Goldsmiths Graduate Festival 2013
At Goldsmiths University of London
Panel on Secularism, Post-secularism and Public Space – Thursday 16th May 5pm-6.30pm
See full program here.
Goldsmiths Graduate Festival 2013
At Goldsmiths University of London
Panel on Secularism, Post-secularism and Public Space – Thursday 16th May 5pm-6.30pm
See full program here.
As posted on the International Association for the Cognitive Science of Religion’s Facebook page:
The Department of Religious Studies at the University of Tennessee is offering a one-year lecturer position in the field of “Science and Religion.”
Please contact Dr. Rosalind Hackett (rhackett@utk.edu) if you would like more information.
BSA Sociology of Religion Study Group Study Day
Making Sense of the Census
The SocRel Response
Venue: London
Date: 18 June 2013 (9.45-5.00)
The UK government Office for National Statistics (ONS) administers a census questionnaire every ten years. The purpose is to provide data to inform decisions about policy and resource allocation. In 2001, for the first time in its 150-year history, the census contained a question about religious identity. That question was repeated, with a slight variation, in 2011 and results are prompting debate and discussion amongst academics, religious leaders, faith groups, nonreligious groups and various other interested parties.
To help form a response from SocRel, our annual Study Day will develop a synthesis of SocRel analysis in order to inform wider public debates.
The event will be of empirical and theoretical interest, both empirical and theoretical, to scholars in anthropology, geography, history, philosophy, practical theology, psychology, religious studies, sociology and social policy as well as to those working in specific faith traditions.
Please find the full event programme attached.
The event is £40.00 for BSA/SocRel members; £50.00 for non-members; £20.00 for SocRel/BSA Postgraduate members/unwaged; £25.00 for Postgraduate non-members.
Registration is available via the BSA website at the following address:
http://portal.britsoc.co.uk/public/event/eventBooking.aspx?id=EVT10280
Information directly quoted from: http://www2.lse.ac.uk/anthropology/research/PRNR/Events/events.aspx
Speaker: Professor Heiner Bielefeldt (UN Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief and Professor of Human Rights and Human Rights Politics, University of Erlangen-Nürnberg)
Chair: Dr Ronan McCrea (Faculty of Laws, University College London)
Date: 25 April 2013
Time: 18.30-20.00
Venue: Wolfson Lecture Theatre, New Academic Building, London School of Economics
Within the UK, the recent cases of Nadia Ewedia and others before the European Court of Human Rights have brought questions of freedom of religion or belief to the fore, cases which are part of a much broader set of currents, interests, and debates. In this lecture, Professor Bielefeldt will reflect upon how what we’re seeing in the UK relates to these broader currents, from his unique perspective as the UN’s Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief.
This event is free and open to all with no ticket required. The New Academic Building is accessible at Lincoln’s Inn Fields. Please contact Dr Matthew Engelke via religionforum@lse.ac.uk with any questions.
Co-sponsored by the LSE’s Forum on Religion and Centre for the Study of Human Rights.
Risk and Rapture: Apocalyptic Imagination in Late Modernity
Centre for Faiths and Public Policy, University of Chester
Wednesday 11th September 2013
Keynote Speaker: Professor Scott Lash(Goldsmiths College, University of London)
Apocalypse captivates the human imagination. Once synonymous with ‘end of the world’ scenarios and confined largely to the religious, the term is part of vernacular language in the West and is used to describe a myriad of events from the fiscal difficulties of the Eurozone to nuclear war, from environmental disaster to the dangers of digital technology.
The advancement of science and technology has assisted in expediting anxiety with regard to apocalyptic catastrophe because such ‘progress’ has produced unforeseen hazards and risks. Critical theories of risk have been developed that harness and organise responses to scientific developments in an attempt to provide solutions to possible catastrophe. It is suggested that in order to prevent global catastrophe, modern society must be reflexive. Moreover, the advent of such hazards has served as a recruiting sergeant for fundamentalist religious groups who have clear and explicit eschatologies. Rather than viewing possible risks and hazards as by-products of late modernity—‘signs of the times’, they are re-interpreted as ‘signs of the end times’. Consequently, one strand that runs through the above is the political implications of apocalyptic ideology and theories of risk. Whether this is the focus some Christian dispensationalist groups put on the role of the state of Israel in the Middle East, or the so-called catastrophic acceleration of global-warming, decisions based on interpretations of these inevitably have political ramifications.
The purpose of this inter-disciplinary conference is to investigate and evaluate some of the variety of apocalyptic discourse that exists in contemporary popular western culture along with critical theories of risk. Papers are invited that explore both the secular and religio-political dimensions of apocalyptic language in contemporary society and include, but not restricted to, the following themes:
Proposals for short papers are invited on any aspects or themes related to the above. Papers will be 20 minutes in length with an additional 10 minutes discussion. Applications to submit a paper should include:
Short paper proposals should be submitted toRiskraptureconf@chester.ac.uk by no later than 4pm on Monday 22nd April 2013.
Conference costs: £50 (£25 unwaged and students) inclusive of lunch and refreshments.
Conference registration will open in due course.
