Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Book
JOIN US IN SUPPORTING THE
Audrey
Thompson
PITTSBURGH Patrick Clayborn
THEOLOGICAL METHODIST
SEMINARY THEOLOGICAL
SCHOOL OF OHIO
Nami Kim
SPELM A N
COLLEGE
Teresa
Delgado
IONA
Eric Barreto COLLEGE
L UTHER
SEM IN A RY
Stephanie Gray
Audiovisual:
Associate Director of Publications
Bill Baskett
Steve Herrick PRG Audiovisual
Director of External Relations
Annual Meeting Publications:
Margaret P. Jenkins
Director of Membership and Development Cassy Gordon
Graphic Design
Aislinn Jones
Director of Marketing
Deanna Lord
Administrative Assistant
Deborah Minor
Director of Finance and Administration
Robert Puckett
Director of Meetings
Susan Snider
Associate Director of External Relations
2 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Table of Contents
Annual Meeting Information
Directory of Services............................................................................................................................................................. 4
Hours of Operation............................................................................................................................................................... 4
Hotel Information................................................................................................................................................................. 5
Hotel Maps........................................................................................................................................................................... 7
Workshops.......................................................................................................................................................................... 20
Tour Information................................................................................................................................................................ 26
Highlights........................................................................................................................................................................... 30
Advertising................................................................................................................................................................................... 168
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 3
Annual Meeting Information
Exhibit Hall
Hyatt Regency, Grand Hall
Saturday, October 30.......................8:30 am–5:30 pm
Sunday, October 31.........................8:30 am–5:30 pm
Monday, November 1......................8:30 am–5:30 pm
4 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Hotel Information and Map
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 5
Job Center
Employer Fees
First job: $325 onsite
Each additional job: $85 onsite
6 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Hyatt Regency Atlanta
Skywalk to the
Marriott Marquis
(Job Center)
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 7
Hyatt: Ballroom Level
JOB CENTER
8 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Hyatt: Exhibit Level
REGISTRATION
(Exhibit Hall)
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 9
Hyatt: Conference Level
10 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Marriott Marquis
AT R IU M B A L L R O O M
A 60 0 ’S
A 70 0 ’S
H EAL TH C L UB
S PA
Lobby Level FRONT DESK
C O N C IE R G E
L 4 0 0 ’S
L 50 0 ’S
S TA R B U C K S
M:S T O R E
MA R Q U IS B A L L R O O M
M10 0 ’S
M20 0 ’S
Marquis Level
M30 0 ’S
F E D E X K IN K O ’S
IMP E R IA L B A L L R O O M
R O O MS 1-10
International Level R O O MS A -C
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 11
12
Floor to Ceiling Windows
Atrium Ballroom
B C
Marquis Tower II A
Skywalk to
Hyatt Regency Freight Elev ator
Atrium Stairs
A706 A707 A708
Men’s
A601
Registration
1 Escalator
A705
Registration
2 A602
Women’s
A704 A703 A702 A701
Pulse
Pool Bar
Women’s
Sear
Bar Men’s
High-Velocity
Marriott: Atrium Level
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Media Room
Marquis Tower I
Pool
Sear Restaurant
Marquis Tower II
Luggage Storage
S ta i rs
B ell
Porte Registration
Cochere Spa
Escalator
Fountain
F ront
Entranc e
E s c a l a to rs
Marriott: Lobby Level
Health
Club
Concierg e Womenʼs
M:Store Womenʼs
Menʼs L401
L508 L406
L501
Menʼs
L403
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Marquis Tower I
L502
L404
L505 L504 L503
13
Marriott: Marquis Level
Marquis Ballroom
A B C D
Men’s
Stairs
Women’s
FedEx
M304 Kinko ’s
E s c a l a to rs
M303 Escalators
Women’ s Men’s
M302
Stairs
M301
M101 M102
M201
M103
M107 M106
14 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Marriott: International Level
Loading Dock
F. C. Shipping
C B A
Storag e
Mo to rc o a c h A rr i v a l s /D e p a r tu re s
Wo me n
C o u r tl a n d S tre e t
E s c a l a to rs
Men
3 2 1
Storag e
10 9 8 7 6 5 4
Loadin g
Do ck
Storag e
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 15
e Va lu e Our Members,
W
Join Us!
With more than 10,000 members, the American Academy of Religion (AAR) is the world’s largest organization serving teachers,
scholars, and other professionals in the field of religion. AAR members are affiliated with institutions of higher education, and are
also media and publishing professionals, clergy, independent scholars, high school teachers, and nonprofit community workers. The
professional diversity of the AAR’s membership reflects the substantial and growing role religion plays in the lives of individuals and
communities as well as social, political, and economic events worldwide.
Membership in the AAR provides you with a spectrum of opportunities to both enrich your professional life and
contribute to the field.
3 Connect with scholars in the field by attending the Annual and Regional Meetings at
unities
deep discounts.
pport
your career.
m
3 Help to shape the AAR by volunteering to serve on committees, task forces, and other
ctru
leadership groups.
Spe
3 Answer the urgent call from journalists, public policy makers, and your fellow citizens who rely on
our community to foster the public understanding of religion.
3 Gain access to AAR print and online publications like the Journal of the American Academy of Religion
( JAAR), Religious Studies News (RSN), and the monthly E-bulletins for the latest scholarship and news.
1. ONLINE (www.aarweb.org/Members/Dues)
2. MEMBERSHIP FORM (Mail or fax the form on the following page with payment to the AAR office. Alternately, you can
download a form from the link above.)
3. PHONE (Call the office at 404-727-3049 on Monday–Thursday, 9:00 am–5:00 pm, Friday 9:00 am–3:00 pm.)
16 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
American Academy of Religion MEMBERSHIP FORM
825 Houston Mill Road, Suite 300, Atlanta, GA 30329
P: 404-727-3049 F: 404-727-7959
2010 CALENDAR
2010/2011 YEAR
CALENDAR YEAR
E-mail: membership@aarweb.org
Web: www.aarweb.org
Save time by joining or renewing your membership online at
www.aarweb.org/Members/Dues
CONTACT INFORMATION
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 17
SUPPORT THE CENTENNIAL FUND
The Centennial Fund is supported by donations that are received during the AAR’s
Centennial Celebration, from August 1, 2009–December 31, 2010. Donors can
choose to have their gift support the General Centennial Fund or can designate
their gift toward International Dissertation Research Grants.
The General Centennial Fund will provide operational and program support to
the AAR, including individual and collaborative research grants and exciting new
technological enhancements and networking opportunities that will benefit members.
We suggest any new donor consider a minimum initial gift of $100 to commemorate
our 100 years. In an effort to enable more support for the Centennial Fund, we have
introduced recurring giving, which allows you to make payments on a credit card, on
a schedule of your choice. Donors can also make a pledge to support the Centennial
Fund. To ensure your pledge is credited toward the Centennial Fund, pledges must be
completed by December 31, 2010. Each gift makes a difference.
18 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
American Academy of Religion
Centennial Fund Gift/Pledge Form
Name ____________________________________________________ AAR Member ID _________________________________________
Address ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Country ____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
I would like to designate my gift to support the International Dissertation Research Grants.
1. GIFT OF $ ______ .
Please charge my payments directly to my credit card (Visa, MasterCard, American Express, or Discover)
according to my payment schedule.
(Should you choose to discontinue or suspend your monthly gift, please contact us at 1-404-727-3049 or in writing to 825 Houston Mill Road,
Suite 300, Atlanta, Georgia 30329.)
Thank you for supporting the AAR. Gifts to the AAR are tax-deductible to the fullest extent of the law, as no goods or services are provided
in consideration of the gift. Please send your completed pledge form to American Academy of Religion, 825 Houston Mill Road, Suite 300,
Atlanta, Georgia, 30329, or fax it to 1-404-727-7959. Please contact us at 1-404-727-3049 with any questions.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 19
Religion and Ecology Workshop
Sponsored by the Religion and Ecology Group, the Forum on Religion and Ecology, and the Sustainability Task Force
This workshop, led by activist and author Margaret Swedish, is intended for those who teach in the area of
religion and ecology/religion and nature. Many who teach in this field face the problem of ecological despair
in both their own research and teaching, and in the students that are learning about global environmental
issues. In this workshop, participants will discuss experiences of ecological despair and share techniques for
dealing with it in the classroom.
There will be a lecture, question and answer session, and group discussion.
Margaret Swedish served for twenty-five years as co-coordinator, then director, of the Religious Task Force
on Central America and Mexico in Washington, D.C. Her publications include, Living Beyond the End of
the World: A Spirituality of Hope (Orbis, 2008), and with Marie Dennis, Like Grains of Wheat: A Spirituality of
Solidarity (Orbis, 2004). She is currently the author of the blog “Spirituality and Ecological Hope,” which is a
project of the Center for New Creation: www.ecologicalhope.org.
