
19:00 Dinner
Friday September 13
10:00 – 12:30 five papers
12:30 Lunch
14:00 – 17:30 special section for additional Russian participants (in Russian)
19:00 Dinner
Saturday September 14
Sightseeing
20:00 Departure from St Petersburg (Ferry to Helsinki) Sunday September 15
8:30 Return to Helsinki

Paper Proposals
Researchers interested in presenting a paper at the conference are asked to send an abstract of no more than 300 words by the 1st of May 2013 to the following email addresses:
mika.ojakangas@jyu.fi
power.religion2013@gmail.com
NOTE: The conference will take place in Helsinki and St Petersburg.
Those participants who wish to participate in the sessions in both cities are recommended to use the opportunity to purchase a visa free cruise / hotel package to St Petersburg including two nights on board (St Peter Line / Princess Maria, Helsinki – St Petersburg – Helsinki) and two nights’ accommodation in a hotel (four stars) in St Petersburg.
The price of the cruise / hotel package is about 250-300€. If you are interested in the package, please contact Mika Ojakangas
(mika.ojakangas@jyu.fi) before the 1st of April. See also
http://www.ferrycenter.fi/index.php?1422 
Looking forward to receiving your paper proposals,

Roland Boer (University of Newcastle, Australia) Sergey Kozin (Russian Christian Academy of the Humanities) Mika Ojakangas (University of Jyväskylä, Finland)

Sponsors:
Subjectivity, Historicity, and Communality Research Group (Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies, University of Helsinki) Academy of Finland (Faculty of Theology, University of Helsinki) European University at St Petersburg (http://www.eu.spb.ru/)
Russian Christian Academy for Humanities (http://rhga.ru/) Religion and Political Thought Project (Australian Research Council)

This is the fifth conference to be held in the ‘Religion and Radicalism’ series. To date, we have had:
Copenhagen: September 2010
Taipei: September 2011
Newcastle: October 2012
Herrnhut: March 2013
A five-volume series, under the title of Religion and Radicalism, will gather the articles from this international series of conferences.

University of Derby Centre for Society, Religion & Belief events

Dear all,

Some events coming up at the Centre for Society, Religion & Belief (SRB) at the University of Derby. All SOCREL members and colleagues are welcome to come along.

1) The Nationalism, Identity & Belief symposium takes place on 25th March, featuring keynote speaker Daniel Trilling, author of Bloody Nasty People: The Rise of Britain’s Far Right (London: Verso, 2012), assistant editor The New Statesman, columnist for The Guardian. The conference is being organised by SRB’s Andrew Wilson and Frauke Uhlenbruch, with Jason Lee from the Identity, Conflict & Representation Research Centre. Details of how to register to attend the conference will follow.

2) The Centre for Society, Religion & Belief & the Multi-Faith Centre Seminar series. This semester’s seminars resume with speakers from the Islamic Foundation and the Universities of Derby, Birmingham and Canterbury Christ Church. We are working with the Identity, Conflict & Representation Research Centre to screen (on 13th February, 1.30-3pm) a fascinating new film on space and spirituality by the Derby-based film-making collective leere/SpektiFilms. Please come along to these free events and do invite others. Directions to the Multi-Faith Centre can be found here: http://www.multifaithcentre.org/contact-us The programme for the semester is:

23rd January 1.30-3pm Multi-Faith Centre Dilwar Hussain (Head of the Policy Research Centre at the Islamic Foundation) British Secularism and Religion: Islam, Society and the State

13th February 1.30-3pm Multi-Faith Centre leere collective & Spektifilms (film screening) The Sacred and the Personal (What Makes Places Special?)

