Art and Belief / Ruth Illman

JUST PUBLISHED:
Art and Belief: Artists Engaged in Interreligious Dialogue
Ruth Illman, The Donner Institute for Research in Religious and Cultural History, Finland

HB 9781845539665 £60 / $99.95
248pp

“Art and Belief is an illuminating book on the important role that contemporary artists play in creating bridges across religious differences. Writing with huge generosity and impressive philosophical knowledge, Ruth Illman orchestrates a beautiful and unforgettable symphony of hopeful dialogues, which we need more than ever in a time of fear and uncertainty.”
Ruth Behar, University of Michigan

Art and Belief explores communication between faiths through an examination of contemporary artistic practice. The book discusses how a range of artists – all active in this field – formulate their worldview and what motivates them to engage in dialogue. The artists interviewed include Jordi Savall, Susanne Levin, Marita Liulia, Chokri Mensi, Cecilia Parsberg, and Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt. Together, these artists are engaged in a wide range of artistic forms and practice and come to dialogue from diverse religious positions. The aim of the book is to question the assumption of interreligious dialogue as a largely intellectual exercise in defining the religious “other” and to explore dialogue as a manifestation of interpersonal ethics.
 
Book page:

http://www.equinoxpub.com/equinox/books/showbook.asp?bkid=494&keyword=

Religion in Cyberspace

RELIGION IN CYBERSPACE 2012
Call for Papers

We cordially invite you to participate in the workshop ‘Religion in Cyberspace 2012’ which will take place at the 10th international conference Cyberspace 2012 held in Brno, Czech Republic, 30 November – 1 December 2012.

Illustrative topics

religious normative frameworks in cyberspace, networking diasporas, religious collaborative environments, on-line counseling, on-line fatwas and cyber muftis, new religious movements, religious discourses in cyberspace, methodology of online-religion research, rituals in cyberspace etc.

Note: Authors of accepted papers will be invited to submit their papers for peer review to Masaryk University Journal of Law and Technology (MUJLT – mujlt.law.muni.cz) or Cyberpsychology (http://www.cyberpsychology.eu).

Important dates

Abstract submission deadline: 31 July 2012
Notice on acceptance deadline: 31 August 2012
Conference dates: 30 November – 1 December 2012
Papers for publication deadline: 11 January 2013

Abstract formal requirements

Range: max. 1.500 characters incl. spaces
Submission: on-line at www.cyberspace.muni.cz

Paper formal requirements and submission

Papers published in MUJLT: http://mujlt.law.muni.cz/instructions.php
Papers published in Cyberpsychology:
http://www.cyberpsychology.eu/submission.php

Full CFP

Full version of CFP can be found here:
https://cyber.law.muni.cz/storage/1334356391_sb_cyberspace2012cfp.pdf

–Vit Sisler,
Workshop Chair
Ph.D. Charles University in Prague Faculty of Arts & Philosophy Institute of Information Science and Librarianship New Media Studies
http://uisk.jinonice.cuni.cz/sisler/

Approaching Religion Vol 2/1

Dear Colleagues,
We are happy to announce that the open access e-journal Approaching Religion has published a new issue:

Approaching Religion
Vol. 2/ 1 (June, 2011)
Theme: The New Visibility of Atheism in Europe

Available at: http://ojs.abo.fi/index.php/ar/issue/view/20

Contributors:
Grace Davie, Phil Zuckerman, Teemu Taira, Thomas Zenk, Teuvo Laitila, Tiina Mahlamäki, Gavin Hyman, Mattias Martinson, Stuart McAnulla, Stephen Bullivant, Lise Kanckos, Mikko Sillfors.
AR is published by the Donner Institute for Research in Religious and Cultural History in Åbo, Finland. Its purpose is to publish current research on religion and to offer a platform for scholarly co-operation and debate within the field. The journal appears twice a year and consists of articles and book reviews. It addresses an international readership and, as the title suggests, approaches the field of religion from a broad perspective, engaging contributors from different theoretical and methodological traditions.


