CFP: SECULARISMS AND THE FORMATIONS OF RELIGION IN ASIA

International Conference, 29 Feb. – 1 Mar. 2016

SECULARISMS AND THE FORMATIONS OF RELIGION IN ASIA: PLURALISM, GLOBALIZATION, MODERNITIES

Keynote speakers:

  • Prof. Peter Beyer, University of Ottawa
  • Prof. Peter van der Veer, Max Plank Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity

Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Main organizer: Global Asia Research Cluster, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, NTU

In recent years there has been growing academic and public interest in the global “resurgence” of religion around the world. This has in turn stimulated scholarly debates concerning “secularism” and its conceptual imbrication with notions such as modernity, the public sphere, multiculturalism, governance, citizenship and global civil society. Some have even envisioned the desecularization of the world or the coming of the “post-secular” era. Against this backdrop this conference will focus on the complex interactions between politics of secularism and changing religious expressions across contemporary Asia, especially how the “secular” and “religious” have mutually defined and shaped each other in diverse social, cultural and political settings. Inter-disciplinary studies on “the secular” have contributed to better scholarly understanding of not only the rise of the category of religion, but also the different transformations of the religious sphere in modern times. However, a dominant thread in existing scholarship tends to focus on how the majority of contemporary societies in Asia have reacted and responded to Western versions of secularism through colonial encounters.

This workshop seeks to go beyond this action-reaction model, and to examine the ways in which societies in Asia have been active contributors to the global engagement with, and formulation of, different expressions of secularism and the “religious”. Whether through accepting, appropriating or resisting secularism as a result of colonial experiences, or through elaborating and promoting their own versions of secularism, societies in Asia have diversely defined their various traditions as “religion”, “civilization”, “spirit” or “magic/cult/superstition” in their respective colonial and postcolonial contexts. In this conference, we will particularly examine how the interactions between forms of secularism and religious discourses and traditions have in Asian societies contributed to the rise of nation-states, transformed the religious terrains and reformulated the modern functional systems such as legal, financial and educational institutions.

We invite paper proposals from different approaches such as sociology, anthropology, philosophy, religious studies, international relations, law, history, geography, political science, media studies and cultural studies that examine, but not restricted to, the following questions:

  • In what ways have societies and cultures in Asia contributed to the discourses and conceptualizations of secularism, the post-secular and the religious in the context of regional and global encounters?
  • How do secular state and religious tradition shape the spaces of civil society? What are their implications for the formulation and practice of citizenship?
  • How is ethnic or identity politics related to the interplay of religion and secularism?
  • What forms of relationship do religion and the secular state have across Asia?
  • How do religions interpret and response to the building of secular nation-states across Asia?
  • How do different forms of secularism influence the growth or decline of religious institutions or engage with other forms of religious change or innovation across Asia?
  • How do secularisms and religious traditions affect the geopolitics and international relations of a globalized Asia?

We are pleased to provide meals and accommodation for presenters during the conference period. Partial subsidies for travel expenses might be available depending on funding availability and on a case-by-case basis. We intend to publish selected papers from the conference as a journal special issue and/or as an edited volume with a reputable academic press.

GUIDELINES FOR SUBMISSION

  1. Deadline: Please submit your proposal with title and an abstract of not more than 350 words, together with your name, title, institutional affiliation and email address by 13th July, 2015.
  2. Submission method: Send in MS Word via email to hssglobalasia@ntu.edu.sg
  3. Final papers: Paper presenters are requested to submit full papers by 8th February, 2016.

Please do not hesitate to contact us for any questions or clarification regarding this workshop.

Conveners: 

  • Associate Professor Francis Lim
  • Dr Kyuhoon Cho

The post CFP: SECULARISMS AND THE FORMATIONS OF RELIGION IN ASIA appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

Conference: “Challenging (European) Modernity: Islam in Context”

Challenging (European) Modernity: Islam in Context
University of Durham
August 19-20, 2015
Keynote speakers:

  • Marco Cinnirella (Royal Holloway University of London)
  • Amina Wadud (Virginia Commonwealth University)

Submission Deadline: June 17th 2015.

Since the turn of the late-19th century, Europe gave rise to a range of cultural, socio-political, and socioeconomic projects seeking to restructure society after the concept of a modern Europe.  Some of these projects were predominantly advanced through subordinating traditions, cultures, and identities and have an inherently Eurocentric outlook. The historical experience evokes responses. Traditions, cultures, and identities have responded to fit the hegemonic conception of European modernity. This response has challenged European modernity as a concept, social entity and ideological force. Critics have problematized the unilinear view of historical progress in the discourse of Enlightenment modernity and its homogenizing universalism. Out of these critical engagements, have emerged counter discourses such as “indigenous modernities”, “multiple modernities”, and “alternative modernities”. These critiques have opened up new possibilities for research and engagement.