6th March 1.30-3pm Multi-Faith Centre Dr Giselle Vincett (Lecturer, Centre for Postgradate Quaker Studies, University of Birmingham) Young People, Deprivation and Religion in the UK: Coping and Resistance

17th April 1.30-3pm Multi-Faith Centre Jamie Bird (Senior Lecturer in Therapeutic Arts, University of Derby) Imagining the Past; Remembering the Future: Using Visual Stories to Understand Domestic Violence

8th May 1.30-3pm Multi-Faith Centre Dr Robert Beckford (Reader in Theology & Religious Studies, Canterbury Christ Church University & award-winning broadcaster)Title TBC

Looking forward to seeing you at these events.
Best wishes,
Dr Kristin Aune
Senior Lecturer in Sociology
Director, Centre for Society, Religion & Belief
Faculty of Education, Health & Sciences
University of Derby
Kedleston Road
Derby DE22 1GBTel: 01332 591428

Call to proposal on Women and Religion

CALL TO PROPOSALS ON WOMEN AND RELIGION/ WOMEN IN THE AMERICAS
ELEVEN ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE INSTITUT DES AMÉRIQUES, 4-6 DECEMBER 2013, AIX-MARSEILLE UNIVERSITY

The 11th Institut des Amériques Conference Call for papers interrogates the theme of “Women in the Americas.” A generation of scholars in the humanities and social sciences have paid considerable attention to gender- and women-related issues. This more comprehensive framework, constructing North/South and transamericanist paradigms, ambitions to revisit such topics from interdisciplinary and intercultural perspectives. Beyond traditional oppositions and stereotypes, we invite contributions which question permanence and change in the role and status of women in the Americas.

Conference languages are English, French and Spanish.

A SPECIFIC SESSION IN PREVIEWED ON WOMEN AND RELIGION

Despite the critical and antireligious nature of major American feminist protests in the 1960s and 1970s, religion has been a field of experiment, challenges and change for twentieth century American women, much more so than for their European counterparts. Thus, new political forms of religious commitment have emerged and which remain largely unexplored: the feminization of the Church, the feminization of the priesthood in various Christian churches, the social policy of transcontinental female religious congregations, the struggle for the empowerment of poor women in conversional churches, religious militancy against established powers or deforestation or the destruction of indigenous peoples, as well as female contemporary anti-globalization counterculture. This panel session will examine and compare current scholarly research within the Americas. Topics include but are not limited to: 1. Religion and Feminism.
2. Political and social critics and experiments.
3. Transcontinental networks

Proposals should be sent to panel Organizers by April 1, 2013. They should include a one page abstract and one page bio, including institutional affiliation

Organizers: Blandine Chelini-Pont (Aix-Marseille Université) : blandine.chelini-pont@univ-amu.fr Florence Rochefort (GSRL/ EPHE. Institut Emilie du Châtelet) : florence.rochefort@wanadoo.fr Pierre Langeron (Sciences Po Aix) : langeron.pierre@wanadoo.fr

For more information, see http://women-americas.blogspot.fr

APPEL A PROPOSITIONS SUR ‘FEMMES ET RELIGIONS’
CONGRES INTERNATIONAL FEMMES ET AMERIQUES (4-6 décembre 2013, Aix-Marseille Université)

L’Institut des Amériques (IdA), en partenariat avec le Centre Aixois d’Etudes Romanes (CAER, AMU) et avec le soutien de SciencesPo Aix, du Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherche sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA, AMU) du Laboratoire Interdisciplinaire de droit des médias et des mutations sociales (LID2MS, AMU) et du Centre d’Etudes mexicaines et centraméricaines (CEMCA), propose pour la 11e édition de son Congrès annuel, de réfléchir sur la thématique Femmes dans les Amériques. Il se tiendra du 4 au 6 décembre 2013 dans les locaux d’Aix-Marseille Université (Maison de la Recherche-Centre Schuman). Il se déroulera en français, en anglais et en espagnol et débouchera sur plusieurs publications à caractère international.

Si les travaux sur le genre et les femmes ont largement marqué les sciences humaines ces dernières décennies, il s’agira ici, cinquante ans après la publication de l’ouvrage fondateur de Betty Friedan, Feminine Mystique, de proposer une approche croisant les domaines disciplinaires et les aires culturelles à l’échelle du continent, dans une perspective épistémologique résolument comparatiste entre le Nord et le Sud des Amériques et/ou transaméricaniste. Ce Congrès s’attachera à analyser les permanences et les mutations des rôles, des représentations et identités des femmes dans les Amériques, ainsi que la spécificité de l’aire culturelle des Amériques dans le questionnement sur le genre. Cette démarche comparatiste et transaméricaine orientera les conférences plénières et les Axes thématiques.