Dr. Ruth Illman
Docent of comparative religion
Researcher, The Donner Institute
phone: +358-20-7861 462
e-mail: ruth.illman@abo.fi<mailto:ruth.illman@abo.fi>
http://web.abo.fi/instut/di/english/ruth.html

Religions: fields of research, methods and perspectives

CALL FOR PAPERS
Religions: fields of research, methods and perspectives

Jagiellonian University, Kraków, 12-14 September 2012

http://www.religioznawstwo.uj.edu.pl/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1138&Itemid=105

Organisers:
International Journal for the Study of Religions “Studia Religiologica” and Institute for the Study of Religions of Jagiellonian University

Keynote speakers:

Prof. Grace Davie (University of Exeter)

Prof. Ralph W. Hood Jr (University of Tennessee at Chattanooga)

Prof. Barnaba Maj (University of Bologna)

CALL FOR PAPERS

“Religion is a defining mark of humanity – as emblematic of its bearer as the web for the spider, the dam for the beaver, and the song for the bird,” writes Patrick McNamara in his most recent book. It may seem that such a role and position of religion would require sophisticated reflection, extended methods of scientific analysis and the creative activity of research communities. However, in spite of the clear evidence of the importance of these issues, religious studies is a long way both from the role of the “crown of the humanities” foreseen by Eliade and from agreement on and verification of research tools. For some scholars, religions remain a “by-product” and a “virus of the mind”, while for others they are proof of the existence of “supernatural forces” and the central activity of people on the path to transforming their condition.

The conference “Religions: fields of research, methods and perspectives” will present the spectrum of approaches to religious phenomena that are multi-layered and anchored in various ways in cultures, societies and individuals as well as new methods of research  and refined versions of previous ones. It will also show the research quandaries and problems to be solved which religious studies scholars come up against in their historical, comparative, sociological, philosophical and psychological studies. The aim of the conference is to demonstrate the potential of religious studies and related fields in solving and comprehending
the fundamental problems of humanity.

Conference languages: English, Polish

Conference fee: 200 PLN (or 50 EUR). The fee does not cover the cost of accommodation and meals.

Registration form available for download at www.religioznawstwo.uj.edupl.

Please send registrations (marked “Conference”) by 30 June  2012

by email:  symposium@iphils.uj.edu.pl

New issue of Politics and Religion journal (PRJ)

New Issue
Politics and Religion Journal
http://www.ipsa.org/news/journal/politics-and-religion-journal-prj-1?allblocks=1
Volume 6 (No. 1) – Spring 2012

Table of contents
<http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/images/pdf_files/engleski/volume6_no1/sadrzaj%20engleski.pdf>
Obituary Professor John Rex (1925-2011), Politics and Religion Journal (PRJ ) member of Editorial Board <http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/images/pdf_files/engleski/volume6_no1/obituary.pdf>

TOPIC OF THIS ISSUE
POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT, FAITH – BASED SCHOOLING AND SECULARISATION

Héctor Gómez Peralta
THE ROLE OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IN MEXICO’S POLITICAL
DEVELOPMENT
<http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/images/pdf_files/engleski/volume6_no1/peralta.pdf>

Duncan MacLellan
FAITH-BASED SCHOOLING AND THE POLITICS OF EDUCATION: A CASE STUDY OF ONTARIO,
CANADA
<http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/images/pdf_files/engleski/volume6_no1/maclellan.pdf>

Ludwig Gelot
SECULARISATION AS AN INTERNATIONAL CRISIS IN
LEGITIMACY
<http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/images/pdf_files/engleski/volume6_no1/gelot.pdf>

ANALYSES

Igboin, Benson Ohihon
FUNDAMENTALISMS, SECURITY CRISIS AND TOLERANCE IN GLOBAL CONTEXT: THE NIGERIAN
EXPERIENCE
<http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/images/pdf_files/engleski/volume6_no1/igboin.pdf>

Tarek Ladjal, Benaouda Bensaid, Mohd Roslan Mohd Nor
TASAWWUF AND WESTERN INTERESTS PERSPECTIVE OF HISTORY AND
POLITICS
<http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/images/pdf_files/engleski/volume6_no1/ladjal.pdf>

Vladimir Đurić
RELIGION AND NATIONAL MINORITIES IN THE LEGAL AND POLITICAL SYSTEM OF THE REPUBLIC
OF
SERBIA
<http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/images/pdf_files/engleski/volume6_no1/djuric.pdf>

REVIEWS, CRITICAL VIEWS AND POLEMICS

Corey L. Williams
RELIGION, CONFLICT, VIOLENCE AND TOLERANCE IN GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES: THE ISA/RC22
ABUJA 2012 CONFERENCE AND ITS CONTRIBUTION TO THE POLITOLOGY OF
RELIGION
<http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/images/pdf_files/engleski/volume6_no1/viliams.pdf>

