Symposium: “Sacred and Secular: Faith and Formation” (16 January, 2015; London)

FaithXchange invites you to its 2nd Annual Symposium of v. This year’s theme focuses on how do religion and belief inform how we do policy, politics, and practice. This is an exciting day for all of us as it brings together scholars of all stages in their career, as well as practitioners to open up and expand a cross disciplinary and cross national dialogue. 

A keynote panel will proceed a series of exciting papers that bring different disciplinary perspectives in the conversation. Keynotes include Professor Adam Dinham, Professor Elaine Graham, Dr. Daniel Nilsson DeHanas, and Dr. Alp Arat.

Please follow the link for more information http://www.gold.ac.uk/faithsunit/network/​ 

For RSVP, please contact Clare Canning at faithxchange@gold.ac.uk

We are looking forward to seeing you on January 16th at Goldsmiths. 

With best regards

faithXchange Research Network 

23 St. James St. | London SE14 6NW | Goldsmiths, University of London

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CFP: “Changes in Contemporary Judaism”

Call for papers for a session or sessions at the Biennial Conference of the International Society for the Sociology of Religion (SISR/ISSR)
Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium, July 2-5, 2015

Special deadline extension until January 15th, 2015.

WG6: Changes in Contemporary Judaism:Judaism and Jews in Contemporary Societies

This working group has been created since 2011 and focuses on changes in contemporary Judaism and Jewish society. It is a reflection from within the community itself, our thoughts about change extends to the following questions:

  • Where do Jews live today?
  • What can we say about their recent migrations?
  • What about Israel?
  • What about women in judaism?  What are their real and their symbolic places in contemporary societies?
  • Questions on the permanence and rise of antisemitism in Europe? in Muslim countries?

This working group will allow for a reflection intersecting concepts from Sociology, Anthropology, History, Psycho-Sociology, etc.

Send paper proposals by January 15th to joelle.allouche@gsrl.cnrs.fr

Joëlle Allouche-Benayoun
   page perso:  https://www.gsrl.cnrs.fr
CNRS, Groupe Sociétés,Religions,Laïcités
Site Pouchet, 59-61 rue Pouchet,75017 Paris
joelle.allouche@gsrl.cnrs.fr

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Appel: “Mutations et évolutions du monde juif contemporain.”

APPEL A COMMUNICATION
    Mutations et évolutions du monde juif contemporain.  Judaïsme et judaïcités dans les sociétés contemporaines, SISR 2015,  Louvain la neuve(Belgique)

Les propositions de communication sont attendues jusqu’au 15 janvier 2015 (prolongation exceptionnelle) aux: joelle.allouche@gsrl.cnrs.fr,

    WGT 6
  Mutations et évolutions du monde juif contemporain.  Judaïsme et  judaïcités dans les sociétés contemporaines

Joëlle ALLOUCHE-BENAYOUN,
Groupe Sociologies, Religions, Laïcités (GSRL-CNRS)

    Dans la continuité de l’atelier mis en place depuis 2011, nous  nous interrogerons sur les évolutions du judaïsme et des  sociétés juives contemporaines. Tant d’un point de vue “interne” : comment être juif en diaspora après la Shoa ? Quels sont les effets de ce génocide sur l’être juif ?pluralité religieuse? place d’Israël? Place des femmes? question de la conversion?  que  d’un point de vue plus global et externe : où vivent les Juifs dans le monde au début du 21éme  siècle ? Qu’en est-il des migrations juives depuis la deuxième moitié du 20éme siècle ? Quelle  place le judaïsme et les Juifs occupent-ils dans l’imaginaire des sociétés contemporaines ? Quid  de la permanence et du renouveau de l’antisémitisme en Europe, dans les pays musulmans ?