This is part of a day of events cosponsored by the Religion and Ecology Group, the Forum on Religion and
Ecology, and the Sustainability Task Force.
20 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Leadership Workshop
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 21
Religion and Media Workshop
The cost for the workshop is $70, which includes the entire day of sessions and lunch. Registration is limited to the first
75 participants.
22 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Islam Workshop
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 23
Sustainabilit y Workshop
Sponsored by the Religion and Ecology Group, the Forum on Religion and Ecology, the AAR Task Force on
Sustainability, and the Animals and Religion Consultation
A. Whitney Sanford, University of Florida, David Aftandilian, Texas Christian University, and Barbara A. B.
Patterson, Emory University, Presiding
This interdisciplinary and participatory workshop will explore pedagogical issues and strategies around food,
justice, and sustainability. Food is an increasingly popular way to engage critical thinking and personal choice,
as well as to explore economic, environmental, health, and social justice issues in our global food system.
Local and sustainable food alternatives, both urban and rural, provide connections to campus action, ethical
reflection, and spiritual life. This workshop on food, justice, and sustainability will present an overview of
issues and challenges that can be incorporated into existing and new religion courses, examples of useful
topics for in-depth treatment, and teaching strategies for graduate and undergraduate levels. Attendees will
have opportunities to discuss particular issues of interest with a panel of experienced teachers and will receive
a bibliography.
This is part of a day of events cosponsored by the Religion and Ecology Group, the Forum on Religion and
Ecology, and the Sustainability Task Force.
Presenters include:
• Peggy Bartlett, Emory University
Overview of Key Issues in Sustainable Food for Religion and Theology Courses
• Sandra Robertson, Victory Church
Connecting to Place: Addressing Food Deserts in Atlanta
• Carol Newsom, Emory University
The Bible and the Earth
• Laurel D. Kearns, Drew University
Religious Communities and Food: The Green Seminary Initiative
Registration is limited to the first 75 participants. The cost for the workshop is $70.
24 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Program Unit Proposals
The Program Committee is actively seeking proposals for new The Program Committee meets each December to review and
program units, especially proposals that address: 1) Areas of approve any proposals. Samples of successful proposals are
pent-up demand; and 2) New and emerging fields. available from annualmeeting@aarweb.org.
All proposals for new Program Units must begin as wildcard
sessions. A wildcard session is a complete prearranged session Which Type of Program Unit to Propose?
on a topic outside of the program unit structure. The proposal Consultations are the most common type of new unit. A
can be for a paper, panel, or other creative type of session Consultation provides a platform for a group of members to
format. All wildcard sessions are ninety-minutes in length announce a line of inquiry new to the AAR program and to
and will be scheduled for Sunday afternoon at the Annual seek out others interested in pursuing it further. While some
Meeting. Wildcard sessions are submitted through the Online Consultations pursue a limited agenda and end after three
Paper/Panel Proposal (OP3) System, and must be submitted or fewer years, others develop a constituency interested in
before March 1, 2011. Notification of program acceptance will exploring a topic for a longer period.
be announced by April 1, 2011. Wildcards that are accepted Seminars are for an already-identified group of up to twenty
onto the program are then invited to submit an application for members who want to work together on a defined research
new unit status by November 19, 2011. project with a view to publication.
How to Propose a New Program Unit In preparing all petitions, members should be aware of the
following policy:
The proposal is your opportunity to make the case for the new
program unit by presenting a clear rationale, analytical focus, The American Academy of Religion is committed to the
approaches, and objectives of the unit. policy and practice of including women, minority, and
younger members in the activities of the Academy. In Annual
In three-to-five typewritten pages, include:
Meeting programming, this commitment will be carried out
• The title of the new unit. to the degree that each unit works to accomplish it. Thus,
unit chairpersons, steering committees, and participants in
• Identify and define/describe the scholarly field the
sessions provide the testing arenas for evaluating our success
unit addresses, making an intellectual argument for
in adhering to this commitment. The Program Committee
the new unit.
will include attention to this policy and practice in evaluating
• State the need and the unit’s purpose. proposals for starting or continuing program units.
• Note the scope, directions, and approaches the unit
might take.
• Distinguish the unit from other existing program
units. If there is overlap with an existing unit, we
would like a letter of support from that unit’s chair(s).
Additional information required:
• List the AAR members who will chair the unit (1–2)
and serve on the steering committee (3–5).
• A short annotated bibliography of published works
on the topic, with an introductory paragraph
explaining the status of publications in the subfield.
• Letters of support from AAR members who are
interested in, and support the work of, the proposed
unit.
• A description of the wildcard session, including an
attendance count.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 25
Tour Information
26 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Buckhead Church is an in-town campus of North Point
Michael C. Carlos Museum Ministries located in the Buckhead neighborhood of Atlanta.
Approximately 5,000 people are in attendance every Sunday.
Monday, 12:30 pm–4:00 pm
The church is an innovator in the use of technology among
The Michael C. Carlos Museum of Emory University multisite churches. The sermon each week is delivered virtually
houses a large collection of ancient art, with objects from from North Point’s home campus in Alpharetta, GA, and the
ancient Egypt, Greece, Rome, the Near East, and the ancient senior minister, Andy Stanley, appears via hologram in the
Americas. The Museum is also home to collections of Buckhead Church.
ninteenth and twentieth century African art and European
The Temple is the oldest Jewish congregation in Atlanta,
and American works on paper from the Renaissance to the
established in 1860. During the 1950s and 1960s it became
present day. Two special exhibitions on display are Traces of the
a center for Civil Rights advocacy. In response, white
Calligrapher: Islamic Calligraphy in Practice, 1600 – 1900 and
supremacists bombed The Temple in 1958. Atlanta Journal-
Writing the Word of God: Calligraphy and the Qur’an.
Constitution editor Ralph McGill’s outraged front-page column
on The Temple bombing won a Pulitzer Prize for commentary.
Oakland Cemetery Al-Farooq Masjid was established in 1980, and at the time it
was only one of a few mosques in the Southeast. Today, the
Monday, 1:00 pm–4:00 pm mosque is one of nearly thirty-five in Metro Atlanta, and it
attracts Muslims from over fifty countries, including Nigeria,
Oakland, founded in 1850, exemplifies the nineteenth century
Ghana, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh,
“rural garden” cemetery movement. It is the final resting place
Malaysia, and from all across the United States.
of many of Atlanta’s most noted citizens. It is also a showplace
of sculpture and architecture, and a botanical preserve with
ancient oaks and magnolias. Here in this peaceful place the
full scope of the city’s rich and fascinating history unfolds William Breman Jewish Heritage
before you. Museum
Monday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm
Pitts Theology Library Special The Museum’s extraordinarily vivid exhibitions use the
Collections personal remembrances of Atlantans to explain seminal
moments in the Jewish experience. Creating Community
Saturday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm tells the story of Atlanta Jews creating and experiencing
community. Absence of Humanity tells the story of the
Pitts Theology Library houses many distinguished collections
Holocaust through historical photographs and documents,
of theological materials, including the English Religious
personal memorabilia and family pictures, and in the voices of
History Collection; the Richard C. Kessler Reformation
those who survived and made new lives in Atlanta.
Collection on the Protestant Reformation in Germany; the
English and American Hymnody and Psalmody Collection;
and the North European Theological Dissertations Collection.
Your guide is a member of the library staff. Yerkes Primate Center
Monday, 8:30 am–11:30 am
Sacred and Religious Sites of The Yerkes National Primate Research Center at Emory
Atlanta Tour University is an international leader in biomedical and
behavioral research. Thus the Center provides a critical link
Monday, 1:00 pm–5:00 pm between research with small laboratory animals and clinical
trials with humans. Yerkes Research Center is dedicated
This religious sites tour explores four sites exemplifying the
to advancing scientific understanding of primate biology,
rich diversity of Atlanta’s religious communities.
behavior, veterinary care, and conservation. The tour will be led
The Catholic Shrine of Immaculate Conception is the second by Yerkes Director and AAR Plenary speaker Frans de Waal.
oldest structure in downtown. It was completed and dedicated
in 1873 and is still in use. It replaced a frame structure on the
same site that was famously saved from the burning of the city
in 1864.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 27
Student Lounge Round Tables
The Student Lounge (Hyatt Regency, Chicago A) is a place for students to relax in the midst of the hectic Annual Meeting. We
hope that you will take advantage of the free coffee and chance to talk with fellow students. The lounge will be open Saturday–
Monday, 8:00 am to 6:30 pm. The Graduate Student Committee has also organized a series of roundtable discussions on topics
related to professionalization and student life. These discussions will last about an hour. This is a great opportunity to network with
fellow students and discuss issues that matter to you. Light snacks will be provided.
