Events

Events Archive

Filtering by: A.Y. 2016-17

Brokering Religion and Development: Ethnographic Approaches to NGOs
May
18
12:30 PM12:30

Brokering Religion and Development: Ethnographic Approaches to NGOs

With R. Michael Feener, Catherine Scheer, Giuseppe Bolotta

The past decade has witnessed a remarkable surge of interest among both policy makers and academics into the effects that religion has on international aid and development. Within this broad field ‘religious NGOs’ or ‘Faith-Based Organizations’ (FBOs) have garnered considerable scholarly and professional attention, resulting in a flurry of surveys and mapping exercises, as well as a number of practitioner-oriented handbooks and toolkits aiming at integrating religion into development programming. Beyond these attempts at conceptualizing the field at a macro level, more recently there has also been significant new research examining the work of particular organizations and contexts from ethnographic perspectives. This growing literature provides new tools to better appreciate the ways in which emergent institutional forms advocating diverse social interventions arise out of or in conversation with religious communities and discourses on transcendent values. This, in turn, sheds light on the variety of ways in which FBOs are reshaping the global landscape of non-governmental organizations and their work across diverse societies – thus opening up new conversations on the possibilities and problematics of contemporary engagements of religion in the public sphere in diverse societies across the globe. This presentation features critical reflections on cutting edge work in this direction by a team of researchers examining dynamics of religion and NGOs in Southeast Asia based at the National University of Singapore’s Asia Research Institute, and the University of Oxford.

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A History of Difference: Piety and Space in Early Modern West Asia
May
4
to May 5

A History of Difference: Piety and Space in Early Modern West Asia

With Fatma Müge Göçek and Carl Ernst

This conference brings together scholars working broadly in Ottoman and Mughal pasts to converse, consult, and present what ways of thinking and doing difference are recoverable to us. This workshop will take as its objective a grounded history of difference narrated in diverse textual and visual cultures. We aim to incorporate venues beyond the legal—histories, hagiographies, travel accounts, visual and material culture—into the discussions of the contemporary.

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Religion II: Dynamics, Processes, and Change
Apr
21
10:00 AM10:00

Religion II: Dynamics, Processes, and Change

With Katherine Ewing, Jessica Roda, Soraya Batmanghelichi, Bahar Tabakoglu & others

The Institute for Religion, Culture, and Public Life (IRCPL) at Columbia University will host a one-day conference entitled Religion II: Dynamics, Processes, and Change on Friday, April 21, 2017. IRCPL will bring together visiting scholars and fellows to take up the theme of religion from various critical perspectives that engage: democratic processes, states, ideologies, identity-making, gender, social class, kinship, space, symbols and meaning construction in diverse places such as Canada, China, India, Iran, Israel, Palestine, Turkey, and the U.S. The conference aims to facilitate an active intellectual exchange and provide a comparative understanding of the multi-layered dynamics and processes undergirding religion in societies.

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Apr
13
4:10 PM16:10

Religion and Public Life Series - Religion and the Digital Turn

With Hussein Rashid

The methods of the Digital Humanities present an opportunity to think about the goals and methods in the Study of Religion. The emergence of these new tools challenges the ways in which we consider academic work, and the premises around which Study of Religion is built. By broadening the scope of what we can do with "religious" material, we can more broadly imagine what religion is.

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Intimacies: Days I & II
Apr
13
to Apr 14

Intimacies: Days I & II

With Homa Hoodfar, Gul Ozyegin, Sofian Merabet, Scott Kugle & more

Recent debates on gender and sexuality in Islam have centered on the shift in attitudes towards gender equity and sexual orientation within contemporary Muslim communities. This is due in large part to the range of policies and legal reforms that regulate and redefine gender relations for individuals and families across changing political and social environments in many Muslim-majority countries. Given the intricate, intervening forces of neoliberalism, mass migration, global commerce, and the expansion and use of social media technologies, there is heightened media, academic and political attention to changing norms and dynamics within Muslim societies. Yet this higher profile does not adequately capture how issues of desire, belonging, identity, intimacy, and queerness are variously understood, experienced, and practiced across diverse Muslim communities. Nor does it illuminate other pertinent discussions about women’s pleasure, queer activism, minority rights, and deconstructing Islamic masculinity, and other topics that are already taking place in Muslim contexts.