    Cet atelier devrait permettre de réfléchir à ces questions en  s’appuyant de façon tant  unilatérale que croisée sur les concepts issus de la Sociologie, de l’Anthropologie, de l’Histoire, de la
Psycho-Sociologie, etc.

joelle.allouche@gsrl.cnrs.fr

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New Book: “Lone Star Muslims”

Lone Star Muslims: Transnational Lives and the South Asian Experience in Texas
Ahmed Afzal
288 pages
5 tables illustrations
December, 2014
ISBN: 9781479844807

Link to title on NYU Press online catalog:
http://nyupress.org/books/9781479844807/

Lone Star Muslims offers an engaging and insightful look at contemporary Muslim American life in Texas. It illuminates the dynamics of the Pakistani community in Houston, a city with one of the largest Muslim populations in the south and southwestern United States.

Using a multi-sited approach, the volume examines Pakistani diasporic public cultures and everyday life to demonstrate the complexity of the South Asian Muslim American experience. Drawing on interviews and participant observation at Pakistani festivals and parades, radio programs, and ethnic businesses, it develops the concept of a transnational Muslim heritage economy, illuminating the increasingly central role of Islam in shaping consumption patterns and public cultures among Pakistani communities in Houston.

Importantly, the volume incorporates a range of narratives, including stories from the Pakistani corporate workforce; Pakistani ethnic entrepreneurs, the working class, and the working poor employed in Pakistani ethnic businesses; second generation youth; Muslim American gay men; community activists; and radio program hosts and producers. Critiquing dominant understandings of Muslim Americans, such as “terrorist” on the one hand, and “model minority” on the other, Lone Star Muslims offers a glimpse into a variety of lived experiences that belie generalizations. It shows how specificities of class, Islamic sectarian affiliation, citizenship status, gender, and sexuality shape transnational identities and mediate racism, marginalities and abjection.

Link to title on NYU Press online catalog:
http://nyupress.org/books/9781479844807/

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CFP: Conference on “Islamism and Post-Islamism”

On behalf of the School of Religion at Queen’s University, I would like to invite you to join our fabulous international conference, entitled “Islamism and Post-Islamism: Religious and Political Transformations in Muslim Societies” which is scheduled to take place on 13-14 March 2015 at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada.

This is with great pleasure that I would like to extend the invitation to participate in an international event which will include prominent scholars such as Prof. Asef Bayat, post-revolutionary Iranian
intellectual Abdulkarim Soroush, Prof. Will Kymlicka, Prof. Nader Hashemi, Prof. Forough Jahanbakhsh Prof. Khalid Medani, Prof. Farhang Rajaee, and Prof. Ariel Salzmann. National & international TV channels and journals will be invited to this international event which will produce wide media attention. Please see the link below for the call for papers.

Abstract Submission Deadline (300 words): 25 January 2015

Conference Webpage: http://www.queensu.ca/religion/events/islamismconference.html

Call for Papers: http://www.queensu.ca/religion/events/islamismconference/callforpapers.html

We are looking forward to receiving original paper proposals.

Best regards,
Mehmet Karabela
Assistant Professor
Queen’s University
School of Religion
Theological Hall 230
Kingston, ON K7L 3N6
CANADA
Phone: 613-533-6000 ext.74313
Fax: 613-533-6879
E-mail: karabela@queensu.ca

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New Book: “Becoming German, Becoming Muslim”

BEING GERMAN, BECOMING MUSLIM: Race, Religion, and Conversion in the New Europe by Esra Özyürek
Princeton University Press

“Through thoughtful portraits, Özyürek explores the dilemmas faced by converts to Islam in Germany, where new Muslims are seeking nonethnic forms of the religion. She shows how these converts are finding an original way to be German through their Islam–a discovery that seems dangerous to some in the German state. A clear, convincing account of new Muslims in a European land.”
—John Bowen, author of Can Islam Be French?