What’s the Use of Academic Rubrics? Distant and Communal: Exploring New Forms of
Saturday, 3:00-4:00 pm Online Pedagogy
Whitney Bauman, Florida International University Sunday, 1:00-2:00 pm
When rubrics are imposed upon you, they can feel stifling. Marilyn Matevia, Graduate Theological Union, and Jim
However, when done well, they can be a tool of creativity Siburt, Alvernia University
when assessing student work. This workshop will be devoted Where and when education occurs is increasingly dictated by
to the joys and pains of developing rubrics. Please come with students without traditional residency at a physical academic
an assignment in mind so that we can put these ideas into location. This session will explore how identifying the key
practice. traits that make you unique and effective as an instructor and
transferring them into an online environment is one of the
Balancing Career and Family in Graduate School: A most difficult, yet rewarding, aspects of online education.
Discussion on Institutional Policies and Personal Practices
Sunday, 9:00-10:00 am e Balancing Act: Teaching and Coursework/
Th
Dissertation
Herbie Miller, University of Dayton, and Meredith Minister,
Southern Methodist University Monday, 1:00-2:00 pm
Many graduate students on the fast-track to service in the Emily Bennett, Claremont Graduate University, and
academy live with a tension between their academic careers Elizabeth Lawson, Temple University
and their personal lives. In response to this tension, this Many students juggle independent teaching with completing
discussion attends to the personal aspects of balancing career our degrees, whether in coursework, exams, or the dissertation
and family life and the institutional aspects of developing stage. This session will discuss issues that include how we
family-friendly policies for graduate students. prioritize our own work and our teaching responsibilities,
how our teaching and studying can enrich each other, and
Beyond the Classroom: A Holistic Approach to Student strategies for managing our time and resources.
Life as Preparation for Departmental Life
Sunday, 10:00-11:00 am aming the Transitions: Negotiating Challenges in
T
Advanced Graduate Work
William Myatt, Loyola University, Chicago
Monday, 3:00-4:00 pm
Graduate education is not unidimensional. Students and
faculty who excel are able to supplement scholarly pursuits Amy DeBaets, Emory University, Kate McEachen, University
with emotional intelligence, approaching academia in a of California, Sacramento, and Almeda Wright, Pfeiffer
holistic manner. This roundtable discussion will draw from University
interviews with successful faculty from around the country This session will focus on the challenges in transitioning
to explore the possibilities for cultivating a fully integrated into advanced graduate work, including exams, theses, and
approach to graduate education as preparation for success in dissertations. We will discuss committee composition and
an academic department. development, managing the loss of structure and community
that often accompanies the end of coursework, and best
practices for getting major writing projects up and running
smoothly.
28 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Beyond the Boundaries
Public Lecture Series
The AAR is committed to fostering the public understanding A31-409
of religion. Inspired by this goal, the Graduate Student Sunday, 6:00 pm-8:00 pm
Committee has established a series of public talks to be held
around the city of Atlanta. Student members will present their Roy Whitaker, Claremont Graduate University
cutting edge research in these innovative evening sessions From Multiculturalism to Multireligiousity: Shifting Paradigms
designed to move our discussions of religion out of the of African-American Religious Studies in a Pluralistic Age with
traditional academic setting of the annual meeting and into Special Reference to Martin Luther King, Jr.
the community. This year’s talks center around three themes: Whitaker’s paper tracks the shifting paradigms of African-
• Religion and science American Religious Studies discovering that the pluralistic
age is influencing how scholars do Religious Studies with
• Religion in Atlanta a greater sensitivity to religious diversity. In African-
• Religion and pluralism American Religious Thought: An Anthology (2003),
Cornel West and Eddie Glaude map the intellectual
Plan to join us for these stimulating discussions on Saturday, shift among black thinkers/theologians’ singular focus on
Sunday and Monday evenings between 6 and 8 p.m.! Consult Christianity beginning to fade in the late 1960’s; after King’s
the AAR website and “Especially for Students” materials for assassination. James Cone’s Black Power & Black Theology
venue details. (1969) adds additional evidence as he clarifies in his 1989
forward how he never considered Christianity the exclusive
A30-401 religion of God. Yet, West and Glaude’s periodization may
Saturday, 6:00 pm-8:00 pm be pushed back a bit if King and other black pluralists like
Howard Thurman are factored into the schematization.
Shannon Montgomery, Georgia State University
Whitaker further emphasizes that, in the end, Black
“An Influence Among Humanity”: Internal Religious Debate over
Theology is not reducible to Christian Studies. Race and
Narrative Paradigms
religious pluralism both matter; and need to be part of the
Montgomery’s project examines a 1911 controversy at contemporary black theological discourse.
Brigham Young University which ended in three professors
being fired for teaching evolution. After detailing the basic A1-403
controversy both nationally and at Brigham Young specifically, Monday, 6:00 pm-8:00 pm
the project hones in on a letter signed by more than 80
percent of the student body in that year. The letter, written Dong-Sik Park, Claremont Graduate University
in support of the teachers, offered a contrasting narrative to The Pursuit of Harmony in Differences between Religion and
that of the school administration. Lodged between embattled Science
professors and school administration (with church officials), Dong-Sik Park applies Sri Aurobindo’s marvelous insight,
the students had to demonstrate fidelity to the religious “For all problems of existence are essentially problems of
institution even as they sought the widest academic vision. harmony.” to the debate of religion and science. Park argues
Montgomery also considers implications for the Church of that the debate of religion and science seems to be that
Latter Day Saints over the next century. She argues that of dualisms: creation and evolution, of sacred and secular,
ultimately, the controversy represents a missed opportunity of theism and atheism, or of believers and non-believers.
for the church to be viewed as relevant in secular discourse For theists science is unholy. For atheist religion is absurd.
and opens up a discussion about the potential of religious However, instead of following the Either-Or paradigm, he
organization in general to better engage in secular discourse. pushed for a “Both-And.”
He explores multiple perspectives in science and religion,
including two extremes between science and religion, Daniel
Dennett and Pat Robertson. However, Park argues that “we
need harmony through contrasts or differences in order to
combine this “ugly ditch” between science and religion.”
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 29
Highlights
Is the God Beat Dead? (A30‑301)
Plenary and Presidential Addresses
The Past, Present, and Future of Racial and Ethnic Minorities
Frans de Waal: Morality before Religion — Empathy, in the Profession (A31‑100)
Reciprocity, and Fairness in our Fellow Primates (A30‑140)
Rethinking Indigeneity in the Age of Globalization
Presidential Address — Ann Taves: “Religion” in the (A31‑101)
Humanities and the Humanities in the University (A30‑404)
AAR Guidelines for Teaching about Religion in K–12 Public
Jonathan Z. Smith (A31‑137) Schools in the United States: Responses from Teachers and
Teacher Educators (A31‑102)
Anne Harrington: Religion and the Placebo Effect —
Historical Issues, Present‑Day Challenges (A1‑141) SWP, REM, and LGBTIQ Women’s Mentoring Lunch
(A31‑138)
How to Propose a New Program Unit (A31‑200)
PreConference Workshops
Conversation with Bobbi Patterson, 2010 Excellence in
Nurturing the Next Generation of Scholars Workshop Part I Teaching Award Winner (A31‑201)
(A28‑200)
Roundtable on Online Publishing (A31‑202)
Dealing with Ecological Despair: Religion, Ecology, and
Hope in the Classroom (A29‑100) If I Knew Then What I Know Now: Lessons from Academic
Life from Those Who have Gone Before (A31‑250)
Leadership Workshop ‑ Cultivating Interdisciplinarity:
Opportunities for Curriculum, Faculty Development, and The Marty Forum: Elaine Pagels (A31‑251)
Hiring (A29‑101) Conversation with Ena Heller, 2010 AAR Religion and Arts
Luce Seminars on Theologies of Religious Pluralism and Award Winner (A31‑300)
Comparative Theology Fellows: Cohort Two (A29‑102) The Job Market for Academic Positions in Religious Studies:
Nurturing the Next Generation of Scholars Workshop Part II Recession, Depression, or Paradigm Shift? (A31‑301)
(A29‑115) Scholarship and Activism (A1‑100)
Religion and Media Workshop ‑ Religion Counts: Spiritual Practices, Religious Pluralism, and Theological
Demographic Technologies and the Politics of Surveillance Education (A1‑200)
(A29‑103)
Rethinking Islamic Studies (A29‑201)
Teaching about Food, Justice, and Sustainability (A29‑202)
B Sessions Honoring AAR Award
Winners
Conversation with Bobbi Patterson, 2010 Excellence in
Special Topics Forums Teaching Award Winner (A31‑201)
Student Town Hall Meeting: Come, Listen, Learn, Get The Marty Forum: Elaine Pagels (A31‑251)
Involved! (A30‑100) Conversation with Ena Heller, 2010 AAR Religion and the
Bondage and Liberation: Questioning Debts to Slavery and Arts Award Winner (A31‑300)
Enslavement to Debt (A30‑101) AAR Awards Ceremony and Reception (A31‑401)
LGBTIQ Mentoring Lunch (A30‑141)
Overcoming Institutional Resistance to Underrepresented
Scholarship (A30‑200)
T Sessions Honoring the AAR’s
Centennial
Beyond the Rainbow Generation? Religion and Pluralism in a
Globalized World (A30‑201) Bondage and Liberation: Questioning Debts to Slavery and
Enslavement to Debt (A30‑101)
How to Get Published (A30‑202)
Centennial Fund Donors Reception (A30‑402)
Making the Case for the Importance of Religion (A30‑300)
30 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Mark L. Taylor’s The Theological and the Political: On the Weight
A Arts Series of the World (A31‑328)
Atlanta Artists: Guy Robinson and Keith Prossick (A31‑404) Regina Schwartz’s Sacramental Ethics: Poetics at the Dawn of
Secularism with Author Responding (A1‑101)
Jazz Vespers by Dwight Andrews and the Atlanta Jazz Chorus
(A31‑405) Responses to Jeremy Stolow’s Orthodox by Design (A1‑128)
How Has Orsi’s Madonna of 115th Street Affected the Way We
Think about Religion? (A1‑205)
C Books Under Discussion
Philosophical Issues in the Madhyântavibhāga (A1‑217)
The Politics of the Veil: Author Meets Critics with Joan Wallach
Scott (A30‑102) Review of Néstor Míguez, Joerg Rieger, and Jung Mo Sung’s
Beyond the Spirit of Empire: Theology and Politics in a New Key,
An Ecumenical Exchange on Kathryn Tanner’s Christ the Key Reclaiming Liberation Theology Series (A1‑314)
(A30‑104)
Author Meets Critics: Winnifred Fallers Sullivan’s Prison
The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young Religion: Faith‑Based Reform and the Constitution (A1‑320)
Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future (Or, Don’t Trust Anyone
Under 30): A Response from the Religion Department
(A30‑108) L Especially for Students
Responses to Serene Jones’s Trauma and Grace: Theology in a
Student Town Hall Meeting: Come, Listen, Learn, Get
Ruptured World (A30‑109)
Involved! (A30‑100)
Author Meets Critics: Thomas A. Tweed’s Crossing and
LGBTIQ Mentoring Lunch (A30‑141)
Dwelling (A30‑207)
How to Get Published (A30‑202)
Panel Discussion on the Cambridge Dictionary of Christianity
(A30‑229) SWP, REM, and LGBTIQ Women’s Mentoring Lunch
(A31‑138)
The Body and Society at Twenty: Peter Brown and the History
of Christianity (A30‑304) If I Knew Then What I Know Now: Lessons from Academic
Life from Those Who Have Gone Before (A31‑250)
The Mahabharata: End and Endings (A30‑306)
The Job Market for Academic Positions in Religious Studies:
Review of Hope Abundant: Third World and Indigenous Women’s
Recession, Depression, or Paradigm Shift? (A31‑301)
Theology (A30‑309)
Student Lounge Roundtables (see page XX)
Political Theology, Jewish, and Democratic: A Discussion of
Bonnie Honig’s Emergency Politics (A30‑336) Beyond the Boundaries (see page XX)
“Scientific Buddhism” among Tibetans and their Western
Interlocutors: Reflections on Donald Lopez’s Buddhism and
Science (A31‑128) E Films
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 31
Highlights
Emile Durkheim and Australian Aboriginal Religions Luce Seminars on Theologies of Religious Pluralism and
(A30‑112) Comparative Theology Fellows: Cohort Two (A29‑102)
Trickster, Game, and Struggles for Self‑Determination Nurturing the Next Generation of Scholars Workshop Part II
(A30‑114) (A29‑115)
Buddhist Women Migrants, Migrating Women’s Buddhism: Religion and Media Workshop ‑ Religion Counts:
The Complexities and Challenges for Buddhist Women in Demographic Technologies and the Politics of Surveillance
Oceania (A30‑123) (A29‑103)
Practicing Liberation Theology in the Twenty‑first Century Rethinking Islamic Studies (A29‑201)
(A30‑127) The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies Young
Beyond the Rainbow Generation? Religion and Pluralism in a Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future (Or, Don’t Trust Anyone
Globalized World (A30‑201) Under 30): A Response from the Religion Department
(A30‑108)
Pagan Masculinities (A30‑215)
Teaching for Transformation: Examining the Lessons,
Varieties of Qur’anic Issues (A30‑221) Challenges, and Possibilities of Community‑based Pedagogy
Social Justice and Religion (A30‑305) (A30‑134)
Review of Hope Abundant: Third World and Indigenous Women’s LGBTIQ Mentoring Lunch (A30‑141)
Theology (Orbis Books, 2010) (A30‑309) Overcoming Institutional Resistance to Underrepresented
Rethinking Indigeneity in the Age of Globalization Scholarship (A30‑200)
(A31‑101) How to Get Published (A30‑202)
Religion and Politics in Theory and Practice (A31‑105) How Does the Academy Impinge on the Study of Theology?
On Overcoming Dualisms with Paul Tillich: Reconsidering (A30‑231)
Empire, Secular Reason, Religious Fundamentalism, and Making the Case for the Importance of Religion (A30‑300)
Everyday Religious Practices (A31‑129)
Democracy’s Hope: Feminist Classrooms as Counterpublic
Bible and Colonization: Asia/Oceania (A1‑115) Spaces (A30‑308)
Breaking the Mould, Traversing the Boundaries: Conceptions Religion Education and Citizenship in Europe and Beyond
of Mission and Unity in a Fragmented and Postcolonial (A30‑333)
World (A1‑221)
The Past, Present, and Future of Racial and Ethnic Minorities
in the Profession (A31‑100)
AAR Guidelines for Teaching about Religion in K–12 Public
Schools in the United States: Responses from Teachers and
Teacher Educators (A31‑102)
SWP, REM, and LGBTIQ Women’s Mentoring Lunch
(A31‑138)
Teaching Roundtable Discussions (A31‑139)
32 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Conversation with Bobbi Patterson, 2010 Excellence in
Teaching Award Winner (A31‑201) J Sessions with a Focus on
Religion and Science
Roundtable on Online Publishing (A31‑202)
The Impact of Biological Theories of Evolution on East Asian
Children’s Education and Religious Pluralism (A31‑228)
Buddhism Around the Early Twentieth Century (A30‑103)
If I Knew Then What I Know Now: Lessons from Academic
The Science of Morality: Recent Trends and Future Prospects
Life from Those Who Have Gone Before (A31‑250)
(A30‑117)
Approaches to Teaching Comparative Religions, Medicines,
Frans de Waal: Morality before Religion — Empathy,
and Healing (A31‑260)
Reciprocity, and Fairness in our Fellow Primates (A30‑140)
The Job Market for Academic Positions in Religious Studies:
Buddhist Medicine: Transnational Traditions and Local
Recession, Depression, or Paradigm Shift? (A31‑301)
Contexts (A30‑204)
The Activism of Black Theologians: Scholarship, Pedagogy,
Fellow Primates: A Conversation with Frans de Waal on
Institution, and Society (A31‑313)
Cognition, Animals, and Religion (A30‑230)
Scholarship and Activism (A1‑100)
Cognitive‑Scientific Studies of Buddhist Thought and
“Does It Fit?” The Classroom as a Context for the Making Practice: Philosophical Interrogations of the Issues (A30‑313)
and Testing of Knowledge (A1‑110)
Tillich and New Directions in Science and Theology
Spiritual Practices, Religious Pluralism, and Theological (A30‑328)
Education (A1‑200)
Making Good: Synthetic Biology and the Creation of the
Educating for Social Transformation in Religious Studies World (A31‑113)
and Beyond: Perspectives from Atlanta Area Activists and
“Scientific Buddhism” among Tibetans and Their Western
Educators (A1‑211)
Interlocutors: Reflections on Donald Lopez’s Buddhism and
Prevailing Structure, Countervailing Voice: The Dangerous Science (University of Chicago Press, 2008) (A31‑128)
Religious Studies Classroom (A1‑313)
Religion and the Cognitive in Neurosciences (A31‑210)
J. Wentzel van Huyssteen on Science and Religion (A31‑274)
K Receptions and Breakfasts
Templeton Lecture — Francisco José Ayala: Darwin’s Gift to
Welcome Reception (A29‑401) Science and Religion (A31‑406)
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 33
Highlights
N Tours
African‑American Religion and Civil Rights Tour (A29‑113)
Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum Tour
(A30‑138)
High Museum of Art Tour (A30‑139)
Yerkes Primate Center Tour (A1‑2)
Food, Justice, and Sustainability: Atlanta’s Urban Agriculture
Tour (A1‑137)
BAPS Shri Swaminarayan Mandir Tour (A1‑138)
William Breman Jewish Heritage Museum Tour (A1‑139)
Drepung Loseling Monastery Tour (A1‑140)
Oakland Cemetery Tour (A1‑236)
Sacred and Religious Sites of Atlanta Tour (A1‑237)
34 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
BOOK AWARD
GIVEAWAY!