Miki Bozinovich
POLITICAL RELATIONS AND
RELIGION
<http://www.politicsandreligionjournal.com/images/pdf_files/srpski/godina6_broj1/bozinovic.pdf>

Call for paper: Identity Religion and Ethnicity: New Patterns, Realities and Pitfalls

Call for Paper
Workshop on

Identity Religion and Ethnicity: New Patterns, Realities and Pitfalls

[http://www.gcis-kuleuven.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/Workshop-identity-religion-and-ethnicity1-150×150.jpg]http://www.gcis-kuleuven.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/Workshop-identity-religion-and-ethnicity1.jpg

Where: Istanbul, Turkey
Date: 29 Nov – 1 Dec 2012
Organisers: KULeuven Gülen Chair for Intercultural Studies (GCIS), Intercultural Dialogue Platform (IDP) and Department of Sociology (Suleyman Sah University, Istanbul)

Workshop theme and questions
Identity, Religion and Ethnicity are three terms interrelated and become all important issues in the European Union and its neighbourhood. The social change and economical transformation of societies fallowed by flow of people, objects, symbols and places enforce the change on identity and citizenship relations. In sum, in addition to the flows, all changes concern the interpersonal and inter-group dimensions. Today, a high degree of human mobility, telecommunications have contributed to the new understanding of citizenship as a mode of identity in relation to national identity, ethnicity, religion, groups and social movements. Belonging to an ethnic-religious group and distinctions are increasingly blurred or strengthened in the new national and international contexts. The motivations and modalities of belonging and identifying are much more diverse. It is therefore useful to explore relatively new patterns of the intersection between religion, identity and ethnicity issues.  As noted “Race, ethnicity, and nation are not things in the world but ways of seeing the world. They are ways of understanding and identifying oneself, making sense of one’s problems and predicaments, identifying one’s interests, and orienting one’s action. They are ways of recognizing, identifying, and classifying other people, of construing sameness and difference, and of “coding” and making sense of their actions” (Brubaker, Loveman, and Stamatov 2004). The workshop proposes to analyse the relation between these three notions interconnected in different political, cultural and economical cases to understand also some challenges and pitfalls in a plural society.

What is the relation between identity, ethnicity and citizenship in a global world? What are the new patterns of ethnic identities in plural societies? Can globalization de-ethnicize religion? How ethnical and religious identity is changed and faced with social and economic changes? What are the roles of social movements in these undergoing changes? What are the challenges for the classical religious-ethnic identity? How can nation state models regulate the plurality of religious and ethnic groups? How does EU deal with ethnical pluralism and diversity?
Participants in the workshop Identity, Religion and Ethnicity will explore the answers of these questions. The workshop will analyse the interaction and the interpenetration of race, ethnicity and identity through the problematic of transnationalism, globalization and nation-state approaches. The workshop will be accompanied by practical visits with local communities. Participants are invited to discover the theoretical debates and issues in local different areas with practitioners and civil society representatives to further having insights from demographic, economic, philosophic, legal and socio anthropological approaches. This workshop looks at identity, citizenship and ethnicity issues across Belgium as well as in the Turkey, focused primarily on Belgium-EU cases.

Topics of Workshops
The workshop will be organized around three central themes.
Authors are invited to send abstracts (maximum 500 words) of their papers on themes of their own choosing, which may include (by way of example only):

Ethnicity and ethno-nationalism
Multiple language policies and education
Racism and nationalism
Immigration, Assimilation and National History

Religion and ethnic identities
Religious Minority and Identity
Immigration and Religion

Politics and Ethnicity
Identity policies and Citizenship
Citizenship and Nation state
Multiculturalism and ethnic relations

Programme
A detailed schedule will follow in due course.

Tuition Fees and Scholarships
There is no tuition fee for the workshop programme.  The IDP will pay all the costs of accommodation and board, and transfers, and there is no registration fee for participants in the Workshop. However, authors are expected to pay the costs of their flight to and from Turkey (currently about 300 euros). A limited number of scholarships are available for outstanding candidates to cover tuition, travel and accommodation.

Outcome
Within six months of the event, a book will be produced and published by the GCIS, comprising some or all of the papers presented at the Workshop. The papers will be arranged and introduced, and to the extent appropriate, edited, by scholar(s) to be appointed by the Editorial Board. Copyright of the papers accepted to the Workshop will be vested in the GCIS.