Wednesday 1 May 2013
at the Faculty of Laws, UCL
ABOUT THE CONFERENCE
Throughout history, religious belief and religious affiliation have been powerful factors in shaping human societies. They have defined individual identities and communities, governed the relationship between commonwealths, and inspired human creativity. Religious visions, hopes and fears also stimulated conflict and unleashed violence. For an overwhelming and growing majority of people living on our planet today, religious belief answers questions central to their existence. It allows them to cope with difficult or decisive moments and structures everyday life. It seems that over the past generations, differences regarding the place and role of religious belief have grown considerably. In a world marked more than ever before by migration and global connectivity, societies which tend towards religious neutrality or indifference need to define anew their relationship to communities with strong religious commitments. In the past as well as today, the relationship between individual and community, between different confessions and religious communities, between these communities and the state, are negotiated in complex processes of moderation, sometimes involving conflict or even violence.
This conference is the closing event of a four-workshop series which took place at UCL in 2010-12. It offers a cross-disciplinary assessment of these different forms in which religious identity, commitment and community are negotiated in the contemporary world. Without claiming to exhaust the topic, it proposes to look at the agents, procedures and outcomes of these negotiations, and hopefully will evaluate the potentials and limits of negotiation of religion.
More information here: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/european-institute/events/religion
2013 Conference of the Australasian Philosophy of Religion Association (APRA)
Theme: Religion and Science, Theism and Atheism
Date: Friday 21st June to Sunday 23rd June, 2013
Keynote Speakers:
Professor Herman Philipse, University of Utrecht, Netherlands
Professor Michael Ruse, Florida State University, USA
Professor John Bishop, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Professor Peter Forrest, University of New England, Australia
Other speakers include:
Professor Purushottama Bilimoria, Deakin University
Professor James Franklin, University of NSW
Doctor Bruce Langtry, University of Melbourne
Professor David G. Santos, University of Beira Interior Portugal
Doctor Jeremy Shearmur, Australian National University
Doctor Lloyd Strickland, Manchester Metropolitan University, Great Britain
Venue: University of Sydney, Department of Studies in Religion, Woolley Building.
The Australasian Philosophy of Religion Association (www.apra.org.au) aims to encourage, publicise and circulate scholarly work within the field of philosophy of religion. It also hopes to foster greater ties between scholars working in the field by providing a forum for a constructive and critical analysis of religion.
If you would like to present a paper, please submit a title, a short abstract (of up to 200 words), and a brief bio to:
p.quadrio@unsw.edu.au<mailto:p.quadrio@unsw.edu.au> OR nathanaeverson@gmail.com<mailto:nathanaeverson@gmail.com>
Abstracts due, 1 April 2013.
Proposals relating to the above conference theme are particularly welcome, though the organising committee also welcomes papers on any topic in the philosophy of religion or philosophical theology.
Enquiries may be directed to:
Dr Philip Quadrio or Nathan Everson
p.quadrio@unsw.edu.au<mailto:p.quadrio@unsw.edu.au> OR nathanaeverson@gmail.com<mailto:nathanaeverson@gmail.com>
Disbelief in Antiquity: an Interdisciplinary Conference
22-24 June 2013
Al-Jaber auditorium, Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
Online booking: http://www.oxforduniversitystores.co.uk/ (search for ‘Disbelief’ or follow Conferences and Events > Classics > Classics Events)
We plan to have a number of shorter, TED-style papers (10 minutes + 5 minutes of discussion) at 5.00 on 23rd June). If you have an idea for one of these, please send a short abstract (200 words maximum) to tim.whitmarsh@ccc.ox.ac.uk. Unfortunately we cannot guarantee financial support for these speakers.
Were there ancient versions of atheism? Who were the religious disbelievers in antiquity? What did they question? When and why did ancient religions allow dissent? This conference brings together some of the top names of Egyptology, Classics, Biblical Studies, the Ancient Near East and East Asia to address these questions.
22nd June
12.45 pm arrivals, registration, lunch
2.00 pm Cliff Ando (Chicago) ‘Disbelief and cognate concepts in Roman antiquity’
3.15 pm Teresa Morgan (Oxford) ‘Is divine-human (dis)belief analogous to intra-human (dis)belief?’
4.30 pm Tea and coffee
5.00 Xinzhong Yao (King’s London) ‘The tension between belief and disbelief in early Confucianism’
6.15 Opening reception
7.15 Dinner in College
23rd June
9.00 am Richard Parkinson (British Museum) ‘Is he asleep? Scepticism and disbelief in Middle Kingdom elite culture’
10.15 am Jan Assmann (Heidelberg) ‘Egyptian disbelief in the promises of eternity’
11.30 am Coffee
11.45 am Marianna Shakhnovich (St Petersburg) ‘The origin and transformation of disbelief in shamanism’
1.00 pm Lunch
2.00 pm Herbert Niehr (Tübingen), ‘Some aspects of ‘disbelief’ according to the sources from Late Bronze Age Ugarit’
3.15 pm Francesca Stavrakopoulou (Exeter) ‘Let sleeping gods lie: atheism, skepticism and religious reality within and without the Hebrew Bible’
4.30 pm Tea and coffee
5.00-6.30 shorter papers
7.15 Conference dinner in College
24th June
9.00 am Sarah Hitch and Emily Kearns (Oxford) ‘Atheism as literary criticism: the case of Greek poetry’
10.15 am Jim Porter (Irvine) ‘What’s the matter with God? Natural philosophy, materialism, and the sublime in Greece and Rome’
11.30 Coffee
11.45 Tim Whitmarsh (Oxford) ‘Atheism and polytheism’
1.00 Lunch
Please note that accommodation is limited at Corpus Christi. Rooms can also be booked via http://www.oxfordrooms.co.uk/. Hotels close to Corpus Christi include the Eastgate (http://www.mercure.com/gb/hotel-6668-mercure-oxford-eastgate-hotel/index.shtml) and the Old Bank (www.oldbank-hotel.co.uk/).
