Book: “Young Sikhs in a Global World”

Young Sikhs in a Global World:
Negotiating Traditions, Identities and Authorities
Edited by Knut A. Jacobsen, University of Bergen, Norway and Kristina Myrvold, Linnaeus University, Sweden
Ashgate, August 2015

http://www.ashgate.com/isbn/9781472456960

In attempting to carve out a place for themselves in local and global contexts, young Sikhs mobilize efforts to construct, choose, and emphasize different aspects of religious and cultural identification depending on their social setting and context. Young Sikhs in a Global World presents current research on young Sikhs with multicultural and transnational life-styles and considers how they interpret, shape and negotiate religious identities, traditions, and authority on an individual and collective level.

With a particular focus on the experiences of second generation Sikhs as they interact with various people in different social fields and cultural contexts, the book is constructed around three parts: ‘family and home’, ‘public display and gender’, and ‘reflexivity and translations’. New scholarly voices and established academics present qualitative research and ethnographic fieldwork and analyse how young Sikhs try to solve social, intellectual and psychological tensions between the family and the expectations of the majority society, between Punjabi culture and religious values.

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Conference: “Life Here and Hereafter”

3rd International Scientific Conference of the Lithuanian Society for the Study of Religions

LIFE HERE AND HEREAFTER: BELIEFS AND PRACTICES

Vilnius, Lithuania

23-24 October, 2015

Vilnius University and Vytautas Magnus University

Call for Papers

Life here and hereafter is considered to be one of the core concerns of an individual throughout the history of humanity. Quest for the meaning of life, role ofdeath, possibilities of life after death are challenged with a broad scope of perceptions, reflections and expressions among various spiritual and religious traditions, emerging spiritualities, groups and individuals.

This conference addresses the topic of life here and hereafter and focuses on beliefs and practices of diverse origins, their formation, spread and expressions. It also focuses on the past and current representations of the phenomenon in specificregions and worldwide, discussing its diverse manifestations and changes concerning institutional and individual religiosities on (trans)national and (trans)regional levels.

The conference welcomes both empirical and theoretical contributions from various disciplines, as well as interdisciplinary approaches towards beliefs and practices within the domain of life here and hereafter. Of particular interest are those that combine perspectives and methods drawn from all social sciences and humanities on historical, present, and newly emerging approaches towards conceptions, manifestations and representations, as well as research methods, issues and problems, and new directions in studies of this phenomenon.

The 3rd Conference of the Lithuanian Society for the Study of Religions Life Here and Hereafter: Beliefs and Practices will be held on October 23-24, 2015 at VilniusUniversity, Vilnius. We welcome scholars from religious studies, sociology, anthropology, philosophy, psychology, political science, and other disciplines to contribute to historical and contemporary studies of the role and manifestations of the phenomenon of life here and hereafter, in this way enriching its academic understandings. We expect individual paper proposals as well as panel proposals with three to four presentations.

We invite papers and panels including, but not limited to the following topics:

  • – Methodological implications, challenges and issues
  • – Life here and hereafter and their socio-cultural representations
    – Death and dying related beliefs and practices
  • – Divinations, predictions and prophecies
    – The role of individuals and institutions in practices related to beliefs in lifehere and hereafter
  • – Life here, hereafter and cultural memory
  • – Life here and hereafter: religious and secular approaches
    – Life, dying and afterlife in traditional religious groups and churches in the past and in the 21st century
  • – Life here and hereafter within contemporary spirituality, individual religiosity, combined forms of organized and individual religions
  • – Institutional arrangements, development and changes of beliefs and practices within the domain of life here and hereafter
  • – Afterlife and social imagination
  • – Life here and hereafter in the public sphere
  • – Life here and hereafter in the popular culture

Please submit a 250-300 words abstract of your presentation accompanied by a short CV by e-mail to: religiousstudieslt@gmail.com by June 15, 2015. If you are interested in another topic related to the study of life here and hereafter, we encourage you to organize a session/panel. In this case, please submit a 200-300 words proposal by July 15, 2013 to the same email address.

