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E-grāmata: Writing Religion: The Case for the Critical Study of Religion

Foreword by , Foreword by , Afterword by , Edited by
  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Jul-2015
  • Izdevniecība: The University of Alabama Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780817388386
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Jul-2015
  • Izdevniecība: The University of Alabama Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780817388386
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Writing Religion: The Case for the Critical Study of Religions is a collection of outstanding essays on wide-ranging aspects of religious studies by well-known scholars, delivered as part of the University of Alabamas annual Aronov Lectures.

In 2002, the University of Alabamas Department of Religious Studies established the annual Aronov Lecture Series to showcase the works of nationally recognized scholars of religion capable of reflecting on issues of wide relevance to scholars from across the humanities and social sciences. Writing Religion: The Case for the Critical Study of Religions is an edited collection of essays that highlights critical contributions from the first ten Aronov lecturers.

Section one of the volume, Writing Discourses, features essays by Jonathan Z. Smith, Bruce Lincoln, and Ann Pellegrini that illustrate how critical study enables the analysis of discourses in society and history. Section two, Riting Social Formations, includes pieces by Arjun Appad­urai, Judith Plaskow, and Nathan Katz that reference both the power of rites to construct society and the act of riting as a form of disciplining that both prescribes and proscribes. The writings of Tomoko Masu­zawa, Amy-Jill Levine, Aaron W. Hughes, and Martin S. Jaffee appear in section three, Righting the Discipline. They emphasize the correction of movements within the academic study of religion.

Steven W. Ramey frames the collection with a thoughtful introduc­tion that explores the genesis, development, and diversity of critical analysis in the study of religion. An afterword by Russell McCutcheon reflects on the critical study of religion at the University of Alabama and rounds out this superb collection.

The mission of the Department of Religious Studies is to avoid every ten­dency toward confusing the study of religion with the practice of religion. Instruction aboutrather than inreligion is foundational to the depart­ments larger goal of producing knowledge of the world and its many practices and systems of beliefs. Infused with this spirit, these fascinating essays, which read like good conversations with learned friends, offer sig­nificant examples of each scholars work. Writing Religion will be of value to graduate students, advanced undergraduates, and scholars interested in the study of religion from a critical perspective.
Foreword ix
Theodore Louis Trost
Steven Leonard Jacobs
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Writing, Riting, and Righting in the Critical Study of Religion 1(16)
Steven W. Ramey
I Writing Discourses
1 God Save This Honorable Court: Religion and Civic Discourse
17(15)
Jonathan Z. Smith
2 An Early Moment in the Discourse of "Terrorism": Reflections on a Tale from Marco Polo
32(22)
Bruce Lincoln
3 "A Storm on the Horizon": Discomforting Democracy and the Feeling of Fairness
54(19)
Ann Pellegrini
II Riting Social Formations
4 Fear of Small Numbers
73(23)
Arjun Appadurai
5 Developing a Critical Consciousness: Feminist Studies in Religion
96(18)
Judith Plaskow
6 Religious Practices and Communal Identity of Cochin Jews: Models, Metaphors, and Methods of Diasporic Religious Acculturation
114(17)
Nathan Katz
III Righting the Discipline
7 Regarding Origin: Beginnings, Foundations, and the Bicameral Formation of the Study of Religion
131(18)
Tomoko Masuzawa
8 De-Judaizing Jesus: Theological Need and Exegetical Execution
149(23)
Amy-Jill Levine
9 How to Theorize with a Hammer, or, On the Destruction and Reconstruction of Islamic Studies
172(22)
Aaron W. Hughes
10 Personal Self-Disclosure, Religious Studies Pedagogy, and the Skeptical Mission of the Public University
194(14)
Martin S. Jaffee
Afterword: Reinventing the Study of Religion in Alabama 208(15)
Russell T. McCutcheon
Works Cited 223(16)
Contributors 239(4)
Index 243
Steven W. Ramey is an associate professor of religious studies at the University of Alabama, USA. He is the author of Hindu, Sufi, or Sikh: Contested Practices and Identifications of Sindhi Hindus in India and Beyond.