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Recent Posts
- Studying Religion in the Age of a ‘White-Lash’
- On Byzantine Apocrypha and Erotapokriseis Literature
- Discourses of Religion and the Non-Religious/Secular in Islamic Contexts: Call for Expressions of Interest
- A Review of Emily Ogden’s Credulity: A Cultural History of US Mesmerism
- Name it and Disclaim it: A Tool for Better Discussion in Religious Studies
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- Kate on Nazi Christianities
- Karen Zoppa on Studying Religion in the Age of a ‘White-Lash’
- tenzan eaghll on Studying Religion in the Age of a ‘White-Lash’
- Karen Zoppa on Studying Religion in the Age of a ‘White-Lash’
- Matt Baldwin on So You’re Not a Priest? Scholar Explain What They Do to Outsiders: Natasha L. Mikles
Bulletin for the study of religion feed
- Society for Pentecostal Studies , Tulsa, OK, 16-18 March 2023
- AAAL, Portland, OR, 18-21 March 2023
- JCA Book Review by Barbara Hausmair: Archaeologies of Totalitarianism, Authoritarianism, and Repression: Dark Modernities edited by James Symonds and Pavel Vařeka
- JCA Book Reviews: The Archaeology of Burning Man: The Rise and Fall of Black Rock City by Carolyn L. White
- JCA Book Reviews: Rock, Bone, and Ruin: An Optimist’s Guide to the Historical Sciences. By Adrian Currie
- JCA Book Reviews: Networked Remembrance: Excavating Buried Memories in the Railways Beneath London and Berlin. By Samuel Merrill
- JCA Book Reviews: Reluctant Landscapes: Historical Anthropologies of Political Experience in Siin, Senegal. By François Richard
- JCA Book Reviews: Future Remains: A Cabinet of Curiosities for the Anthropocene. Edited by Gregg Mitman, Marco Armiero and Robert. S. Emmett
- Lewis, A. David and Martin Lund, eds. Muslim Superheroes: Comics, Islam, and Representation. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2017. Pp. 256. $24.93 (paperback). by Aaron Ricker
- Credulity: A Cultural History of US Mesmerism. By Emily Ogden. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2018. Pp. xiv + 268. $27.50 (paperback), $82.50 (hardcover). by Charles McCrary
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Tag Archives: Matthew Baldwin
So You’re Not a Priest? Scholars Explain What They Do to Outsiders: Matthew Baldwin
In this series with the Bulletin, we ask scholars to talk about how they describe what they do to outsiders by sharing a story or two, and reflect on how this has affected their identity as scholars of religion. For other … Continue reading
What’s in Your Religion Syllabus? Scholars Give Advice on Where to Start
In this series with the Bulletin, we ask scholars of religion to share with our readers what’s in their religion syllabus, from a new class or a class they’ve taught for years, reflecting on what has worked, what has been … Continue reading
Posted in Donovan Schaefer, Pedagogy, Stacie Swain, Uncategorized
Tagged Bulletin for the Study of Religion, Donovan Schaefer, Ian Alexander Cuthbertson, Ken Derry, Kenneth McKendrick, Kristian Peterson, Leslie Dorrough Smith, Matthew Baldwin, pedagogy, professional development, Religion, religious studies, Richard Newton, Russell McCutcheon, S. Brent Plate, Syllabi, Syllabus, teaching, Warren S. Goldstein, What's in Your Religion Syllabus
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So You’re Not a Priest? Scholars Explain What They Do to Outsiders: James Dennis LoRusso
In this series with the Bulletin, we ask scholars to talk about how they describe what they do to outsiders by sharing a story or two, and reflect on how this has affected their identity as scholars of religion. For other … Continue reading
Theorizing Religion in the Age of Trump: Matthew Baldwin
The election of Donald Trump has given rise to new kind of politics that has already increased tensions between competing groups, including religious groups over issues such as public education, science funding, and a proposed travel ban impacting several Muslim … Continue reading
Posted in Politics and Religion, Religion and Society, Religion and Theory, Religion in the News, Theory and Method, Theory in the Real World, Uncategorized
Tagged Alison Stanger, Andrew Sullivan, Anna Carastathis, Arthur Miller, Charles Murray, Charles Sanders Peirce, Columbia University, Edward O’Brien, Frank Bruni, John Warner, Matthew Baldwin, McCarthyism, Middlebury College, New York Magazine, New York Times, public reason, Rachel Fulton Brown, Richard Rorty, Roger Williams, secularism, Stephen L. Carter, The Crucible, Theorizing Religion in the Age of Trump, Thomas Jefferson, Time Magazine, Wil DiGravio
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Theorizing Religion in the Age of Trump Series: Matthew Baldwin
The election of Donald Trump has given rise to new kind of politics that has already increased tensions between competing groups, including religious groups over issues such as public education, science funding, and a travel ban impacting several Muslim majority … Continue reading
Posted in Politics and Religion, Religion and Popular Culture, Religion and Society, Religion and Theory, Religion in the News, Theory and Method
Tagged #BlackLivesMatter, Allison Stanger, alt right, Andrew Sullivan, Anna Carastathis, Bernie Sanders, Charles Murray, Coming Apart: The State of White America 1960–2010, Donald Trump, intersectionality, Matthew Baldwin, Middlebury College, Milo Yiannopoulos, New York Magazine, Nicholas Kristof, Rachel Fulton Brown, Ross Douthat, The Bell Curve, Theorizing Religion in the Age of Trump, Women’s March
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On the Nature and Ends of Critique in the Study of Religion: Part Two
Edited by Craig Martin Recently Critical Research in Religion (CRR) posted an editorial titled “How Can Mainstream Approaches Become More Critical,” written by editors Warren S. Goldstein, Roland Boer, Rebekka King, and Jonathan Boyarin. The editorial identified four sites where critique could … Continue reading
Posted in Religion and Society, Religion and Theory, Theory and Method, Uncategorized
Tagged 11th Thesis on Feuerbach, biblical criticism, bill o'reilly, Capitalism, Craig Martin, cultural relativism, Emile Durkheim, Ernst Troeltsch, Facebook, Feminism, Frankfurt School, Friedrich Nietzsche, Gandhi, Ian Wilson, Jonathan Boyarin, Karl Kautsky, Liberation Theology, Martin Luther King, Marx, Matthew Baldwin, Max Weber, Per Smith, post-structuralist, postmodern, Raymond Geuss, Rebekka King, Richard Niebuhr, Roland Boer, Russell McCutcheon, Socialism, Sociology of Religion, The German Ideology, value neutrality, Warren Goldstein, William Arnal
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On the Nature and Ends of Critique in the Study of Religion: Part One
Edited by Craig Martin Recently Critical Research in Religion (CRR) posted an editorial titled “How Can Mainstream Approaches Become More Critical,” written by editors Warren S. Goldstein, Roland Boer, Rebekka King, and Jonathan Boyarin. The editorial identified four sites where … Continue reading
Posted in Politics and Religion, Religion and Society, Religion and Theory, Theory and Method, Uncategorized
Tagged Craig Martin, Critical Research in Religion, Facebook, Friedrich Engels, Friedrich Nietzsche, Hegelians, Ian Wilson, Jonathan Boyarin, Jürgen Habermas, Matthew Baldwin, Per Smith, Rebekka King, Roland Boer, Russell McCutcheon, Sociology of Religion, value neutrality, Warren S. Goldstein
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