Interlocutions
Interlocutions
About our program: The 2024 NAASR Annual Meeting will provide a space to explore contemporary theoretical gains that have a bearing on and/or implications for academic studies of religion. Doing so will not only diversify our conversational points of analysis but also demand a sharper focus on NAASR’s own specific theoretical commitments. Inasmuch as religious studies is a necessarily interdisciplinary field, we will think about and discuss scholarly inroads and debates that newly energize our analyses of discourses on religion. Many of us engage with such discourses in our own work, but bringing them to bear more directly on the NAASR program will hopefully refocus our organization as a hub for scholarly interlocutions by way of publication and analysis. The motivation for doing so is a drive to make our scholarly critiques all the clearer, expanding our critical canon by remembering that theory is not a defensive response but a generator of new knowledge. To that end, we will not recapitulate academic “greatest hits” within social theory but instead think about the current work that is exciting us but which may be unfamiliar to our colleagues within NAASR.
[ABSTRACTS AND OUTLINE of participant presentations are available below]
Virtual Programming | Saturday, November 16
(Click here to register and receive a Zoom link for these sessions.)
Meet the Editors: The Place of NAASR Publications in the Field
12:00-1:30pm EST
K. Merinda Simmons, Editor of Concepts in the Study of Religion: Critical Primers
Leslie Dorrough Smith, Editor of Interdisciplinary Studies in Religion: Key Thinkers
Mitsutoshi Horii and Tisa Wenger, Editors of Method & Theory in the Study of Religion
Emily Crews, Editor of NAASR Working Papers
Keynote Address
Cobbled Fictions: Lessons from Cultural History in Reception and Aesthetics
2:30-4:00pm EST
Robyn Faith Walsh, University of Miami
The grand fiction of the lily-white art and built environment of ancient Greece and Rome has largely been debunked in recent years. Likewise, of late there has been greater recognition of the tattered and often paltry state of our manuscript traditions in fields like early Christianity. All of this has necessitated self-reflection in certain corners of religious studies about the assumptions we perpetuate in our scholarship. This is a reckoning that has taken place within cultural and art history, classics, and related disciplines and there is much that we can still learn from their examples. In this keynote, I will discuss how cultural aesthetics intersect with our theoretical approaches to history-telling by reexamining the museum and tourism industries and how they have packaged a highly romantic idea of the past that we have been reticent to challenge. I will also discuss the real-world implications for continuing to authorize an ancient Mediterranean imaginary steeped in the aesthetics of violence and colonialization.
Virtual Happy Hour
4:00pm EST
In-Person Programming | Friday, November 22-Sunday, November 24
Friday, November 22
Human/Subject/World
10:00-11:50am
Grand Hyatt, Balboa A-C
This roundtable will engage with questions and topics related but not limited to: subjectivity and data networks, critical access studies, waste studies, digital technologies, governmentality and global religions, indigenous studies, queer theory, trauma studies, and structures of time.
Tenzan Eaghll, ISIC, RMUTK, Bangkok
Adrian Hermann, University of Bonn
Matt Sheedy, University of Bonn
Lauren Lovestone, Florida State University
Interrelation and Cognition
1:00-2:50pm
Grand Hyatt, Balboa A-C
This roundtable will engage with questions and topics related but not limited to: affect theory, cognitive studies (including cognitive psychology, cognitive science, and analytic philosophy of mind), structuring dynamics of belief and social groups, and critical methodologies in studies of history and text.
Chris Jones, Washburn University
Daniel Miller, Landmark College
Cooper Minister, Shenandoah University
Structure and Infrastructure
3:00-4:50pm
Grand Hyatt, Balboa A-C
This roundtable will engage with questions and topics related but not limited to: infrastructure studies, animal studies, theories of nationalism and social conservatism, neo-liberalism and deregulated markets, formalism and literary theory, fiscal/monetary studies, and theories of the “gimmick.”
Talia Burnside, Florida State University
Finbarr Curtis, Georgia Southern University
Mike Altman, University of Alabama
Saturday, November 23
Business Meeting
11:00am-12:00pm
Grand Hyatt, Balboa A-C
Cross-currents: Interdisciplinary Applications of Religious Studies
1:00-2:50pm
Grand Hyatt, Balboa A-C
While the other sessions will focus on the potential influence of other disciplines on religious studies, this roundtable will consider where and how other disciplines can benefit from greater familiarity with established research in our field. Where are the findings of our field currently being applied? Where might/ought our findings be utilized? What might we as scholars do to translate our findings more effectively for other disciplines?
Jennifer Eyl, Tufts University
Mayanthi Fernando, University of California—Santa Cruz
Donovan Schaefer, University of Pennsylvania
Jolyon Thomas, University of Pennsylvania
Leslie Dorrough Smith, Avila University
Retrospective on Jonathan Z. Smith’s Drudgery Divine
4:00-6:30pm
Convention Center, 20A (Upper Level East)
Co-sponsored with Rethinking Christian Origins Seminar, Society of Biblical Literature
This panel offers a reassessment of and re-engagement with Jonathan Z. Smith’s Drudgery Divine. Panelists will discuss and reflect on the legacy of Smith’s work on the study of religion in antiquity, and theory of religion more broadly. The panel is a joint session with the Rethinking Christian Origins seminar of the Society of Biblical Literature.
Jennifer Eyl, Tufts University, Presiding
Karen Devries, University of Colorado—Colorado Springs
Russell McCutcheon, University of Alabama
Pamela Klassen, University of Toronto
Kevin Schilbrack, Appalachian State University
Deane Galbraith, University of Otago
Sarah Rollens, Rhodes College
Robyn Walsh, University of Miami
Brian Rainey, Interdenominational Theological Center
Theron Clay Mock, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität—München
Sunday, November 24
NAASR Working Group Meeting: American Examples
9:00-11:50am
Grand Hyatt, Balboa A-C
This working group meeting is for existing members of the American Examples research workshop, as well as those possibly interested in participating in the future.