The authors of accepted proposals will be notified by July 15, 2015.

Key dates
Submission of paper and session/panel proposals – June 15, 2015
Notification of acceptance and opening of the registration – July 15, 2015
The final date of the registration for the conference – September 15, 2015
Final program – September 20, 2015

Fees

Conference fee (50 Euro) may be paid by bank transfer or in cash (not by card) at the registration desk.

The costs of travel and lodging should be covered by the participants.

Special events
Participants of the conference will be offered excursion in Vilnius city.

Organisers: dr. Eglė Aleknaitė (Vytautas Magnus University), assoc. prof. Milda Ališauskienė (Vytautas Magnus University), prof. Audrius Beinorius (Vilnius University), assoc. prof. Aušra Pažėraitė (Vilnius University), dr. Rasa Pranskevičiūtė (Vytautas Magnus University), prof. Edgūnas Račius (Vytautas Magnus University), assoc. prof. Annika Hvithamar (Copenhagen University).

Any conference related queries are to be sent to the conference email address.More information is available at http://en.religijotyra.lt/

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Waikato Islamic Studies Conference

Waikato Islamic Studies Conference
The University of Waikato in Hamilton, New Zealand
November 11-12, 2015
http://www.waikato.ac.nz/fass/UWISG/index.shtml

Abstract Submission Deadline: 31 July 2015
Inquiries to: islamic-studies-group@waikato.ac.nz.

The University of Waikato Islamic Studies Group (UWISG) is pleased to announce the Call for Papers for the first conference on Islamic Studies to be held November 11-12, 2015 at the University of Waikato in Hamilton, New Zealand. We welcome submissions from a variety of disciplines and perspectives and encourage both established academics and research students to submit proposals on any topic with particular reference to one of the following themes:

  1. Islam; History, Religion and Theology
  2. Islam; Arts, Sciences and Culture
  3. Islam; Law, Economics and Politics
  4. Islam and Gender Relations
  5. Theory and Method in Islamic Studies
  6. Contemporary Islam: Challenges and Prosperities

Among the above themes the 2015 meeting will feature a special focus on “Muslim/non-Muslim relations”. In addition to the above, other topics are also welcome.

Proposals for in-person presentations should be submitted (title and short abstract of 150-250 words) by 31 July 2015 to: islamic-studies-group@waikato.ac.nz.
The conference language is English.

Publication Option
Presenters may also choose to submit written papers to be uploaded onto  the refereed “Waikato Islamic Studies Review” online presentation. If you are unable to attend the conference in person you may still submit your article for peer review and possible upload on the Review’s online presentation.

Registration
The conference standard fee is $150. For doctoral candidates and early career researchers with no full-time position the fee is $90. Respective early bird fees are $130 and researchers and $70 provided this is paid in full by 30 August 2015. Lunch, morning tea and afternoon tea for both days are included.

For those who need visa to enter New Zealand we recommend submitting their proposals as soon as possible as confirmation of acceptance will assist the visa application process. Please register through the following website:
www.waikato.ac.nz/fass/UWISG/conference.

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Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies,

Invitation to the Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies, 2015, at the Old Library in the Oxford University Church of St Mary


We are pleased to invite you to participate in the Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies. You may register for the Summer Session (3, 4 & 5 August) or the Fall Session (7, 8 & 9 December). The meeting will be held at The Old Library in the Oxford University Church of St Mary.  Constructed in 1320, The Old Library is the first university (as opposed to college) building in Oxford and therefore uniquely important; this is where the nascent University began.

The sessions will be hosted by Canon Brian Mountford, Vicar of St Mary’s. Dr. Mountford is a Fellow and Chaplain of St Hilda’s College in the University of Oxford.

You are invited to present a paper on an aspect of religious studies, or you may wish to attend as an observer.

For more information visit our website Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies

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Job Announcement: University of Groningen

Assistant Professor Comparative Study of Religion (1.0 fte) (215139)

University of Groningen, the Netherlands
http://www.rug.nl/about-us/work-with-us/job-opportunities/overview?details=00347-02S0004HLP

Job description

The Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies seeks to appoint an Assistant Professor (UD) in the comparative study of religion. The position will involve 50% teaching, 40% research and 10% administration. The position will be located within the Department of Comparative Study of Religion.

