CALL FOR PAPERS – Africa-Related Papers, Panels and Roundtables American Academy of Religion

American Academy of Religion Annual Meetings, Nov. 22-25, 2014, San Diego

The American Academy of Religion (AAR) is the largest professional organization for scholars of religious studies, history, the social sciences, literature, and other disciplines who study religion.

The AAR will meet in San Diego from Saturday, Nov. 22 to Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2014. The AAR’s African Religions Group seeks papers for panels or roundtables on (1) religious dimensions of violence in Rwanda and the DRC, (2) religious dimensions of international development and climate change, (3) LGBTIQ women in Africa, (4) mental health and religion in Africa, (5) African religions and agriculture, and (6) aspects of law, ethics, and religion in relation to homophobia on the continent. The full CFP (see http://papers.aarweb.org/content/african-religions-group) follows below; please distribute widely.

The deadline for proposals is 5:00 p.m. EST, Monday, March 3. Directions for submitting proposals may be found at http://papers.aarweb.org/content/general-call-instructions. Please contact Joseph Hellweg (jhellweg@fsu.edu) and/or Mary Nyangweso (wangilam@ecu.edu) with any questions you might have.

We invite individual papers, paper sessions, and roundtable proposals on the following six themes from scholars in all academic disciplines relevant to these topics:

1. Religious dimensions of violence, displacement, and politics in Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo 20 years after the Rwandan genocide: Two decades after the Rwandan Genocide, President Kagame still leads Rwanda. Rwanda’s gacacha courts that judged genocide perpetrators only closed recently in 2012. And violence continues just beyond Rwanda’s border in the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo. We seek contributions that explore the gendered, political, ritual, transnational and other dimensions of the current situation in relation to religion and ethics, broadly construed, in either or both countries.

2. Religious responses to and reflections on the ecological and environmental impact of international development and climate change: As apocalyptic scenarios for climate change and its impacts on the Global South gain attention, religious authorities and ethicists are interpreting changing climate patterns in moral terms or taking ritual action to address them, giving scholars of religion opportunities to assess the religious and ethical aspects of the current situation. We seek contributions that focus on such issues on the African continent in autochthonous, Christian, Muslim, or other religious or ethical contexts.

3. LGBTIQ women in Africa: Although the lives of LBGTIQ persons are receiving increasing international attention by scholars and the media, the focus is more often on men than on women. We seek insights into how women in specific communities on the African continent fashion their gendered and sexual lives in light of various religious and ethical dynamics and contexts—in cities and villages, in Christian and Muslim communities, and in light of autochthonous religious logics and practices, etc. We also welcome contributions that evaluate Western notions of LBGTIQ identity and queer theory in light of local categories of gender and sexuality—including critiques of the concepts of gender and sexuality themselves and of other theoretical frameworks—as they affect these women’s lives.

4. Mental health and religion in Africa: As state resources for the treatment of mental illness continue to dwindle across Africa, ritual and religious sources of treatment come into greater public view, having long coexisted with biomedicine. We invite contributions that explore the coexistence of these healing systems; the treatment of mental illness by religious (including missionary) institutions; religious or ritually grounded etiologies of mental illness (including etiologies prevalent in Islam); ethical dimensions of mental health and illness on the continent; and the impacts of shamanism, spirit possession, divination, or other ritual practices on mental health. Related topics are also welcome.

5. African religions and agriculture: Agricultural work in Africa has long involved ritual action to assure the intervention of ancestors and spirits in providing rain and for the fertility of the land. We seek contributions that explore intersections among ritual, ethics, and farming—from ethnographies of agricultural rituals to studies of cooperatives organized by religious practitioners to assessments of state policies linked to the redistribution or commodification of land in ways that reveal socialist or capitalist cosmologies, to the ethics of land ownership and the use of genetically modified crops. We welcome related topics as well.

6. Homophobia, Law, and Religion in Africa: This session will critically examine the wave of legalized homophobia across the continent that has recently garnered attention in Uganda and Nigeria with respectively failed and successful attempts to outlaw homosexuality with the imprimatur of religious authorities. We seek papers that focus on specific national, regional, or continental aspects legalistic attempts to marginalize LGBTIQ persons in Africa. We also seek papers that engage relationships between religious and legal authorities or theology and law in these efforts. Above all we seek detailed presentations that explore precise dimensions of the wave of homophobia on the continent in relation to law and religious or ethical concerns at whatever scale the author chooses.

8th GloPent conference on ‘Pentecostalism & Development’, SOAS, London, 5-6 September 2014

 

Conference Theme
Pentecostal Christianity (including its many variants) has undoubtedly become one of the major religious forces in the so-called “developing world”. This has major implications for numerous parameters crucial to development initiatives, such as politics, social relations, inter-religious affairs, gender roles, and household economics. However, the academic analysis of these implications has been constrained by a number of factors. First, Pentecostalism’s emphasis on individual conversion and its outer-worldly ontology have tended to eclipse the multiple and even contradictory ways the movement has engaged with the practice of development. Second, the academic debate about Pentecostalism’s impact on development has been controversial, with opinions varying between attributing Pentecostals with a new “Protestant Ethic” leading to an “upward social mobility” and seeing them complicit with the development failures of the “gatekeeper state”. Finally, in development studies the role of religions has largely been seen as problematic or simply ignored, which is a lack now gradually being addressed by new publications and development programmes.