Every year more and more Europeans, including Germans, are embracing Islam. It is estimated that there are now up to one hundred thousand German converts—a number similar to that in France and the United Kingdom. What stands out about recent conversions is that they take place at a time when Islam is increasingly seen as contrary to European values. BEING GERMAN, BECOMING MUSLIM: Race, Religion, and Conversion in the New Europe, by Esra Özyürek, explores how Germans come to Islam within this antagonistic climate, how they manage to balance their love for Islam with their society’s fear of it, how they relate to immigrant Muslims, and how they shape debates about race, religion, and belonging in today’s Europe.

Esra Özyürek looks at how mainstream society marginalizes converts and questions their national loyalties. In turn, converts try to disassociate themselves from migrants of Muslim-majority countries and promote a denationalized Islam untainted by Turkish or Arab traditions. Some German Muslims believe that once cleansed of these accretions, the Islam that surfaces fits in well with German values and lifestyle. Others even argue that being a German Muslim is wholly compatible with the older values of the German Enlightenment.  BEING GERMAN, BECOMING MUSLIM provides a fresh window into the connections and tensions stemming from a growing religious phenomenon in Germany and beyond.

Given the current position of Islam in Europe, why do Europeans convert? What do the experiences of converts reveal about contemporary life, particularly in Germany? This rich book offers a new perspective and entrée into the discussion of religion in Europe.”
—Damani J. Partidge, University of Michigan

About the Author:
Esra Özyürek is an associate professor at the European Institute of the London School of Economics. She is the author of Nostalgia for the Modern: State Secularism and Everyday Politics in Turkey.

PRINCETON STUDIES IN MUSLIM POLITICS
Dale F. Eickelman and Augustus Richard Norton, Series Editors
http://press.princeton.edu/titles/10404.html

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Call for Papers: “Nature and Religion”

Twentieth Postgraduate Religion and Theology Conference
Theme: ‘Nature and Religion’
University of Bristol

Keynote speaker: Professor Peter Hampson
Research Fellow, Blackfriars Hall, Oxford University
13-14 March 2015

The relationship existing between religion and nature manifests itself in numerous ways in nearly all religions. Throughout the centuries, thinking about nature has been perceived both as extremely supportive of and also profoundly damaging to religious belief. This year’s postgraduate conference invites papers exploring all aspects of the theme of nature, including environmental (papers on things such as climate change, food chains), biological (animal welfare, bio-ethics), philosophical and theological subjects (creation-evolution debate, the nature-grace dichotomy), historical (mythical and monstrous animals, the black plague), scriptural (the use of natural metaphors in scripture and  preaching), ethical issues (themes of environmental sustainability, categories of beings/animals, the question of the status of nonhuman beings), inter-personal relationships (gender and sexuality), esoteric, gnostic, and new-age spirituality and the occult, natural religions, issues associated with ontology, hamartiology, anthropology, physics, astronomy and history, politics and sociological issues. We invite papers on these and a myriad of other topics related to religion and nature. All religious topics and religions: Buddhist, Hindu, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Druidism, Rosicrucianism, Bahaism, Shamanism, Atheism, etc will be given equal consideration. As always, papers will
also be accepted on all subjects related to religion and theology.

http://www.bristol.ac.uk/arts/gradschool/pg-activity/conferences/twentieth-postgraduate-religion-and-theology-conference/

We welcome paper submissions now!

We will make a proper website to receive papers soon, but in the meantime please send paper proposals to: Dr Jon Balserak at: J.Balserak@bristol.ac.uk.

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New Book: After Integration: Islam, Conviviality and Contentious Politics in Europe

After Integration: Islam, Conviviality and Contentious Politics in Europe.

Edited by Marian Burchardt and Ines Michalowski,
Springer 2015, ISBN 978-3-658-02593-9, € 38,86
http://www.springer.com/springer+vs/politikwissenschaft/book/978-3-658-02593-9

The integration of Muslims into European societies is often seen as a major challenge that is yet to be confronted. This book, by contrast, starts from the observation that on legal, political and organizational levels integration has already taken place. It showcases the variety of theoretical approaches that scholars have developed to conceptualize Muslim life in Europe, and provides detailed empirical analysis of ten European countries. Demonstrating how Muslim life unfolds between conviviality and contentious politics, the contributors describe demographic developments, analyze legal controversies, and explore the action of government and state, Muslim communities and other civil society actors. Driving forces behind the integration of Islam are discussed in detail and compared across countries.