The candidate will contribute to the teaching programme (introductory and advanced) in the general study of religion, research methods, as well as in her/his area of specialization. International staff members will teach in English. Her/his research expertise should fit with the profile of the department
(see: http://www.rug.nl/research/centre-for-religious-studies/comparative-historical-study-of-religion/).

While we invite applications from scholars with various research interests, preference will be given to candidates with a research focus on religion and media or religion and culture in Asia.

Qualifications

The candidate should hold a PhD degree in religious studies,  anthropology or sociology of religion, or related disciplines. Moreover, she/he has to demonstrate experience in or willingness to develop and gain experience in the following attributes:

  • – a strong profile in teaching in the study of religion and qualitative research methods. Experience in teaching quantitative methods on an introductory level is appreciated
  • – a strong commitment to teaching and willingness to contribute to the development of bachelor’s and master’s curricula, with demonstrated experience in the design of course modules and the supervision of bachelor’s and master’s theses
  • – demonstrated success or capacity for success in the acquisition of research funding
  • – a demonstrable interest in interdisciplinary cooperation
  • – organizational competence, entrepreneurship and excellent communication skills.

Deadlines and procedures

You may apply for this position before 7 June 2015 Dutch local time by  means of the application form (click on “Apply” on the advertisement on the university website).

Job interviews will be held on 24 and 25 June. Shortlisted applicants will be notified before 10 June 2015 and will be expected to be in Groningen for both days of the interviews. Travel and accommodation will be arranged and reimbursed.

Date of entry into employment: 1 September 2015 or as soon as possible.

Application requirements

Interested candidates should submit a complete application composed of:

  • a letter of motivation, addressing the above criteria
  • a complete CV with a list of publications and with names and contact details for three referees
  • a PDF of three self-selected “best papers”
  • a brief description (maximum two pages) of scientific interests and plans.

Please send your application in PDF format and with all the credentials in separate attachments. Applications with missing credentials will not be taken into consideration.

For information you can contact: Dr Peter Berger, Head of Department CRS, p.berger@rug.nl

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CRS Newsletter Online

The latest issue of the CRS Newsletter (Uppsala University project on religion) is available at http://www.anpdm.com/newsletterweb/434459417844425F4677464159/414B594474494259467343445E4A71 .  It contains reports of the CRS projects, workshop announcements, and many other things.

(We would reproduce it here, but our blogging software messes up the formatting. – JS)

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Religion as Creativity An interdisciplinary conference

Religion as Creativity:  An interdisciplinary conference
October 2-4, 2015
Miami University
Oxford, Ohio

With support from the Miami University Humanities Center and the Departments of Anthropology and Comparative Religion at Miami University.

What relationships emerge between religion and creativity? This question will organize a 2 ½ day symposium at Miami University from October 2-4, hosted by the “Religion as Creativity” working group at Miami. Funded by the Miami University Humanities Center Collaborative Research Challenge grant, this symposium will gather scholars whose work addresses the intersections of creativity and religion. Symposium participants will share their ongoing research, provide critical feedback to other participants, and explore applications to course innovation.

  • We invite scholars to submit proposals that address a range of themes, including (but not limited to):
  • · the role of creative action and virtuosity in religious life;
  • · the creative dimensions of the category “religion”;
  • · dialectics of creativity and authority, agency, power, and change;
  • · creative uses of classic paradigms in the study of religion;
  • · and the ontological sources of creative production.

Please submit an abstract of no more than 250 words and a 1-2 page Curriculum Vitae no later than July 1st to Dr. James S. Bielo, Miami University: bielojs@miamioh.edu.

Food and lodging will be provided for symposium contributors, however travel costs to and from Miami University will be the responsibility of contributors. Admission is open to the public free of charge.