Given this current re-appraisal of the role of religions in development studies and the need for a reassessment of Pentecostalism’s influence on development initiatives, the conference addresses a highly relevant theme. Three keynotes will frame the conference debate by addressing the most pressing conceptual questions from the disciplinary vantage points of cultural anthropology, development studies, and religious studies. Issues of practice will be explored in a panel discussion featuring experts actively involved in development initiatives with Pentecostal actors. In addition, the conference will offer workshops in two parallel sessions, addressing specific themes of the conference topic and presenting ongoing research on Pentecostal and Charismatic movements.

Call for Papers
We invite contributions to the parallel session workshops at the conference.

Papers may address the conference theme and/or present current research projects on Pentecostal and Charismatic movements worldwide. The parallel sessions will be grouped according to topical focus and with a special interest in interdisciplinary exchange. Should you wish to organize a full panel, please contact the conference organizer before soliciting and submitting abstracts.

Please send your title and a 150-200 word abstract to joerg.haustein@soas.ac.uk by 30 April. Selections will be confirmed by 31 May at the latest.

Lecturer in Asian Religions, Dept. of Religious Studies, Cape Town University

The Department of Religious Studies, Asian Religions, invites applications for a permanent Lecturer level position, from 01 July 2014 or as soon as possible thereafter. Closing date: 10 March 2014

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IAHR 21st World Congress, Erfurt, Germnany 23-29 August 2015: Call for Panel Proposals

 

You are invited to propose panels for the 21st IAHR World Congress, Erfurt, Germany, 23-29 August 2015, within the thematic framework of our Congress” “Dynamics of Religions: Past and Present”, which will be addressed in four interrelated fields: “Religious Communities in Society: Adaptation and Transformation”; “Practices and Discourses: Innovation and Tradition”; “The Individual: Religiosity, Spiritualities and Individualization”; and “Methodology: Representations and Interpretations”. Click HERE for a further description of these four areas.

We encourage you to propose panels for our Congress at this point as well as to approach your colleagues and friends who you think would be interested in participating in our Congress and present their ideas and projects there.This Call is for Panels only. If you are looking for presenters to participate in you panel, please make use also of our Facebook page as a discussion forum. Our Call for Papers will follow in the next months.

Each panel lasts two hours. Panel papers should be limited to 20 to 30 minutes, depending on the number of panel participants. Panel conveners are asked to approach possible participants from different nations to reflect the scope and internationality of the IAHR Congress.

To propose a panel, please submit a general proposal of the panel as well as individual proposals of all papers included in the panel. Both panel and papers of a proposed panel will be evaluated by the Academic Program Committee to ensure a high academic standard of the Congress program. We therefore ask panel conveners to submit the proposals of all prospective panel participants of a proposed panel as indicated by the submission form. Proposals of panels and of papers should not exceed 150 words.

The deadline for submission of proposals is Sunday, September 14, 2014. All proposals must be submitted electronically via the IAHR 2015 website. This site will be available for submissions from Sunday, September 1, 2013 through Sunday, September 14, 2014. As part of the submission process, you will be asked to indicate the area in which you would like your proposal considered. Your proposal will then be forwarded to the appropriate member of the Academic Program Committee.

You will receive notice concerning the status of your proposal as soon as possible and certainly before March 1, 2015. If your panel or paper has been accepted by the Academic Program Committee, please note that you will have to register as Congress participant before May 15, 2015 to be included in the Congress program.

Congress Websites: www.iahr2015.orgwww.uni-erfurt.de/iahr
Contact: iahr@uni-erfurt.de

AAR African Religions Group

AAR African Religions Group

Statement of Purpose
This Group provides a forum for the discussion of research on the multiple religious traditions of Africa, methodological issues in the study of the religions of Africa, and African religious responses to ethical and social issues affecting the continent. The Group encourages the participation of African and non-African scholars in the leadership of the Group and in participation in its programs.

Leadership
Chair: Joseph Hellweg, jhellweg@fsu.edu; Mary Nyangweso, wangilam@ecu.edu
Steering Committee
Adriaan van Klinken, a.vanklinken@leeds.ac.uk; Afe Adogame, a.adogame@ed.ac.uk; Albert K. Wuaku, wuakua@fiu.edu; Danoye Oguntola-Laguda, danoyeoguntola@yahoo.com
Dianna Bell, bell.dianna@gmail.com

Call for Papers for the AAR Annual Meeting at San Diego, CA., USA, November 22-25, 2014
This Group encourages critical inquiry about religions originating in Africa as well as all those practiced there. Proposals should go beyond description; they should analyze the conceptual tools and methods employed. We invite individual papers, paper sessions, and roundtable proposals on the following five themes relevant to any region of the African continent (North, West, East, Central, Southern, and the Horn):
• Religious dimensions of violence, displacement, and politics in Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo 20 years after the Rwandan genocide
• Religious responses to and reflections on the ecological and environmental impact of international development and climate change
• LGBTIQ women in Africa
• Mental health and religion in Africa
• African religions and agriculture

The deadline for proposal submission is Monday, March 3, 5:00 PM EST

For questions or support, email support@aarweb.org.

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