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A Pre-History of Post-Truth: Evangelical and Liberal Understandings of Worldview in the Cold War Era
Apr
11
4:00 PM16:00

A Pre-History of Post-Truth: Evangelical and Liberal Understandings of Worldview in the Cold War Era

With Todd Weir

The starting point of much contemporary thinking about religion and politics is that we are confronted with irreducible disagreements between different ethical and religious worldviews. Some scholars have argued that the first step to reconciliation between worldviews might be to abandon absolute claims to truth. This conclusion would appear to be the labor of secular observers of contemporary culture wars, who might feel with this insight to have achieved a location above fray. Yet, as I will argue, this conclusion is neither necessarily liberal nor secular. It arose already amongst Protestant fundamentalists in the early twentieth century. They developed the notion of the irreconcilability, not to compromise with secular worldviews, but to dodge the scientific arrows aimed at their own "Christian worldview" by seculatists. Responding to the Second World War and the Cold War, liberal intellectuals, such as Sidney Hook and Daniel Bell, drew quite opposite conclusions about worldview. They attacked the very notion of worldview and came up with the plan for an "end of ideology" in the interest of promoting US-style pluralistic liberalism in post-totalitarian Europe. In my lecture, which draws from a book project on the history of Weltanschauung/worldview, I will discuss the politics of worldview in the 1940s and 1950s and ask what relevance they have for our contemporary discussion of post-truth politics.

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Surveillance and the Mosque
Apr
7
8:30 AM08:30

Surveillance and the Mosque

With Arun Kundnani, Asim Qureshi, Ramzi Kassem, Maurits Berger & more

Last year’s turbulent presidential campaign revealed implicit biases about the status and security of Muslims in America and elsewhere. A rhetoric that was invariably framed using terms like “surveillance,” “suspicion,” “Islamic terror,” and “jihadist” permeated media and public discourse, culminating in widespread calls for increased surveillance of Muslim communities at home and abroad. These calls build upon discourses as well as policies and practices implemented by government officials and institutions that have policed and surveilled Muslims communities since 9/11. A consequence of these circumstances has been an amplification of commentary by Muslim leaders, civil liberties organizations, scholars, journalists, and artists on the practical and discursive implications they have for diverse Muslim communities. A fundamental point of contention is the way in which government surveillance of public “safe spaces,” such as mosques, impacts Muslim-Americans and Muslim communities here and abroad, jeopardizing their fair treatment and equal status.

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Spirit & Sound Series - Capoeira: The Music, Movements, and Ritual of the Spirit Circle
Mar
31
5:00 PM17:00

Spirit & Sound Series - Capoeira: The Music, Movements, and Ritual of the Spirit Circle

With Master Fabio Aranha Miranda, Daniel Scruggs, Dr. Katya Wesolowski, Dr. T.J. Desch-Obi Dr. Kristin Soraya Batmanghelichi

Part of the Spirit & Sound Series, The Institute for Religion, Culture and Public Life presents "Capoeira: The Music, Movements, and Ritual of the Spirit Circle." The evening will begin with a capoeira demonstration after which there will be a panel discussion on the history, cultural origins, and spiritual significance of capoeira. Topics explored will include: capoeira's beginnings in Africa, destruction of documentation regarding its development in Brazil, the hybrid nature of the art form (instrument, song, movement, acrobatics, and ritual), and its role as a martial art.