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CFP: Panel on Heritization of Religions and Spiritual Practices

SIEF 2015 CONGRESS Utopias, Realities, Heritages. Ethnographies for the 21st Century
Zagreb, 21-25 June
Call for papers closes on 14th January 2015

PANEL Reli002: The heritagization of religious and spiritual practices: the effects of grassroots and top-down policies (SIEF Ethnology of Religion Working Group)

PANEL ABSTRACT:
An idea of the ‘past’ seems to be endlessly popular and valued in various religious contexts. Institutionalized and well-established religious systems eagerly call upon the concepts of the ‘past’ and
‘heritage’ to justify their contemporary practices and ideologies. Also numerous emergent religious and spiritual movements within much more ephemeral and less institutionalized spheres inscribe themselves into heritagization processes.

This panel aims to enhance understanding of how ‘heritage’ as process works in the religious-spiritual domains of contemporary as well as historical societies. We are interested in how heritage is invented, adopted and adapted within specific cultural, social and historical frames, and how it is embraced by or attached to religious-spiritual practices. Is heritagization instigated by grassroots, spontaneous activities, or top-down policies operating on regional, national, trans-national or global  levels, or a combination of both?Are there any conflicting visions of ‘heritage(s)’ between these two – bottom-up and top-down – perspectives? How does religious-spiritual heritagization situate itself in relation to dominant political circumstances, economic conditions and the spread of new media? Is heritagization perceived as a positive value or as an obstacle from an emic viewpoint of religious-spiritual movements and their participants? Does heritage relate to ossified behaviors and practices or can it perhaps engender innovation in religious-spiritual life?

We welcome discussion of these and other questions relating to heritagization of religious and spiritual practices during this panel. Papers which combine ethnographic case studies with theoretical
approaches are especially encouraged.

Convenors:
Anna Niedźwiedź (Jagiellonian University) a.niedzwiedz@uj.edu.pl
Clara Saraiva (IICT Tropical Research Institute) clarasaraiva@fcsh.unl.pt

To propose a paper for this panel, please, use the link below:​
http://www.nomadit.co.uk/sief/sief2015/panels.php5?PanelID=3394

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Post-Doc: Islam in Africa

We invite applications for a one-year postdoctoral position for a scholar working on Islam in Africa in any time-period and region and in any discipline. The fellow will teach one course in the Department of History, pursue his/her own research, participate in the activities of Stanford Center for African Studies and Stanford Global Studies Division, and contribute to the intellectual life on campus.

Candidates must have completed the Ph.D. by the time of appointment on September 1, 2015. The recipient may not be more than three years beyond the receipt of doctoral degree by the time of the appointment. Scholars trained in disciplines other than History (including, for example, Art History, Political Science, and Music) whose work engages in historical analysis are welcome to apply.

Application materials must be submitted online at http://apply.interfolio.com/27224 . Please submit a cover letter, CV, two-page description of your research plans, drafts of two course syllabi, and a writing sample of no more than 30 pages. Applicants should arrange to have three letters of recommendation submitted directly to Interfolio.

Compensation includes an annual salary of $55,000 – $60,000, health coverage, and a $1,500 research fund. Review of applications will begin on February 27, 2015. Inquiries may be addressed to Dr. Burcak Keskin-Kozat (Associate Director of the Sohaib and Sara Abbasi Program) at burcak at stanford dot edu.

Stanford University is an equal opportunity employer and is committed to increasing the diversity of its faculty. It welcomes nominations of, and applications from, women, members of minority groups, protected veterans and individuals with disabilities, as well as others who would bring additional dimensions to the university’s research and teaching missions.

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