Organisers: Sarah Hitch (sarah.hitch@classics.ox.ac.uk), Tim Whitmarsh (tim.whitmarsh@classics.ox.ac.uk). Please contact Sarah if you would like to be considered for a student bursary.
http://www.classics.ox.ac.uk/event-reader/events/disbeliefinantiquity.html
German Association for Religious Studies (DVRW): The diversity of nonreligion: secular worldviews and ways of life
http://www.uni-goettingen.de/de/366073.html
31. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Vereinigung für Religionswissenschaft (DVRW)
11.9. – 14.9.2013
Die Vielfalt der Nichtreligion: Säkulare Lebensentwürfe und Weltanschauungen
The abstracts are in German only:
Panel Abstract:Fasst man unter den Begriff „Nichtreligion“ alle Phänomene, die gemeinhin als nicht religiös gelten, gleichzeitig jedoch nicht ohne Bezugnahme auf „Religion“ adäquat beschrieben und verstanden werden können, stößt man auf ein vielfältiges und eigenständiges Forschungsgebiet. Beispielsweise veranschaulichen Gleichgültigkeit gegenüber Religion auf der einen und Religionskritik auf der anderen Seite grundsätzlich verschiedene Arten der Nichtreligiosität; Mitglieder atheistischer Organisationen unterscheiden sich in vielerlei Hinsicht von individuellen Skeptikern. Allgemein gesprochen produzieren die religiösen, kulturellen und sozio-politischen Hintergründe verschiedener Gesellschaften – welche z.B. vom Staatsatheismus bis hin zur Todesstrafe für Blasphemie reichen – nicht nur unterschiedliche religiöse Traditionen und Arten der Religiosität, sondern auch spezifische Arten der Nichtreligiosität. Vor diesem Hintergrund lädt dieses Panel zu Beiträgen ein, die sich auf der Grundlage empirischer Forschung zu diesem Themengebiet mit der Ausarbeitung einer allgemeinen systematischen Religionsforschung, die eine Erforschung nichtreligiöser Lebensentwürfe und Weltanschauungen einschließt, auseinandersetzen. Hierbei könnten beispielsweise folgende Fragestellungen diskutiert werden:
Paper titels:
The BSPR’s Tenth Conference: Atheisms
11th-13th September 2013
Oriel College, University of Oxford
Keynote Speakers:
Dr. Pamela Anderson (Oxford)
Professor Stephen R. L. Clark (Liverpool)
Professor Owen Flanagan (Duke)
Professor Robin Le Poidevin (Leeds)
Buddhists, Epicureans, Christians, Pantheists, Materialists, Liberal Humanists, Transhumanists, Nietszcheans and Idolaters have all at different times been content to be called “atheists”, and even the most ardent of “New Atheists” will insist that they need have no “positive” beliefs, except to reject whatever God or notion of God it is that they oppose. There need therefore be no one doctrine or way of life identified as “Atheism”. The question is rather what forms of life and thought are to be reckoned “atheistical” and why they might (or might not) seem attractive.
Nor need the rejection of whatever God or Gods are in question always be a matter of intellectual conviction rather than politics (as anti-clericalism) or broadly “spiritual” practice (requiring the rejection of any authority superior to the individual’s own will, or to the State’s judgement).
If you would like to present a paper, please send an abstract of a maximum of 250 words to me (andrew.moore@theology.ox.ac.uk) by the end of March, 2013. Unfortunately, it will not be possible to consider abstracts that exceed the word limit or that are submitted after the closing date (allowance being made to colleagues in other time zones). The plural form “ATHEISMS” is to be noted: papers solely directed to refutations of (and refutations of those refutations of) “the Five Ways” (for example) are discouraged, as are papers directed solely to proving the non-existence of one particular deity, without regard to the alternatives.
Papers need not be on the theme of the conference, although a preference may be shown towards selecting those that are, other things being equal. Time and space at the conference will be limited, so we shall have to be selective, even allowing for the fact that we plan to run parallel sessions and request people presenting papers to keep to half-hour slots.
In order to keep to the tight timetabling required to permit participants to hear (the whole of) as many papers as possible, papers should take ideally fifteen minutes and an absolute maximum twenty minutes to deliver, leaving ten minutes or so for discussion.
Andrew Moore
Hon. Sec. BSPR
Registration Information: TBA