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Religion and Public Life Series - Halal Tourism and the Spoils of War in the Middle East
Mar
30
4:10 PM16:10

Religion and Public Life Series - Halal Tourism and the Spoils of War in the Middle East

With Attiya Ahmad

This talk examines the recent development of global halal tourism networks and the often-­‐frustrated attempts of actors involved in this emergent sector of Islamic enterprise to map leisure and tourist spaces in relation to Muslim sensibilities, practices, historical imaginaries and belongings. Recognizing the global importance of tourism, which today accounts for 10% of GDP and 9% of jobs worldwide, over the past ten years, a disparate group of transnational actors—including internet travel companies, hotel investors, tour guides, religious certification boards, national tourism boards, and consumers—have coalesced to develop ‘halal tourism’ as an alternative to hegemonic forms of tourist practice and infrastructure in the Middle East, ones that have developed through processes of consumer-­‐capitalism, colonialism, Judeo-­‐Christian imaginaries, secularization projects, and nationalist heritage-­‐making projects.

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Tariq Ramadan - Muslims and/in the West: Past, Present, Future
Mar
30
12:00 PM12:00

Tariq Ramadan - Muslims and/in the West: Past, Present, Future

Tariq-Ramadan.jpg

With Brexit, the election of Trump in the US, and the rise of the far-right in Europe, Muslims are facing greater scrutiny than ever before.  Throughout Europe and the US they are increasingly considered a fifth column.  Globally, self-identified Muslims are often considered harbingers of regressive values that are antithetical to a secular project of progressive enlightenment.  Western political and media attempts to expunge Islam and Muslims from the collective imaginary are both a reminder of the exclusionary practices that constitute a collective "we" and a confirmation of the ineluctable entanglements between the West and Islam, its age-old “Other.”  Join us for an afternoon with Tariq Ramadan, Brinkley Messick, Katherine Pratt Ewing, and Hasan Azad as we look at the intimate interconnections among Muslims, Islam, and the West.

*THIS EVENT IS AT CAPACITY* Please join our Waitlist on Eventbrite to RSVP. We do expect to allow as many waitlist guests in as we can, and we encourage those on the waitlist to come 15 mins prior to get a place inside.

RSVP directly on Eventbrite: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/tariq-ramadan-muslims-andin-the-west-past-present-future-tickets-33011681829


Tariq Ramadan is Professor of Contemporary Islamic Studies at the Oxford University (Oriental Institute, St Antony’s College) and also teaches at the Oxford Faculty of Theology. He is Visiting Professor at the Faculty of Islamic Studies, (Qatar) and the University of Malaysia Perlis; Senior Research Fellow at Doshisha University (Kyoto, Japan) and Director of the Research Centre of Islamic Legislation and Ethics (CILE) (Doha, Qatar).

He holds an MA in Philosophy and French literature and PhD in Arabic and Islamic Studies from the University of Geneva. In Cairo, Egypt he received one-on-one intensive training in classic Islamic scholarship from Al-Azhar University scholars (ijazat in seven disciplines). Through his writings and lectures Tariq has contributed to the debate on the issues of Muslims in the West and Islamic revival in the Muslim world. He is active at academic and grassroots levels lecturing extensively throughout the world on theology, ethics, social justice, ecology and interfaith as well intercultural dialogue. He is President of the European think tank: European Muslim Network (EMN) in Brussels.
He is a member of the International Union of Muslim Scholars.

Latest books: “Islam and the Arab Awakening” OUP USA (2012); “The Arab Awakening: Islam and the New Middle East” Penguin (April 2012); “The Quest for Meaning, Developing a Philosophy of Pluralism” Penguin (2010); “What I believe” OUP USA (2009); “Radical Reform, Islamic Ethics and Liberation” OUP USA (2008),« Au péril des idées » (French) with Edgar Morin, Presses du Châtelet, March 2014.

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Everyday Conversions: Islam, Domestic Work and South Asian Migrant Women in Kuwait
Mar
29
4:10 PM16:10

Everyday Conversions: Islam, Domestic Work and South Asian Migrant Women in Kuwait

With Attiya Ahmad

Everyday Conversions examines the widespread but little known phenomenon of migrant domestic workers’ Islamic conversions in the Arabian Peninsula and Persian Gulf region as a way to think more broadly about emergent transnational forms of gendered subjectivity, affinity, and belonging in our contemporary world. Based on extensive ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Kuwait, other Gulf states, and parts of South Asia, and vividly illustrated by descriptions of domestic workers’ everyday activities, encounters and utterances, the book argues these women’s experiences constitute a form of everyday conversion that complicates conventional understandings of both religious conversion and the feminization of transnational labour migration.