The relationship between Muslims and European society feels the effects  in many ways and in many different instances. Muslims have engaged with European Modernity in a variety of ways and from a variety of perspectives. What role is there for Muslims within a minority context both as agents in charge of their own destiny, or as demanders of social justice, and recognition and representation in time, place, and public space? Is there space for and actions of solidarity transcending boundaries, either geographic or socio-cultural? To what extent can Muslims engage with non-Muslims and state authorities, whether as minorities in non-Muslim territories or in countries with a Muslim majority? Are there limits for Muslims in its ability to practice their faith in a European Setting? Are their boundaries within the secular state? What texts or figures are to be considered authoritative when approaching these questions? Is there one locus or multiple loci for a legitimate engagement, either within European modernity or with that modernity as a concept? Although the focus of the public discourse remains on the headlines, this conference aims to engage on a much deeper level the relationship between Muslims or Islam and Europe today.

The overall mission is for this conference to bring together academic minds from a variety of fields all connected by an interest in understanding the role of Islam or Muslims within the dynamics of
contemporary Europe. The conference will explore research from a wide variety of fields and will educate researchers across disciplines and facilitate future cross-pollination in this area.

The plan is for a selection of papers presented at the conference to be published in a peer-reviewed, edited volume or journal edition. Each chapter will be subject to a peer review process and must not have been published, accepted for publication, or presently under consideration for publication elsewhere. Guidelines for preparing the final chapter will be sent upon acceptance notification.

Should you have any questions or require more information, please contact us via email to either laurens.de-rooij@durham.ac.uk  or law.ilm@durham.ac.uk.

The post Conference: “Challenging (European) Modernity: Islam in Context” appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

23rd Nordic Conference for the Sociology of Religion

We are pleased to invite you to the 23rd Nordic conference for the Sociology of Religion. The conference will be held on the 17th–19th of August in 2016 at the University of Helsinki, Finland.
http://blogs.helsinki.fi/ncsr-2016/

The theme of the conference is: Wellbeing, leadership and the lifespan – Current trends in the sociology of religion

The subjective turn has made the individual the centre of attention in debates on current religious and spiritual change. The customisation of religious belief, ritual and thought often centres around individual wellbeing. At the same time, religious organisations are redrafting their management and leadership strategies and have shifted their attention from classic teaching and worship to new forms of individualised and experience-centred formats. Individuals and their lifespan have increasingly become the centre of focus in religion. These changes also tend to raise tensions in religious organisations, and the polarisation between extremes seems to be increasing. The changes are linked to changes in society at large, including demographic changes, generational changes, changes in the role of the media and changes in the role of religious authority. Religion is increasingly a matter of personal choice and is given no automatic authority at any level.

The 23rd Nordic Conference for the Sociology of Religion seeks more understanding, both theoretically and empirically, on the changes in the religious field and their meaning for the individual, for religious and secular organisations, and for society at large. Contributions addressing these developments and changes at different levels and broadening the understanding of the role of religion in society today are warmly welcome. Other current topics within the sociology of religion will also be discussed. We encourage proposals for both sessions and individual papers.

Call for papers is now published!! See more under the ‘Call for papers’ tab! http://blogs.helsinki.fi/ncsr-2016/callforpapers/ 

Important dates:The dead line for session proposals is Nov 31, 2015. The dead line for paper proposals is March 15, 2016.

The confirmed keynote speakers are:

  • Nancy Ammerman, Boston University
  • Jörg Stolz, University of Lausanne
  • Coutney Bender, Columbia University
  • Anne Birgitta Pessi, University of Helsinki

Language of the conference is English.

The post 23rd Nordic Conference for the Sociology of Religion appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

CFP: Media, Gender, & Religion

Media, Gender & Religion
The Sixth International Conference hosted by The Center for Media, Religion, and Culture
January 7-10, 2016, University of Colorado Boulder

http://cmrc.colorado.edu/calendar/upcoming-conferences/

Confirmed Speakers: Sarah Banet-Weiser, USC Annenberg School for Communication Kathryn Lofton, Yale University | Mia Lövheim, Uppsala University Carla Jones, University of Colorado Boulder | Monica Miller, Lehigh University

This conference seeks to bring current research in religion and media studies into conversation with current scholarship on gender and sexuality in order to explore a rich and understudied range of issues relating to the intersection of religion, media and gender studies, broadly considered. During the past three decades, the fields of feminist and gender studies, queer theory, ethnic studies and sexuality studies have generated a tremendous amount of critical, historical and theoretical analysis of the categories of ‘gender’ and ‘sexuality,’ broadening our understanding of these categories well beyond binary models. Scholars working in these areas have explored the myriad ways that cultural, religious, historical, political, legal, psychological, linguistic, and literary contexts shape gender and sexual expressions, identities, norms, and practices. This conference will provide opportunities for careful and focused discussion of these and many more related issues. Papers and panels may address, but should not be limited to, questions such as:

• Theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of media, gender, religion and culture: gender as a category of analysis, feminist theory, queer theory, intersectionality, LGBTQIA analyses, postcolonial feminist perspectives, etc.
• Comparative analyses of religion, gender and sexuality in the media
• Historical approaches to media, gender, and religion
• Global and transnational discourses of religion, gender, and media
• Gender, secularism, and media
• Discourses of sexuality, power, gender and desire
• Religion, gender violence, and media
• Gender, sexuality and the senses, material and visual culture, aesthetics, affect and embodiment
• Neoliberalism, labor, consumption, branding, and marketing gender and religion
• Representations of gender and sexuality in journalism and news media
• Gender, religion and media stereotypes
• Gender, media and religious authority
• Religion and gendered media spaces
• Gender, religion and mediatization
• Gender, religion, and race/ethnicity
• Gender, sexuality, and politics
• Role and impact of new technologies on gender and sexuality
• Popular culture, entertainment media and portrayals of gender and sexuality
• Interactions and shifting boundaries of religion and gender in social media
• Religion, gender, and gaming
• Social movements, social and religious activism, and issues of gender and sexuality
• Religion and gender bullying and harassment in media spaces

The post CFP: Media, Gender, & Religion appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

CFP: 4th Graduate Conference in Religion

Please consider submitting a paper or a pre-organized panel to the Fourth Annual Graduate Conference in Religion at HDS, October 22-24, 2015, or encouraging your students to do so. Our call for papers is open to all work in the study of religion, broadly conceived. In addition, we are featuring four special topic modules with targeted calls:

  1. Religion and Crisis,
  2. The Promise and Peril of Textual Religion,
  3. Magic/Science/Religion, and
  4. Food Practices Across Religious Traditions.

The deadline for submissions is Friday, July 17. Check our website for updated information and for the submission form, which will be live soon. http://projects.iq.harvard.edu/gradreligionconference

For more details, please see the attached call, or email me with any questions.


Kirsten Wesselhoeft
Conference Coordinator, Graduate Conference on Religion at Harvard Divinity School
PhD Candidate: Islam & Ethics
Committee on the Study of Religion
Harvard University

The post CFP: 4th Graduate Conference in Religion appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

CFP: “Pentecostals and the Body”

CALL FOR MANUSCRIPTS: ANNUAL REVIEW OF THE SOCIOLOGY OF RELIGION
Volume 8: Pentecostals and the Body
Forthcoming 2017
Edited by: Michael Wilkinson (Trinity Western University, Canada) and Peter Althouse (Southeastern University, USA)

The body is an important area of research in sociology as well as across a number of disciplines including religion. The intersection of religion, sexuality, gender studies, queer studies, disability studies, health and illness, pain, death and dying, emotions, and embodiment, or more specifically the social and cultural meanings of the body are especially insightful. While literature on embodiment continues to expand, to date, there is no sustained examination of Pentecostalism and the themes associated with research on the body. And yet, Pentecostals offer some very interesting observations about religion, religious experience, religious embodiment, healing, sexuality and notions of control, holiness, and celebration. Pentecostals are well known for
overt bodily expressions of religious experience, spirituality that includes kinesthetic worship such as speaking in tongues, dancing, twirling, and falling down. Among Pentecostals there is also
considerable debate about bodies, the relationship between bodies and the Holy Spirit, possession of evil spirits, deliverance and exorcism.

Pentecostalism also has a long history of claiming divine healing for the body and emotions. Believing that healing is a sign of divine power and presence raises a certain tension with bodies that never experience healing or face some type of disability. Pentecostalism is also associated with notions of sexuality, and gender roles that are liberating and limiting. Generally, we intend to explore the following: How and by what means is Pentecostalism embodied? What debates highlight the tensions over bodies and so called authentic expressions of Pentecostalism vis-à-vis the body and the politics of the body? What is the social processes and social interactions by which bodies embody religion?

To explore these issues we propose to include articles around the following themes.

  1. The Kinesthetic Body – Pentecostals and charismatic worship, speaking in tongues, dreams, and visions.
  2. Bodies and Spirit(s) – Pentecostal notions of being filled with the Holy Spirit and deliverance of other spirits.
  3. Health, Illness, and Disability – Pentecostals and the practice of healing and discourses around illness and death.
  4. The Politics of Sexuality and Gender Roles – Pentecostalism as liberating and limiting for bodies, social control and gender roles, sexuality and notions of holiness/purity of body.

The editors will seek out contributors who can address questions raised in the sociology of religion about Pentecostalism and the sociology of the body with authors representing regional and cultural variation. Please send all proposals (300 words) to Michael.Wilkinson@twu.ca

Deadlines:
Submission of proposals: July 30, 2015
Notification of acceptance: September 30, 2015
Completed manuscripts (7,000 words): June 30, 2016

The post CFP: “Pentecostals and the Body” appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

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/

The post Conference: “Life Here and Hereafter” appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

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.

The post Waikato Islamic Studies Conference appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

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

The post Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies, appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.

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.

The post CFP: “Life and Hereafter: Beliefs and Practices” appeared first on ISA Research Committee 22.