Religion as Creativity working group members:
Dr. James S. Bielo (Dept. of Anthropology)
Dr. Rory Johnson (Dept. of Comparative Religion)
Dr. John Cinnamon (Dept. of Anthropology)
Dr. Nathan French (Dept. of Comparative Religion)

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CFP: “Life and Hereafter: Beliefs and Practices”

3rd International Scientific Conference of the Lithuanian Society for the Study of Religions

LIFE HERE AND HEREAFTER: BELIEFS AND PRACTICES

Vilnius, Lithuania

23-24 October, 2015

Vilnius University and Vytautas Magnus University

Call for Papers

Life here and hereafter is considered to be one of the core concerns of an individual throughout the history of humanity. Quest for the meaning of life, role of death, possibilities of life after death are challenged with a broad scope of perceptions, reflections and expressions among various spiritual and religious traditions, emerging spiritualities, groups and individuals.

This conference addresses the topic of life here and hereafter and focuses on beliefs and practices of diverse origins, their formation, spread and expressions. It also focuses on the past and current representations of the phenomenon in specific regions and worldwide, discussing its diverse manifestations and changes concerning institutional and individual religiosities on (trans)national and (trans)regional levels.

The conference welcomes both empirical and theoretical contributions from various disciplines, as well as interdisciplinary approaches towards beliefs and practices within the domain of life here and hereafter. Of particular interest are those that combine perspectives and methods drawn from all social sciences and humanities on historical, present, and newly emerging approaches towards conceptions, manifestations and representations, as well as research methods, issues and problems, and new directions in studies of this phenomenon.

The 3rd Conference of the Lithuanian Society for the Study of Religions Life Here and Hereafter: Beliefs and Practices will be held on October 23-24, 2015 at Vilnius University,Vilnius. We welcome scholars from religious studies, sociology, anthropology, philosophy, psychology, political science, and other disciplines to contribute to historical and contemporary studies of the role and manifestations of the phenomenon of life here and hereafter, in this way enriching its academic understandings. We expect individual paper proposals as well as panel proposals with three to four presentations.

We invite papers and panels including, but not limited to the following topics:

  • – Methodological implications, challenges and issues
  • – Life here and hereafter and their socio-cultural representations
    – Death and dying related beliefs and practices
  • – Divinations, predictions and prophecies
    – The role of individuals and institutions in practices related to beliefs in life here and hereafter
  • – Life here, hereafter and cultural memory
  • – Life here and hereafter: religious and secular approaches
    – Life, dying and afterlife in traditional religious groups and churches in the past and in the 21st century
  • – Life here and hereafter within contemporary spirituality, individual religiosity, combined forms of organized and individual religions
  • – Institutional arrangements, development and changes of beliefs and practices within the domain of life here and hereafter
  • – Afterlife and social imagination
  • – Life here and hereafter in the public sphere
  • – Life here and hereafter in the popular culture

Please submit a 250-300 words abstract of your presentation accompanied by a short CV by e-mail to: religiousstudieslt@gmail.com by June 15, 2015. If you are interested in another topic related to the study of life here and hereafter, we encourage you to organize a session/panel. In this case, please submit a 200-300 words proposal by July 15, 2013 to the same email address.

The authors of accepted proposals will be notified by July 15, 2015.

Key dates
Submission of paper and session/panel proposals – June 15, 2015
Notification of acceptance and opening of the registration – July 15, 2015
The final date of the registration for the conference – September 15, 2015
Final program – September 20, 2015

Fees

Conference fee (50 Euro) may be paid by bank transfer or in cash (not by card) at the registration desk.

The costs of travel and lodging should be covered by the participants.

Special events
Participants of the conference will be offered excursion in Vilnius city.

Organisers: dr. Eglė Aleknaitė (Vytautas Magnus University), assoc. prof. Milda Ališauskienė (Vytautas Magnus University), prof. Audrius Beinorius (Vilnius University), assoc. prof. Aušra Pažėraitė (Vilnius University), dr. Rasa Pranskevičiūtė (Vytautas Magnus University), prof. Edgūnas Račius (Vytautas Magnus University), assoc. prof. Annika Hvithamar (Copenhagen University).