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Evangelical Truth and Apocalyptic Politics
Mar
23
4:10 PM16:10

Evangelical Truth and Apocalyptic Politics

With Ruth Marshall

The Religion and Public Life lecture series presents public conversations that expand on current theories and spur debate about religion and secularism, considering the range of secularisms and institutionalizations of religion in Europe, the US, and other parts of the world. Lectures in the series examine specific approaches to how something called “religion” is manifest in public life, and cover timely topics including law, museums and cultural institutions, education and health provisions, politics/diplomacy, prisons, and protest and social movements.

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Spirit in the Dark: A Religious History of Racial Aesthetics
Feb
23
6:15 PM18:15

Spirit in the Dark: A Religious History of Racial Aesthetics

With Josef SorettCourtney BenderRobert Gooding-Williams, and Barbara Savage

Associate Professor of Religion and African-American Studies and Director of the Center on African-American Religion, Sexual Politics and Social Justice (CARSS), has just released Spirit in the Dark: A Religious History of Racial Aesthetics through Oxford University Press. Spirit in the Dark offers an account of the ways in which religion, especially Afro-Protestantism, remained pivotal to the ideas and aspirations of African American literature across much of the twentieth century. Professor Sorett is currently at work on his second book, tentatively titled The Holy Holy Black: The Ironies of an African American Secular, which is also in contract with Oxford UP, and is additionally editing an anthology, The Sexual Politics of Black Churches.

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Religion and Public Life Series -  Divine Text, Mundane Language: Debating the Qur'an in Jakarta
Feb
20
12:30 PM12:30

Religion and Public Life Series - Divine Text, Mundane Language: Debating the Qur'an in Jakarta

With Webb Keane

The Religion and Public Life lecture series presents public conversations that expand on current theories and spur debate about religion and secularism, considering the range of secularisms and institutionalizations of religion in Europe, the US, and other parts of the world. Lectures in the series examine specific approaches to how something called “religion” is manifest in public life, and cover timely topics including law, museums and cultural institutions, education and health provisions, politics/diplomacy, prisons, and protest and social movements.

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Religion and Public Life Series - Expertly Secular
Feb
16
12:30 PM12:30

Religion and Public Life Series - Expertly Secular

With Matthew Engelke

The Religion and Public Life lecture series presents public conversations that expand on current theories and spur debate about religion and secularism, considering the range of secularisms and institutionalizations of religion in Europe, the US, and other parts of the world. Lectures in the series examine specific approaches to how something called “religion” is manifest in public life, and cover timely topics including law, museums and cultural institutions, education and health provisions, politics/diplomacy, prisons, and protest and social movements.

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Religion and Public Life Series - History and Presence
Feb
13
4:10 PM16:10

Religion and Public Life Series - History and Presence

With Robert Orsi

The question of “real presence”—the Catholic doctrine of the literal, physical, embodied presence of Christ in the host—coincided with early modern global conquest and commerce and shaped how Europeans encountered the religions of others. The gods really present, in the Catholic sense, were translated into metaphors and symptoms, and into functions of the social and political. Presence became evidence of superstition, of magical thinking, of the infantile and irrational, the primitive and the savage. History and Presence radically confronts this intellectual heritage, proposing instead a model for the study of religion that begins with humans and gods present to each other in the circumstances of everyday life. Orsi then asks what it would mean to write history with the real presence of special beings restored. With reference to Marian apparitions, the cult of the saints, relations with the dead, and other Catholic instances of encounters with the gods really present, Orsi elaborates a theory of presence for the study of both contemporary religion and history.