Win the WINNERS!
Drop your business card off at the AAR booth (#601)
in the Exhibit Hall to be in the drawing to win
the 2010 AAR Book Award Winners.
35
BOOK GIVEAWAY!
Win the Books Under Discussion at the 2010 AAR Annual Meeting!
Drop your business card off at the AAR booth (#601) in the Exhibit Hall
to be in the drawing to win the Books Under Discussion.
A30-104 Christ the Key by Kathrynn Tanner A31-322 Blood that Cries Out from the Earth:
The Psychology of Religious Terrorism by
A30-108 The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital James W. Jones
Age Stupefies Young Americans and
Jeopardizes Our Future (Or, Don’t Trust A31-325 The Aryan Jesus: Christian Theologians and
Anyone Under 30) the Bible in Nazi Germany by Susannah
Heschel
A30-109 Trauma and Grace: Theology in a Ruptured
World by Serene Jones A31-328 The Theological and the Political: On the
Weight of the World by Mark L. Taylor
A30-207 Crossing and Dwelling by Thomas A. Tweed
A1-101 Sacramental Ethics: Poetics at the Dawn of
A30-229 Cambridge Dictionary of Christianity Secularism by Regina Schwartz
A30-304 The Body and Society by Peter Brown A1-128 Orthodox by Design by Jeremy Stolow’s
A30-309 Hope Abundant: Third World and Indigenous A1-205 Madonna of 115th Street by Robert A. Orsi
Women’s Theology
A1-314 Beyond the Spirit of Empire: Theology and
A30-336 Emergency Politics by Bonnie Honig Politics in a New Ke by Néstor Míguez,
A31-128 Buddhism and Science by Donald Lopez Joerg Rieger, and Jung Mo Sung
A31-263 The Africana Bible A1-320 Prison Religion: Faith-Based Reform and the
Constitution by Winnifred Fallers Sullivan
A31-312 Strange Wonder: The Closure of Metaphysics
and the Opening of Awe
36
Program Sessions
Thursday, October 28
M28-1 A29-104
Participatory Mission Theology Religion in the Schools Task Force Meeting
Thursday, 8:00 am–6:00 pm Friday, 8:00 am–10:00 am
Hyatt Regency, Hanover G Hyatt Regency, Spring
Diane L. Moore, Harvard University, Presiding
A28-200 L H
Nurturing the Next Generation of Scholars Workshop Part I M29-2 H
Thursday, 12:00 pm–5:00 pm New Directions in Religious Studies: Conference for Middle
Hyatt Regency, Hanover AB and Secondary School Teachers
Matthew Williams, The Fund for Theological Education, Presiding Friday, 8:00 am–4:00 pm
Sponsored by the American Academy of Religion and The Fund for Hyatt Regency, Fairlie
Theological Education
This two-part workshop is designed for students from under-
represented racial/ethnic groups who are considering the pursuit M29-3
of a PhD or ThD in religion, theology, or biblical studies. The goals Lutheran Women in Theological and Religious Studies
of this workshop are to introduce prospective graduate students to
the professional guilds, provide opportunities for participants to Friday, 8:30 am–12:45 pm
dialogue with distinguished faculty and current graduate students, Lutheran Theological Center, 700 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive
provide useful information on the graduate application process, and
Theme: Listening Closely; Defining the Conversation
increase the pipeline for future faculty of color in the guild. Students
who participate in this workshop have been preselected from an Lutheran women in theological and religious studies, as well as some
application pool. local Lutheran clergy women, gather annually for scholarship, worship,
and friendship. Lutheran women scholars, including graduate students
and women who teach or study at Lutheran institutions, are invited.
M28-201 Papers and presentations will highlight the work of Lutheran women
of color in the United States and Swedish feminist Luther scholars
Society of Anglican and Lutheran Theologians visiting the United States. Registration will include information on
Thursday, 1:15 pm–8:30 pm local transportation.
Saint Luke’s Church, 435 Peachtree Street NE For questions or to register and make a dinner reservation, please contact
Sandra Mejia-Vega at 1-773-380-2885 or sandra.mejia@elca.org.
Theme: Exploring Postcolonial Missiology: Part One
1:15 pm Registration and Social Gathering Time
1:45 pm Welcome and Announcements M29-4 S
2:00 pm Maria Erling, Lutheran Theological Seminary, Gettysburg Society of Anglican and Lutheran Theologians
Reluctant Insiders: Anglican and Lutheran Participation at
Edinburgh, 1910 Friday, 8:30 am–12:45 pm
3:30 pm Break Saint Luke’s Church, 435 Peachtree Street NE
4:00 pm Rowan Strong, Murdoch University Theme: Exploring Postcolonial Missiology: Part Two
Mission and Empire: The Origins and Continuities of Anglican 8:30 am Coffee and Conversation
Missionary Understanding 9:00 am Jorgen Skov Sorensen, Council on International Relations of
5:30 pm Vespers the Evangelical Lutheran Church, Denmark
6:30 pm SALT Conference Dinner at Location TBA From the Authority of Edinburgh 1910 to the Authenticity of the
Individual 2010
For more information, visit the SALT website at
anglicanlutherantheologians.org. 10:35 am SALT Business Meeting
11:05 am Short Break
11:15 am Jayakiran Sebastian, Church of South India
Not Hurrying on to a Receding Future, nor Hankering after an
Imagined Past
For more information, visit the SALT website at
anglicanlutherantheologians.org.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 37
Program Sessions
Friday, October 29
A29-102 H
Luce Seminars on Theologies of Religious Pluralism and
A29-100 M H Comparative Theology Fellows: Cohort Two
Friday, 9:00 am–5:00 pm
SOLD OUT
Hyatt Regency, Hanover G
Dealing with Ecological Despair: Religion, Ecology, and John Thatamanil, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
Hope in the Classroom This all-day seminar will be the second meeting of the second cohort
Friday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm of the American Academy of Religion/Henry Luce Foundation
Summer Seminar Fellows. By invitation only.
Hyatt Regency, Hanover D
Margaret Swedish, Center for New Creation, Presiding
Sponsored by the Religion and Ecology Group, the Forum on Religion A29-105
Friday, OCTOBER 29
A29-101 H A29-106
Leadership Workshop: Cultivating Interdisciplinarity
History of Religions Jury Meeting
Friday, 9:00 am–4:00 pm
Friday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm
Hyatt Regency, Hanover E
Hyatt Regency, University
Fred Glennon, Le Moyne College, Presiding
Pamela Klassen, University of Toronto, Presiding
Theme: Opportunities for Curriculum, Faculty Development, and Hiring
Sponsored by the Academic Relations Committee and the Teagle
Foundation A29-108
Panelists:
Regions Task Force Meeting
Richard M. Carp, Appalachian State University
Friday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm
Rebecca Todd Peters, Elon University
Hyatt Regency, Roswell
Joseph A. Favazza, Stonehill College
Brian Pennington, Maryville College, Presiding
Rosetta E. Ross, Spelman College
Edwin David Aponte, Lancaster Seminary
L. DeAne Lagerquist, Saint Olaf College A29-109
Steve Young, McHenry County College International Connections Committee Meeting
Separate registration is required. See page 21 for details.
Friday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm
Hyatt Regency, Piedmont
Tat-siong Benny Liew, Pacific School of Religion, Presiding
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
38 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A29-111 M29-5
Teaching and Learning Committee Meeting Dharma Academy of North America (DANAM)
Friday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm Friday, 9:00 am–11:00 am
Hyatt Regency, Marietta Marriott Marquis, International 2
Tina Pippin, Agnes Scott College, Presiding Neela Bhattacharya Saxena, Nassau Community College, New York,
and Phyllis Herman, California State University, Northridge, Presiding
Theme: Gynocentric Matrix of Indic Traditions: Dharma, Culture, and
A29-112 the Feminine
Public Understanding of Religion Committee Meeting Panelists:
Friday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm Pankaj Jain, University of North Texas
Ecofeminism and the Bishnois of Rajasthan
Hyatt Regency, Lenox
Kathleen Erndl, Florida State University, Tallahassee
Friday, OCTOBER 29
Sarah M. Pike, California State University, Chico, Presiding “When a Woman Becomes Chandika”: Justice, Violence, and the
Feminine in Popular Hindi Film
A29-115 L H Ramdas Lamb, University of Hawai’i, Manoa
Dharma, Females, and the Challenge of Education in Rural Chhattisgarh
Nurturing the Next Generation of Scholars Workshop Frederique Appfel-Marglin, Smith College (Emerita)
Part II Enacting the World with the Goddesses of Orissa
Friday, 9:00 am–1:00 pm Neela Bhattacharya Saxena, Nassau Community College
Hyatt Regency, Hanover AB Dance of Light at the Feet of a Dark Girl: Kali in Kazi Nazrul Islam’s
Songs
Matthew Williams, The Fund for Theological Education, Presiding
Sponsored by the American Academy of Religion and The Fund for
Theological Education M29-6
By invitation only.
Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception Editorial Board
Meeting
A29-116 Friday, 9:00 am–5:00 pm
Technology Task Force Meeting Marriott Marquis, Internatioal 10
Friday, 9:00 am–11:00 am
Hyatt Regency, Greenbriar
Mark Juergensmeyer, University of California, Santa Barbara, and
A29-103 H
Donna Bowman, University of Central Arkansas, Presiding Religion and Media Workshop: Religion Counts
Friday, 9:30 am–5:00 pm
Hyatt Regency, Hanover C
M29-100 Theme: Demographic Technologies and the Politics of Surveillance
Models of God and Other Ultimate Realities 9:15 am–9:45 am Welcome
Friday, 9:00 am–6:00 pm Katharine Henderson, Auburn Theological Seminary
Marriott Marquis, International 3 9:45 am–11:15 am Counting Religion/Religious Counting
John Durham Peters, University of Iowa
Titus Hjelm, University College London
M29-101 Bruce Lawrence, Duke University
North American Paul Tillich Society 11:30 am–1:00 pm Mobilizing Minorities
Friday, 9:00 am–11:30 am William Elison, Stanford University
Brannon Ingram, University of North Carolina
Hyatt Regency, Hanover F
Rupa Viswanath, University of Pennsylvania
1:00 pm–2:30 pm Lunch Discussions
M29-102 2:30 pm–3:00 pm U. S. Census Videos
3:00 pm–4:30 pm Roundtable: Secularism, Number, and the Nation:
Society for Buddhist–Christian Studies Board Meeting The American Case
Friday, 9:00 am–11:30 am Sarah Barringer Gordon, University of Pennsylvania
Hyatt Regency, Auburn Janet Jakobsen, Barnard College
John Lardas Modern, Franklin and Marshall College
Separate registration is required. See page 22 for details.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 39
Program Sessions
Friday, October 29
M29-105
Dharma Academy of North America (DANAM)
M29-103 Friday, 11:00 am–1:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, International 2
Qur’an Group and the Institute of Ismaili Studies
Rita Sherma, Taksha University and ITBB, and Kathleen Erndl,
Friday, 9:30 am–2:00 pm Florida State University, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, International 6 Theme: Feminism in Dharma Traditions
Theme: The Meaning of the Word: Lexicology and Tafsir Panelists:
This workshop will explore how exegetes approach the meanings Phil Goldberg, Taksha University
of individual words in the Qur’an, and how religious beliefs are The Feminization of Guru Teachings and Transmissions in the West
informed by discussions of lexicology. Whilst lexicology is regarded
as playing a crucial part in the interpretation of the Qur’an, there are Veena Howard, University of Oregon, Eugene
few studies of how exegetes approach these questions. The workshop Gandhi’s Understanding of the Feminine
Friday, OCTOBER 29
will focus on two areas: 1) The interplay between the development of Nikky Singh, Colby College
theological ideas and the interpretation of individual words; and 2) The Feminist Perspectives from Sikh Dharma
methodologies that exegetes employ when dealing with questions of
lexicology. Sherry Fohr, Converse College
Inadvertent Feminism in Shvetambar Jainism
If you are interested in attending, or have any questions, please contact
Stephen Burge, sburge@iis.ac.uk. Rita Gross, University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire
New Perspectives on Models of Female Empowerment in Buddhist
History
M29-104
North American Association for the Study of Religion M29-106
Executive Council Meeting
Encyclopedia of the Bible and Its Reception Editorial Board
Friday, 10:00 am–12:00 pm
Meeting
Hyatt Regency, Kennesaw
Friday, 11:00 am–5:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, International A
M29-112
GLOPENT Americas Meeting A29-113 N D
Friday, 10:00 am–1:00 pm SOLD OUT
Hyatt Regency, Harris
African-American Religion and Civil Rights Tour
Friday, 12:00 pm–5:00 pm
M29-110
Meet in Hyatt Regency Lobby
Explorations in Theology and Apocalyptic Working Group Rosetta E. Ross, Spelman College, Presiding
Friday, 10:15 am–2:45 pm Sponsored by the Afro-American Religious History Group, Black
Marriott Marquis, International 8 Theology Group, Religion, Social Conflict, and Peace Group,
Womanist Approaches to Religion and Society Group, and Theology
of Martin Luther King Jr. Consultation
This walking tour examines four sites among Atlanta’s treasure house
dealing with the African American religious experience and specifically
the Civil Rights struggle.
The Auburn Avenue Research Library on African American
Culture and History is dedicated to preserving African American
heritage by providing a home to the manuscripts, photographs, oral
histories, books, periodicals, and works of art that contain the history
of peoples, of nations, of beliefs and dreams, and of a past worth
sharing with the future.
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
40 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
The African American Panoramic Experience (APEX) Museum
interprets and presents history from an African American perspective
in order to better understand and appreciate the contributions of
A29-201 H
African Americans to America. SOLD OUT
Ebenezer Baptist Church has been a spiritual home to many citizens
of the “Sweet Auburn” community. After giving a trial sermon to
Rethinking Islamic Studies Workshop
the congregation at the age of nineteen, Martin Luther King Jr. was Friday, 1:00 pm–5:00 pm
ordained as a minister, where he remained until his death. Hyatt Regency, Hanover D
The King Center utilizes diverse communications media to educate Carl Ernst, University of North Carolina, and Richard C. Martin,
people all over the world about King’s life, work, and his philosophy Emory University, Presiding
and methods of nonviolent conflict-reconciliation and social change.
Sponsored by the Study of Islam Section and Contemporary Islam
Group
A29-114 K The purpose of the workshop is two-fold. The main goal is to identify
and discuss research problems in the study of Islam that are now
AAR Leadership Summit Luncheon confronting scholar members of the American Academy of Religion.
Friday, OCTOBER 29
Friday, 12:00 pm–1:00 pm Participants (AAR members, including graduate students and faculty)
will receive a copy of Rethinking Islamic Studies: From Orientalism
Hyatt Regency, Courtland to Cosmopolitanism, edited by Carl W. Ernst and Richard C. Martin
John R. Fitzmier, American Academy of Religion, Presiding (University of South Carolina Press, 2010), in which fourteen scholars
Members of AAR’s Board of Directors, Committees, and Task Forces write on specific problems, methods, and theories in Islamic studies
are invited to this luncheon to recognize their service to and leadership today. Within this framework, a second goal is for participants to
within the Academy. meet in broad thematic breakout groups, to present current research
projects for review, and to offer constructive analysis by members of the
group. Each group will be led by two scholars experienced in research,
publication, and grant funding.
M29-108
The thematic breakout groups are:
Women’s Caucus Ethics and Law
Friday, 12:00 pm–3:00 pm Jonathan Brockopp, Pennsylvania State University
Hyatt Regency, Auburn Ebrahim E. I. Moosa, Duke University
Gender and Sexuality
M29-109 H Kecia Ali, Boston University
Scott A. Kugle, Institute for the Study of Islam in the
Society for the Arts in Religious and Theological Studies and Modern World
the Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology History and Historiography
and Religion Vincent Cornell, Emory University
Friday, 12:30 pm–6:30 pm Ahmet T. Karamustafa, Washington University, Saint Louis
Marriott Marquis, International 5 Religion, Politics, and Society
Theme: Art and Pedagogy Workshop Charles Kurzman, University of North Carolina
Bruce Lawrence, Duke University
A29-107 Ritual and Practice
Joyce Flueckiger, Emory University
Job Placement Task Force Meeting
Frederick Denny, University of Colorado
Friday, 1:00 pm–5:00 pm
Text and Interpretation
Hyatt Regency, Vinings
Tamara Sonn, College of William and Mary
Timothy M. Renick, Georgia State University, Presiding
Andrew Rippin, University of Victoria
A29-200 M29-200
AAR Board of Directors Meeting
Bonhoeffer Society Editorial Board and Board of Directors
Friday, 1:00 pm–5:00 pm Meeting
Hyatt Regency, Executive Conference Suite 219 Friday, 1:00 pm–6:00 pm
Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara, Presiding Hyatt Regency, Roswell
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 41
Program Sessions
Friday, October 29
A29-202 M H
SOLD OUT
M29-202 Teaching about Food, Justice, and Sustainability Workshop
North American Paul Tillich Society Friday, 1:30 pm–5:00 pm
Friday, 1:00 pm–3:30 pm Hyatt Regency, Hanover F
Hyatt Regency, Edgewood A. Whitney Sanford, University of Florida, David Aftandilian, Texas
Christian University, and Barbara A. B. Patterson, Emory University,
Presiding
M29-203 Sponsored by the Religion and Ecology Group, the Forum on Religion
and Ecology, the AAR Task Force on Sustainability, and the Animals
Society for Buddhist–Christian Studies Board Meeting and Religion Consultation
Friday, 1:00 pm–3:30 pm This interdisciplinary and participatory workshop will explore
Friday, OCTOBER 29
Hyatt Regency, Greenbriar pedagogical issues and strategies around food, justice, and
sustainability. Food is an increasingly popular way to engage critical
thinking and personal choice, as well as to explore economic,
M29-204 S environmental, health, and social justice issues in our global food
system. Local and sustainable food alternatives, both urban and rural,
Thomas F. Torrance Theological Fellowship provide connections to campus action, ethical reflection, and spiritual
Friday, 1:00 pm–4:00 pm life. This workshop on food, justice, and sustainability will present an
overview of issues and challenges that can be incorporated into existing
Marriott Marquis, International B and new religion courses, examples of useful topics for in-depth
David Ferguson, University of Edinburgh treatment, and teaching strategies for graduate and undergraduate
The Ascension of Christ in the Theology of Thomas F. Torrance levels. Attendees will have opportunities to discuss particular issues
Our session will begin with a thirty-minute meeting for members. of interest with a panel of experienced teachers and will receive a
bibliography.