Selection Criteria
The workshop will accept up to 20 participants, each of whom must meet the following requirements:
– have a professional and/or research background in related topics of the workshop;
– be able to attend the entire programme.
Doctoral and postdoctoral researchers as well as civil servants and professionals from intergovernmental and governmental agencies working in ethnicity, migration areas are encouraged to apply.
Since the Workshop expects to address a broad range of topics while the number of participants has to be limited, writers submitting abstracts are requested to bear in mind the need to ensure that their language is technical only where absolutely necessary and intelligible to non-specialists and specialists in disciplines other than their own; and present clear, coherent arguments in a rational way and in accordance with the usual standards and format for publishable work.

Timetable
1. Abstracts (300–500 words maximum) and CVs (maximum 1 page) to be received by 10th August 2012.
2. Abstracts to be short-listed by the Editorial Board and papers invited by 30th August 2012.
3. Papers (2,500 words minimum – 5,000 words maximum, excluding bibliography) to be received by 1st October 2012.
4. Papers reviewed by the Editorial Board and classed as: Accepted – No Recommendations; Accepted – See Recommendations; Conditional Acceptance – See Recommendations; Not Accepted.
5. Final papers to be received by 20th October 2012.

Workshop Editorial Board
Johan Leman, KULeuven
Erkan Toguslu, KULeuven
Ismail Mesut Sezgin, IDP and Leeds Metropolitan University

Workshop Co-ordinator
Ismail Mesut Sezgin

Venue
Suleyman Sah University, Istanbul, Turkey
The international workshop will be entirely conducted in English and will be hosted by Suleyman Sah University in Istanbul.

Papers and abstract should be sent to Erkan Toguslu
erkan.toguslu@soc.kuleuven.be<mailto:erkan.toguslu@soc.kuleuven.be>

For more information plz contact:
Erkan Toguslu
KULeuven Gülen Chair for Intercultural Studies
Parkstraat 45 – box 3615
3000 Leuven
erkan.toguslu@soc.kuleuven.be<mailto:erkan.toguslu@soc.kuleuven.be>

http://www.gcis-kuleuven.com/cpt_events/identity-religion-and-ethnicity-new-patterns-realities-and-pitfalls/?preview=true&preview_id=559&preview_nonce=04c7ca206f

Call for Papers ARSR

Annual Review of the Sociology of Religion
Issue number 5, 2014
Sociology and Monasticism

Edited by Isabelle Jonveaux (University of Graz), Enzo Pace (University of Padua) and Stefania Palmisano (University of Turin)

Call for Papers

As a result of the growing belief in society that traditional religious institutions were losing credibility, there has been renewed interest in monasteries, going beyond what is strictly defined as religious e.g. increasingly numerous requests to stay over in monasteries, guided tours, the appeal of monastic products and media interest in the subject. As distinct from historical studies which have analysed monasticism, the sociology of religion has shown little interest in the subject, paying more attention to the phenomenon in Oriental religions such as Islam (especially the Sufi tradition), Buddhism and Taoism than to Christian forms. We maintain, given that monasteries have played a fundamental role – especially in the Middle Ages – in Europe’s socio-economic development, that sociology cannot ignore their evolution in the modern age. It is time for sociologists of religion to study monasteries, both Eastern and Western, adopting a comparative perspective when answering parallel research questions.
With the aim of collecting articles by the leading sociologists at present doing fieldwork research on monasticism, we are seeking contributions which offer an overview of work-in-progress in this area. Our objective is to publicize a little-known field of the sociology of religion and to provide it with new legitimacy.

Possible topics include:

*             Varieties of monasticism
*             Monasticism and economics
*             New forms of monasticism
*             Monasticism and vocations (recruiting)
*             Monastic novitiates
*             New monastic foundations in so-called developing countries
*             Extra-European Christian monasticism
*             Social/religious role of monasticism
*             Monasticism and  religious hierarchy

Rather than being prescriptive, we would like to remain open about the definition of monasticism and how its boundaries with other topics and concepts – such as eremites and other religious virtuosos – are drawn.

Please send all proposals to Isabelle Jonveaux and Stefania Palmisano:
isabelle.jonveaux@uni-graz.at, stefania.palmisano@unito.it

Submission of proposals (250 to 300 words): Deadline October 15, 2012
Notification of acceptance by November 15, 2012
Completed manuscripts (7,000 to 8,000 words): Deadline  May 15, 2013

New Book

Those of you interested in the transformation of church and Christian religion in advanced modernity should take notice of he edited volume below.