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Book Talk - Televised Redemption: Black Religious Media and Racial Empowerment
Feb
10
4:10 PM16:10

Book Talk - Televised Redemption: Black Religious Media and Racial Empowerment

With Carolyn Moxley Rouse, John L. Jackson, Jr., Marla F. Frederick & more

The institutional structures of white supremacy—slavery, Jim Crow laws, convict leasing, and mass incarceration—require a commonsense belief that black people lack the moral and intellectual capacities of white people. It is through this lens of belief that racial exclusions have been justified and reproduced in the United States. Televised Redemptionargues that African American religious media has long played a key role in humanizing the race by unabashedly claiming that blacks are endowed by God with the same gifts of goodness and reason as whites—if not more—thereby legitimizing black Americans’ rights to citizenship.

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Religion and Public Life Series – A Liberal Saint: The Genealogy of a Public Ethics in India
Feb
9
12:30 PM12:30

Religion and Public Life Series – A Liberal Saint: The Genealogy of a Public Ethics in India

With Christian Lee Novetzke

The Religion and Public Life lecture series presents public conversations that expand on current theories and spur debate about religion and secularism, considering the range of secularisms and institutionalizations of religion in Europe, the US, and other parts of the world. Lectures in the series examine specific approaches to how something called “religion” is manifest in public life, and cover timely topics including law, museums and cultural institutions, education and health provisions, politics/diplomacy, prisons, and protest and social movements.

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Religion and Public Life Series - Religion and Politics Beyond Freedom and Violence
Feb
2
12:30 PM12:30

Religion and Public Life Series - Religion and Politics Beyond Freedom and Violence

With Elizabeth Shakman Hurd 

The Religion and Public Life lecture series presents public conversations that expand on current theories and spur debate about religion and secularism, considering the range of secularisms and institutionalizations of religion in Europe, the US, and other parts of the world. Lectures in the series examine specific approaches to how something called “religion” is manifest in public life, and cover timely topics including law, museums and cultural institutions, education and health provisions, politics/diplomacy, prisons, and protest and social movements.

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Jan
30
12:30 PM12:30

Religion and Sexuality Series – Christians and Monsters in the History of Sexuality

With Benjamin Dunning

Benjamin Dunning is Professor in the Department of Theology at Fordham University. He teaches primarily in the areas of Christianity in Antiquity, critical theory, and gender and sexuality studies. He is also an affiliated faculty member of Fordham's interdisciplinary programs in both Comparative Literature and Women's Studies.

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Jan
25
12:30 PM12:30

Religion and Sexuality Series - Yannik Thiem

With Yannik Thiem

Yannik Thiem is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Villanova University, and Director of the Doctoral Studies Program in Philosophy. Thiem's research interests include Critical Theory, Social and Political Philosophy, 19th- and 20th-Century German Philosophy, Feminist Theory, and Digital Humanities. Recent work includes the book Unbecoming Subjects: Judith Butler, Moral Philosophy, and Critical Responsibility, and the book project in progress, Ripples of Redemptive Time: The Ethics and Politics of Temporality in Hermann Cohen and Walter Benjamin.

Sponsored by the Department of Religion at Columbia University.

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Jan
24
12:00 PM12:00

Tunisia and the Question of Secularism

With Yadh Ben Achour, Katherine Ewing and Safwan Masri

A conversation on secularism in post-revolution Tunisia between Yadh Ben Achour, former President of the High Authority of the Revolution in Tunisia, Katherine Ewing, Professor of Religion and Director of the Institute for Religion, Culture, and Public Life, and Safwan Masri, Executive Vice President of Columbia Global Centers and Director, CGC | Amman.

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Jan
23
12:30 PM12:30

Religion and Sexuality Series - Spectral Queerness in South Asian Muslim Orthodoxy

With Ali Altaf Mian

Ali Altaf Mian is Assistant Professor of Islamic Studies at Seattle University.  His research interests include Islam in South Asia, Islamic law and ethics, gender and sexuality, feminist theory and practice, Sufism and comparative mysticism, continental philosophy, comparative religion, and theory and method in the study of religion. He is currently working on a manuscript titled, “Surviving Modernity: Ashraf ‘Ali Thanvi (1863-1943) and the Making of Muslim Orthodoxy in Colonial India.