See www.tftorrance.org for more information.
Peggy Barlett, Emory University
Overview of Key Issues in Sustainable Food for Religion and Theology
Courses
M29-209
Sandra Robertson, Victory Church
Womanist In-Gathering Connecting to Place: Addressing Food Deserts in Atlanta
Friday, 1:00 pm–5:00 pm Carol Newsom, Emory University
Marriott Marquis, International 1 The Bible and the Earth
Laurel D. Kearns, Drew University
Religious Communities and Food: The Green Seminary Initiative
M29-205
VISIT THE Dharma Academy of North America (DANAM)
Friday, 2:00 pm–4:00 pm
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
42 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Harshita Mruthinti Kamath, Emory University Barbara Anne Keely will present insights gleaned from a consultation
The Enactment and Aesthetics of Female Impersonation: Performing with faculty from twelve seminaries. The panel will expand the
Satyabhama in Telegu South India conversation to a broader ecumenical context.
Pramila Venkateswaran, Nassau Community College Panelists:
A Face of the Feminine in Tamil Nadu: Reading Kannaki in Doug Hardy, Nazarene Theological Seminary
“Cilappatikaram”
Tim Hessel-Robinson, Brite Divinity School
Elisabeth Koenig, General Theological Seminary
M29-206 D C Valerie Lesniak, Seattle University
Psychology, Culture, and Religion Group
Friday, 2:00 pm–7:00 pm M29-300
Marriott Marquis, International 4 Art/s of Interpretation Group
2:00 pm Theme: Psychological and Religious Perspectives on Southern Friday, 4:00 pm–6:00 pm
Cultures and Sensibilities
Friday, OCTOBER 29
Hyatt Regency, Edgewood
Panelists:
Greg Alles, McDaniel College, Presiding
Mindy McGarrah Sharp, Phillips Theological Seminary
Theme: Rethinking Eliade
Jeanne Stevenson-Moessner, Southern Methodist University
Casey Koons, Syracuse University
Jessica Van Denend, Union Theological Seminary Matter over Mind: Mircea Eliade and Cognitive Science
Responding:
Bryan Rennie, Westminster College
Eileen Campbell-Reed, Luther Seminary Mircea Eliade and the Cognitive Study of Religion: Consonances
3:30 pm Break between Cognitive Science and Eliadean Concepts
4:00 pm Theme: Jung’s Red Book (Norton W. W. and Company, 2009): Lisa J. M. Poirier, Miami University
Explorations at the Edge of Genius and Madness Mapping Missions with GIS: Sacred Spaces in Contact Zones
Panelists:
Felicity Brock Kelcourse, Christian Theological Seminary
M29-301
Kelly Bulkeley, Graduate Theological Union
Pamela Cooper-White, Columbia Theological Seminary Dharma Academy of North America (DANAM)
5:30 pm Lisa Cataldo, Fordham University Friday, 4:00 pm–6:00 pm
Praxis Reflection on Jung’s Red Book: Mandala Meditation Marriott Marquis, International 2
7:00 pm PCR annual dinner at a local restaurant. Location TBA. Anne Vallely, University of Ottawa, Presiding
Theme: The Feminine in Jainism
A29-203 Panelists:
Nika Kuchuk, University of Ottawa
Status of LGBTIQ Persons in the Profession Task Force From Icon to Temple: The Embodied Presence of the Goddess Padmavati
Meeting Christian Haskett, Washington & Lee University
Friday, 3:00 pm–7:00 pm The Visual Vocabulary of Possession Performance and the Categories of
Hyatt Regency, Piedmont Jain and Woman
Melissa M. Wilcox, Whitman College, Presiding Bradley Boileau, University of Ottawa
Between the Veil and the Vow: Ascetic Wifehood, Jain Sati, and the
Devotional Cult of Rajulmata at Mount Girnar
M29-207 Sherry Fohr, Converse College
Indigenous Feminism in Shvetambar Jainism
Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality
Friday, 3:30 pm–5:30 pm
Marriott Marquis, International C
Barbara Anne Keely, United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities,
Presiding
Theme: What Is Meant by “Spiritual Formation” in the Shaping of
Religious Leaders?
The purpose of this workshop is to explore what is understood by
“spiritual formation” and how the formation of students is being
incorporated into master-level degree programs. Presentations include
goals for spiritual formation within programs, courses being taught,
and spiritual growth experiences offered. The workshop will explore the
implications for teaching and research.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 43
Program Sessions
Friday, October 29
M29-305
Women and Religion Section and the Society for Buddhist–
M29-302 Christian Studies
Friday, 4:00 pm–6:30 pm
Feminist Liberation Theologians’ Network
Marriott Marquis, International 6
Friday, 4:00 pm–6:00 pm
Miriam Levering, University of Tennessee, Presiding
Hyatt Regency, Greenbriar
Theme: The Scholarly Contributions of Rita Gross
The Network has explored “feminist” and “liberation” dimensions
of its work. At this annual gathering, discussion will focus on the Colleagues of Rita Gross will examine her scholarly contributions in
development of “critical theologies” from a variety of feminist six different areas.
liberation starting points. All are welcome. Judith Simmer Brown, Naropa Institute
RSVP: Mary E. Hunt, Women’s Alliance for Theology, Ethics, and Tibetan Buddhist Studies
Ritual (WATER), 1-301-589-2509, mhunt@hers.com or to Elisabeth Kathleen Erndl, Florida State University
Friday, OCTOBER 29
M29-304
M29-307 E
Film Screening: Mysteries of the Jesus Prayer
North American Paul Tillich Society
Friday, 4:00 pm–5:00 pm
Friday, 4:00 pm–6:30 pm
Hyatt Regency, Hanover AB
Hyatt Regency, Auburn
Join us for a sneak preview of a new feature film and book on
monasticism and eremetic practices. For centuries monks, nuns and
spiritual hermits have prayed the Jesus Prayer in far away caves and
monasteries. They have remained mostly unknown to the rest of the
western world… until now. In early 2011, the documentary feature film
and book Mysteries of the Jesus Prayer will take you on an epic journey
of prayer and discovery.
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
44 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Follow Dr. Norris J. Chumley and V. Rev. Dr. John McGuckin of
Columbia University and Union Theological Seminary as they discover M29-403
the ancient texts and truths behind the ancient prayer. Companion
book will be published by HarperOne, coming Feb. 8, 2011. Visit New Religious Movements Group
www.MysteriesoftheJesusPrayer.com for more information and free Friday, 7:00 pm–8:30 pm
newsletters.
Hyatt Regency, Auburn
Theme: Ethics in the Study of New Religious Movements
M29-308 Join us for an open discussion on the variety of ethical issues related to
the scholarly study of new religious movements.
