2014
Religion and Society: Advances in Research, Special virtual issue: Four Portraits
Berghahn Journals offers a free virtual issue which features portraits of four senior scholars of religion from our journal, Religion and Society – Advances in Research, from volume 1 (2010) to volume 4 (201 3). The scholars include: Maurice Bloch, José Casanova, Jean Comaroff and Bruce Kapferer. Each profile consists of invited essays on the scholar’s work by authorities in their respective subfields.
To access the virtual issue, visit: http://bit.ly/1iErGoP
2014
Africa Thesis Award 2014 – Deadline 11 July
Dear Sir / Madam,
Are you a student, interested in Sub-Saharan Africa and is your Masters thesis on a related topic? If so, the African Studies Centre in Leiden is offering you the chance to win € 1.000 through its Africa Thesis Award plus publication of the winning thesis in the ASC’s African Studies Collection. This annual award aims to encourage student research and writing on Sub-Saharan Africa and to promote the study of African cultures and societies. Any final-year student who has completed his/her Masters thesis with distinction (80% or higher or a Dutch rating of at least an 8) at a university in Africa or the Netherlands may apply. Please feel free to share this message with anyone who might be interested! Read the flyer.
The deadline is 11 July 2014!
Kind regards,
Marjolein de Leeuw
Student Assistant
African Studies Centre
www.ascleiden.nl
Tel: +31 (0) 715273372
2014
Trans-Islam Research Project: Call for field research proposals
The Trans-Islam Research Project is a two-year research project that analyses the religious flows and the changes occurring in the Niger–Nigeria religious space. In the framework of this project, the French Institute for Research in Africa (IFRA-Nigeria) is offering 4 (four) grants to 4 junior researchers—MA or PhD students—aimed at supporting field research.
The proposals must fit within the research guidelines of the project and must present an innovative perspective. The selected junior researchers will have seven months to conduct fieldwork and collect new data. They will be invited to present the results of their research at a pooling seminar in Niamey (Republic of Niger) in February 2015. Following this, they will have four months to write a scientific article, which will be published on IFRA website.
All applications must be sent by e-mail before 15 June 2014 to:
Dr. Elodie Apard-Malah (IFRA): e.apard@ifra-nigeria.org
The fieldwork subsidized by the grant is expected to take place from July 2014 to February 2015. The scientific article will be expected by the end of June 2015
2014
Lectureship in African History, University of Edinburgh
The College of Humanities and Social Science, University of Edinburgh, is advertizing a Lectureship in African History. Vacancy Ref: 028439. Closing date: 5pm GMT on 30th April 2014
2014
A new book by J. Kwabena Asamoah-Gyadu
J. Kwabena Asamoah-Gyadu 2013, Contemporary Pentecostal Christianity: Interpretations from an African Context. Oxford: Regnum Books International, 232 pp, ISBN-13: 978-1620328989 (pbk), $23,40 (= Regnum Studies in Global Christianity)
Pentecostalism is the fastest growing stream of Christianity in the world. The real evidence for the significance of Pentecostalism lies in the actual churches they have built and the numbers they attract. In Africa, Pentecostalism has virtually become the representative face of Christianity with even historic mission denominations ‘pentecostalising’ their otherwise formal liturgical structures to survive. This work interprets key theological and missiological themes in African Pentecostalism by using material from the live experiences of the movement itself. An important source of primary material for instance is the popular books written by the leadership of contemporary Pentecostal churches and their media programs. An example of this is that on account of its motivational hermeneutics the Eagle, rather than the Dove, has become the preferred symbol of the Holy Spirit in this nascent dynamic movement. The interpretation of themes from contemporary African Pentecostalism in this book reveals much about how as a contemporary movement, it is reshaping African Christian spirituality in the 21st century.