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Jan
13
9:00 AM09:00

The Religion of Karl Ove Knausgaard (Closed Workshop)

Closed workshop on Karl Ove Knausgaard

The year by year translation into English of now the first four of Karl Ove Knausgaard’s virtuosic six-volume novel, Min Kamp (My Struggle), has become something of a slow-gathering storm. Ambiguously figured as “autobiographical” by some, the volumes present an absorbing, even gripping, first person narrative of the life of a Norwegian writer living in Stockholm today, an Everyman of sorts, one with the same name as the author.

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Dec
9
4:00 PM16:00

A Conversation about Love: Queer & Straight Muslims Talk about Love & Dating

With John Austin, Ayah Eldosougi, Ayesha Mattu, Nura Maznavi, Haroon Moghul, Yusef Ramelize, K. Soraya Batmanghelichi

The co-editors of Love, InshAllah and Salaam, Love will join a panel of contributors to and readers of these groundbreaking essay collections in a university-wide conversation about love, sex, and intimacy. Stay after the event for a reception with the speakers, where copies of the book will be available for purchase.

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What Rough Beast? Contending with Trumpism
Dec
7
7:30 PM19:30

What Rough Beast? Contending with Trumpism

With K. Soraya Batmanghelichi

This session of the podcast responds to the urgent need for critical reflection in the wake of the recent, deeply divisive presidential election. Guests Kazembe Balagun (Rosa Luxemburg Stiftung) and Bhaskar Sunkara (Jacobin) will convene together with BISR faculty including Tony Alessandrini, K. Soraya Batmanghelichi, Raphaële Chappe, Ajay Singh Chaudhary, Samantha Hill, Audrey Nicolaides, Rebecca Ariel Porte, Suzanne Schneider, and Jude Webre. What went wrong in the lead-up to the election? And what is to be done in its aftermath? How should we define Trumpism and and how can we understand it?

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Movie Screening - Radical Grace
Dec
6
2:45 PM14:45

Movie Screening - Radical Grace

With Rebecca Parish

Follow Sisters Simone Campbell, Chris Schenk, and Jean Hughes as they challenge the patriarchal system, engaging everyday people in their struggle for equality and ultimately winning the heart of Pope Francis. From their cross-country Nuns on the Bus tour, to serving those on the margins, to a continued struggle for women’s religious equality, these sisters are transforming American politics — and the Church itself.

Collaborating with feminist and faith-based social justice organizations, we will leverage the film to support reform within religious institutions to end gender discrimination of women and girls in the U.S. and around the world and bridge divides to build a stronger progressive and feminist movement.

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Nov
19
8:00 AM08:00

Reframing the Debate about Secularism in the MENA Region: Religious Violence, Secular Violence, and the Question of "Real" Politics

With Liora R. Halperin, Kristin Soraya Batmanghelichi, Suzanne Schneider, Gregory Starrett, Ajay Chaudhary

Now in its third and final year, this panel represents an ongoing collaborative effort to grapple with the implications for historical and cultural studies wrought by the critique of secularism and religion as analytic categories. Despite the growing recognition of these terms' historicity and conceptual instability, scholarship on the MENA region still often reproduces the categories of the religious and the secular as if they were self-evident forms of identity or clearly demarcated modes of social and political organization. Our own dialogue has attempted to bridge the gap between interdisciplinary debates about secularism occurring in the realms of political and social theory--associated with thinkers like Tomoko Masuzawa, Gil Anidjar, Talal Asad, Timothy Fitzgerald, and Akeel Bilgrami, among others--and the historical, literary and cultural study of the modern Middle East.

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Nov
17
1:30 PM13:30

Sex and Transgression as Ways to God in 19th Century Java: Hindu-Muslim Encounters

With Andrea Acri, Terenjit Sevea, Edwin Wieringa, Verena Meyer

The Suluk Lonthang, an example of Javanese Islamic Suluk poetry from the 19th century, exemplifies the relations of sexual transgression and the subversion of gender roles to the status of holy men and women in nineteenth century Java. The poem tells the scandalous story of a renegade saint who disrupts the Islamic observance of a Javanese town with his lewd behavior and ridicule of its pious inhabitants, yet is commended as an example by the Muslim narrator.

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