Any conference related queries are to be sent to the conference email address. More information is available at http://en.religijotyra.lt/

Please feel free to spread this message.

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CFP: “Religion, Ethics, and Economic Life”

Call for papers for panel at the BASR Annual Conference, Religion in the Global and Local: Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Challenges, 7-9  September 2015, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK

Panel: Religion, Ethics, and Economic Life

Organizers: David Henig and Anna Strhan (University of Kent)

The interrelations between religion, values, and the economy were central preoccupations in the work of the founding thinkers of anthropology and sociology. With both the growing marketization of different spheres of human activity and the questioning of current economic orders following the financial crisis of 2008, with religion often perceived as providing resources to (re)moralize the markets and challenge the idea that ‘the market has become God’ (Frank 2001), these questions are once again returning to prominence. Religions have responded to the global extension of market ideologies in the post cold-war era across different spheres of social life in complex ways.

Some have provided moral motivations and resources to foster work ethics and practices that closely align with broader logics of economic ‘growth’ and ‘productivity’. Others have offered challenges to the pervasiveness of the idea of human life as shaped by logics of commodification and the socio-economic inequalities associated with the expansion of global capitalism. Others have offered a critique of contemporary economic values while also drawing on market logics and practices to their own ends.

A growing body of recent scholarship has focused on such questions as the commodification of religion and spirituality, how religion is influenced by consumer culture, how faith-based organizations are involved in forms of welfare provision in neoliberal political economies, and how religious groups have responded to experiences of increasing economic scarcity. This panel seeks to open up analysis of the lived interrelations between religion, economics, and ethics. How are the ethical practices, values, and understandings of religious groups shaped by and responding to particular aspects of economic life? How do religious groups seek to engage with the question of what, or where, is the Good in economic and market practices? What does the increasing public prominence of some religious leaders’ comments on the economy tell us about the place of religion in wider social life, and
how does this relate to everyday religious interrelations with economic structures?

Please send a 200 word abstract to D.Henig@kent.ac.uk and A.H.B.Strhan@kent.ac.uk by 10 June 2015

The post CFP: “Religion, Ethics, and Economic Life” appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

CFP: “Religion, Ethics, and Economic Life”

Call for papers for panel at the BASR Annual Conference, Religion in the Global and Local: Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Challenges, 7-9  September 2015, University of Kent, Canterbury, UK

Panel: Religion, Ethics, and Economic Life

Organizers: David Henig and Anna Strhan (University of Kent)

The interrelations between religion, values, and the economy were central preoccupations in the work of the founding thinkers of anthropology and sociology. With both the growing marketization of different spheres of human activity and the questioning of current economic orders following the financial crisis of 2008, with religion often perceived as providing resources to (re)moralize the markets and challenge the idea that ‘the market has become God’ (Frank 2001), these questions are once again returning to prominence. Religions have responded to the global extension of market ideologies in the post cold-war era across different spheres of social life in complex ways.

Some have provided moral motivations and resources to foster work ethics and practices that closely align with broader logics of economic ‘growth’ and ‘productivity’. Others have offered challenges to the pervasiveness of the idea of human life as shaped by logics of commodification and the socio-economic inequalities associated with the expansion of global capitalism. Others have offered a critique of contemporary economic values while also drawing on market logics and practices to their own ends.

A growing body of recent scholarship has focused on such questions as the commodification of religion and spirituality, how religion is influenced by consumer culture, how faith-based organizations are involved in forms of welfare provision in neoliberal political economies, and how religious groups have responded to experiences of increasing economic scarcity. This panel seeks to open up analysis of the lived interrelations between religion, economics, and ethics. How are the ethical practices, values, and understandings of religious groups shaped by and responding to particular aspects of economic life? How do religious groups seek to engage with the question of what, or where, is the Good in economic and market practices? What does the increasing public prominence of some religious leaders’ comments on the economy tell us about the place of religion in wider social life, and
how does this relate to everyday religious interrelations with economic structures?

Please send a 200 word abstract to D.Henig@kent.ac.uk and A.H.B.Strhan@kent.ac.uk by 10 June 2015

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