L’AXE Femmes et Religions

Malgré la dimension majoritairement critique et antireligieuse de la contestation féministe américaine des années 1960 et 1970, le champ religieux a été pour les femmes américaines du XXe siècle, un champ d’expérimentation, de contestations et d’innovations, beaucoup plus investi par elles que par les femmes d’Europe. De ce point de vue, la féminisation théologique, la féminisation du sacerdoce, dans les différentes Eglises chrétiennes, la « politique sociale » transcontinentale des congrégations religieuses féminines, la valorisation et l’autonomisation des femmes pauvres par les Eglises de conversion, la militance religieuse féminine contre les pouvoirs institués, la déforestation, la destruction des populations indigènes, l’altermondialisme féminin sont des formes politiques contemporaines de l’engagement religieux encore largement inexplorées. Cet axe se propose de réunir et de confronter les recherches en cours sur les deux Amériques. Trois ateliers sont prévus dans lesquels les propositions pourront s’inscrire de manière indicative. 1. Féminisme et religion. 2. Contestations et innovations politiques et sociales. 3. Réseaux transcontinentaux.

Les propositions de communications sont à envoyer aux coordinateurs de chaque Axe, aux adresses électroniques mentionnées dans la page web du Congrès. Elles ne devront pas excéder 3000 caractères (espaces compris) et devront être accompagnées d’une synthèse (une page) du Curriculum Vitae. La date limite de réception des propositions de communications est le 1er avril 2013.

Coordinatrices/Coordinateur : Florence Rochefort  (GSRL/ EPHE. Institut Emilie du Châtelet) : florence.rochefort@wanadoo.fr .Blandine Chelini-Pont (Aix-Marseille Université) : blandine.chelini-pont@univ-amu.fr Pierre Langeron (Sciences Po Aix) : langeron.pierre@wanadoo.fr

Tous les renseignements sont disponibles sur le site http://femmes-ameriques.blogspot.fr/

Libro RELIGION, POLITICA Y CULTURA EN AMERICA LATINA. NUEVAS MIRADAS.

Libro RELIGION, POLITICA Y CULTURA EN AMERICA LATINA. NUEVAS MIRADAS
Cristián Parker G. (editor).

Paul Freston, Orivaldo Pimentel Lopes  Júnior, Dannyel Br unno Herculano Rezende, Eugenia Fediakova, Bibiana Astrid Ortega Gómez, Fortunato Mallimaci, Gizele Zanotto, Raymundo Heraldo Maués,  Eloisa Martin, Irene Dias  de  Oliveira, Ricardo Salas, Oscar Osorio Pérez, L. Nicolás Guigou, Cristián  Parker.

Editores
UNIVERSIDAD DE SANTIAGO DE CHILE INSTITUTO DE ESTUDIOS  AVANZADOS
ACSRM

http://www.acsrm.org/
Bajar libro en base Scribd: http://es.scribd.com/doc/120740823/LIBRO-religion-politica-y-cultura-1
Bajar libro en Academia.edu: http://www.academia.edu/2417732/RELIGION_POLITICA_Y_CULTURA_EN_AMERICA_LATINA._NUEVAS_MIRADAS

PhD scholarships at the Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER), University of Essex

*** PhD scholarships at the Institute of Social and Economic Research (ISER), University of Essex ***

ISER is an interdisciplinary research centre with a thriving PhD programme. We are currently accepting applications from students wishing to study for a PhD (+3), or a Masters plus PhD (1+3) in any quantitative social science discipline.

Applicants are also invited to apply for one of our fully-funded studentships, which are available as part of Essex University’s ESRC-funded Doctoral Training Centre. http://www.essex.ac.uk/dtc/ These studentships are open to all suitably qualified applicants, regardless of nationality. The deadline for applications is 15th February, 2013.

ISER offers the following research pathways:
– Economics
– Applied Social and Economic Research
– Survey Methodology
– Health Research
Information about our PhD programmes may be found on our website http://www.iser.essex.ac.uk/study
Prospective applicants are invited to contact our Director of Graduate Studies, Dr Maria Iacovou (maria@essex.ac.uk)