Authors: Anthony Carroll, Kees de Groot, Staf Hellemans, James Sweeney and others.
Staf Hellemans, Jozef Wissink (Eds.)
Towards a New Catholic Church in Advanced Modernity
Transformations, Visions, Tensions
Series: Tilburg Theological Studies/Tilburger Theologische Studien
Vol. 5, 2012, 280 pp., 29.90 EUR, br., ISBN 978-3-643-90204-7

A new Catholic Church is emerging in the West, one that is very different from the Church before 1960. The book aims to describe this new Church-in-the-making (its new position in society, its new structuring and workings, its new frame of mind) and to look in a prospective way at some basic issues the Church has to deal with (how to imagine Church in advanced modernity, how to attract youth and adults, rebuild local communities, refashion liturgy, rethink pastoral guidance). It is the result of an interdisciplinary endeavor by philosophers, sociologists and theologians, working at Tilburg University (the Netherlands), reinforced by two researchers from Heythrop College, University of London.

Staf Hellemans, Professor in the Sociology of Religion, Tilburg University.
Jozef Wissink, Professor in Practical Theology, Tilburg University.

http://www.lit-verlag.de/isbn/3-643-90204-7

Call for Conference Abstract and Proceedings

Academic Journals Conferences Department is calling for the submission of

Conference/Symposia/Workshop abstracts and proceedings for publication.

Academic Journals Conference Department welcomes the submission of abstracts, and proceedings of conferences, symposia or workshops in all areas of research ranging from Biotechnology, Agriculture, Business and Economics, Medicine, Education, Physical Sciences (*see complete list of journals/research areas:* www.academicjournals.org/journals) that meet the general criteria and contribute significantly to the topic covered by the themes of the conference.

The abstracts and proceedings’ articles to be submitted must have been reviewed by the organising/review committee of the conference and would have met the general criteria marked out by the organisers.

Interested Conference/Symposia/Workshop organizers should forward their abstracts/articles/proceedings as e-mail attachment prepared in MS word format with a covering letter to:
Conference Department, Academic Journals
conference.acadjourn@gmail.com.

Our key objective remains the provision of unrestricted access to latest research publications and giving your conferences/seminars/workshops a wider coverage to the global community.

Best regards,
Mr. Gregory Agadaga
Vice President, Publication Services
Academic Journals

conference.acadjourn@gmail.com
http://www.academicjournals.org

New Book: Claiming Society for God

Now available from Indiana University Press:

Claiming Society for God
Religious Movements and Social Welfare in Egypt, Israel, Italy, and the United States
Nancy J. Davis and Robert V. Robinson

“Illuminating intersections of religion and public life in four different nations, this book is topical. Given that two of these nations are in the Middle East and one of them is Egypt, it is timely, even urgent.” -R. Stephen Warner, University of Illinois at Chicago

Claiming Society for God focuses on common strategies employed by religiously orthodox, “fundamentalist” movements around the world. Rather than employing terrorism, as much of post-9/11 thinking suggests, these movements use a patient, under-the-radar strategy of infiltrating and subtly transforming civil society. Nancy J. Davis and Robert V. Robinson tell the stories of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, Shas in Israel, Comunione e Liberazione in Italy, and the Salvation Army in the United States. They show how these movements are building massive grassroots networks of religiously based social service agencies, hospitals, schools, and businesses to bring their own brand of faith to the center of society.

234 pp., 3 b&w illus.
cloth 978-0-253-00234-1 $70.00
paper 978-0-253-00238-9 $25.00

NANCY J. DAVIS is Lester Martin Jones Professor of Sociology at DePauw University.

ROBERT V. ROBINSON is the Class of 1964 Chancellor’s Professor of Sociology at Indiana University, Bloomington.

Together they have published on religion and politics in the American Sociological Review, the American Journal of Sociology, the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, and Sociology of Religion, winning recognition from the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion and the American Sociological Association’s sections on the sociology of religion and collective behavior and social movements.

For more information, visit:
http://www.iupress.indiana.edu/catalog/155715

For Instructors:
If you are interested in adopting this book for course use, please see our exam copy policy:
http://www.iupress.indiana.edu/link/examcopy