Society for the Study of Native American Religious
Traditions
Friday, 4:30 pm–6:30 pm M29-404
Hyatt Regency, Harris Religious Studies Review Annual Editoral Board Meeting
Friday, OCTOBER 29
Friday, 7:00 pm–10:00 pm
M29-400 H Hyatt Regency, Roswell
Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion Preconference Meeting
Friday, 6:00 pm–8:45 pm M29-405 K
Hyatt Regency, Lenox Society for the Arts in Religious and Theological Studies
Reception
M29-412 K Friday, 7:00 pm–9:00 pm
Hyatt Regency, Hanover E
Søren Kierkegaard Society Banquet
Friday, 7:00 pm–9:30 pm
Commerce Club, 34 Broad Street M29-411
Keynote Speaker: Murray Rae, University of Otago, New Zealand The Word Made Fresh
Friday, 7:00 pm–9:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, International 6
A29-401 K Thomas Oord, Northwest Nazarene University, Presiding
Amos Yong, Regent University
Welcome Reception In the Days of Caesar: Pentecostalism and Political Theology
Friday, 7:00 pm–9:00 pm Responding:
Hyatt Regency, Centennial I J. Kameron Carter, Duke University
Join your friends and colleagues for conversation and fun at the Serene Jones, Union Theological Seminary
Welcome Reception. Light refreshments, cash bar, and live jazz
Graham Ward, University of Manchester
combine to make this a great way to catch up with friends old
and new. The Word Made Fresh is an annual lectureship held in conjunction
with the Society of Evangelical Scholars, which seeks to stimulate
creative dialogue among scholars on themes reflective of evangelical
Christianity. See The Word Made Fresh: A Call for a Renewal of the
M29-402 C Evangelical Spirit at http://people.bu.edu/bpstone/theology/word.html.
Society for Hindu–Christian Studies
Friday, 7:00 pm–9:00 pm
Hyatt Regency, Fairlie
Theme: Book Discussion of Michelle Voss Roberts’ Dualities: A Theology
of Difference (Westminster John Knox Press, 2010)
John J. Thatamanil, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
Panelists:
Laurel Schneider, Chicago Theological Seminary
Brad Bannon, Harvard University
Lance Nelson, University of San Diego
Francis X. Clooney, S. J., Harvard University
Responding:
Michelle Voss Roberts, Rhodes College
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 45
Program Sessions
Friday, October 29
A29-403 E
Film: Songs from the Second Floor
M29-406 K Friday, 8:00 pm–10:00 pm
Hyatt Regency, Hanover AB
Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality
Kevin Cryderman, Emory University and Georgia Gwinnett College,
Friday, 7:30 pm–9:00 pm Presiding
First Congregational Church Commons, 125 Ellis Street NE Sponsored by the Religion, Film, and Visual Culture Group
Theme: Spirituality and the Spirituals in the Struggle for Civil Rights 2000, directed by Roy Andersson. Swedish, with English subtitles. 98
Please join us for an experience of the transformative hope made real minutes.
through the music of the spirituals in the African American struggle Taking place in a Swedish-speaking Everycity and shot as static-
for civil rights. Led by James Abbington, associate professor of church camera tableaus, Roy Andersson’s deadpan absurdist dark comedy
music and worship at Emory University’s Candler School of Theology, Songs from the Second Floor (2000) follows an interlocking network of
the evening’s events will take place at First Congregational Church,
Friday, OCTOBER 29
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
46 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
M29-410 K A30-1 K
Pluralism Project Reception New Members’ Breakfast
Friday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm Saturday, 7:30 am–8:45 am
Hyatt Regency, Hanover FG Hyatt Regency, Dunwoody
Theme: Case Studies of Multireligious America John R. Fitzmier, American Academy of Religion, Presiding
You are invited to join us for our annual reception honoring Pluralism New (first-time) AAR members in 2010 are cordially invited to a
Project friends, affiliates, and advisors. This year’s program will explore continental breakfast with members of the Board of Directors.
new developments in our Case Study Initiative, which seeks to apply
the case method to the disputes and dilemmas of multireligious
America. Highlights from our recent case study workshops, courses,
and our 2010 Case Study Summer Fellowship program will serve as
A30-2 K
a starting point for discussion. We invite you to bring your ideas for Regional Officers’ Breakfast
new cases, as well as your reflections on utilizing the method in your Saturday, 7:30 am–8:45 am
own teaching context. Visit www.pluralism.org/casestudy for more
information. Hyatt Regency, Fairlie
Brian Pennington, Maryville College, Presiding
Networking and information session for those who serve the AAR in
M29-413 K the regions. By invitation only.
Feminist Studies in Religion Reception
Friday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm A30-3
Hyatt Regency, Greenbriar
Theological Education Steering Committee Meeting
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Saturday, 7:30 am–8:45 am
Saturday, October 30 Hyatt Regency, Greenbriar
John Thatamanil, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
M30-1
A30-4
Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion Board Meeting
Saturday, 7:00 am–9:30 am Sustainability Task Force Meeting
Hyatt Regency, Marietta Saturday, 7:30 am–8:45 am
Hyatt Regency, Edgewood
Bobbi Patterson, Emory University, Presiding
M30-2
North American Paul Tillich Society A30-5
Saturday, 7:00 am–8:00 am
Marriott Marquis, M109 Academic Relations Committee Meeting
Saturday, 7:30 am–8:45 am
Hyatt Regency, Harris
M30-3 Fred Glennon, Le Moyne College, Presiding
Spiritus Editorial Board Meeting
Saturday, 7:00 am–9:00 am M30-4
Hyatt Regency, Spring
Dialog Editorial Council Meeting
Saturday, 7:30 am–11:30 am
M30-421 K Hyatt Regency, Kennesaw
Regent College Breakfast Reception
Saturday, 7:00 am–8:30 am M30-5
Hyatt Regency, Courtland
Society for Hindu–Christian Studies Board Meeting
Saturday, 7:30 am–8:30 am
Marriott Marquis, International B
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 47
Program Sessions
Saturday, October 30
A30-101 T
Special Topics Forum
M30-7
Hyatt Regency, Hanover E
Art/s of Interpretation Group Louis A. Ruprecht Jr., Georgia State University, Presiding
Saturday, 8:00 am–10:00 am Theme: Bondage and Liberation: Questioning Debts to Slavery and
Hyatt Regency, Roswell Enslavement to Debt
Randal Cummings, California State University, Northridge, Presiding Sponsored by the American Lectures in the History of Religions
Theme: Reclaiming Eliade Few ideas carry greater resonance in a variety of religious
traditions, literatures, and practices than the twinned
Carl Olson, Allegheny College conceptions of bondage and liberation. And few patterns
Conflicting Methodological Metaphors: Eliade and Deleuze in bear greater poignancy in this postcolonial moment than
Dialogue the seemingly endless cycle of bondage, liberation, and
Jess Hollenback, University of Wisconsin renewed forms of oppression. This is the disturbing
What’s Wrong with Symbols? Revisiting Mircea Eliade in 2010 antiprogressive undertone of the Modern that came into
Opal Moore
Ali Zaidi, State University of New York, Canton singular focus during the French Revolution and its
The Fantastic Fiction of Mircea Eliade aftermath: today’s liberators become the oppressors of tomorrow; the
guillotine is placed in the service of human rights; the world Camus
imagined, one with “neither victims nor executioners,” fails to
materialize. Building on the 2009 AAR/ALHR panel’s
M30-8 interest in “the nexus of religion and colonialism,” this
La Comunidad panel explores the themes of bondage and liberation with
a particular focus on the connections among religions
Saturday, 8:30 am–11:30 am and economies. The panel will point to new theoretical
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
48 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-104 C A30-107
Christian Systematic Theology Section Religion and Politics Section
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom B Marriott Marquis, M103-104
Joy Ann McDougall, Emory University, Presiding Susan B. Thistlethwaite, Chicago Theological Seminary, Presiding
Theme: An Ecumenical Exchange on Kathryn Tanner’s Christ the Key Theme: Global Dynamics
(Cambridge University Press, 2010) Harvey Stark, Princeton University
Panelists: Muslim-American Soldiers Fighting in Muslim Countries
Janet Martin Soskice, University of Cambridge M. Christian Green, Emory University
Ian A. McFarland, Emory University Apostasy, Blasphemy, Conversion, and Defamation: The New Alphabet
of Religion and International Human Rights
Hilda Koster, Concordia College, Moorhead
Responding: Michael Kessler, Georgetown University
Funding Religion as Part of Foreign Policy: The Silence of the
Kathryn Tanner, University of Chicago Establishment Clause
Dalia Fahmy, Rutgers University
A30-105 S Understanding Moderate Political Islam: What Can the Case of Egypt’s
Muslim Brotherhood Tell Us?
Ethics Section
Marriott Marquis, A707
Felicia George Euell, Montclair United Methodist Church, Presiding
A30-108 H C
Theme: Ethical Diversity in the Face of War Teaching Religion Section
Roger S. Gottlieb, Worcester Polytechnic Institute Marriott Marquis, M106-107
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Terrorism/Empire/Anti-Terrorism: Reflections on Justice and Trauma Mike Gutzler, Pennsylvania State University, Abington, Presiding
Jonathan Koscheski, Florida International University Theme: The Dumbest Generation: How the Digital Age Stupefies
The Earliest Christian War: Second and Third Century Martyrdom and Young Americans and Jeopardizes Our Future (Or, Don’t Trust
the Creation of a Christian Culture of Violence Anyone Under 30): A Response from the Religion Department
Nahed Artoul Zehr, Florida State University Panelists:
The Just War and Jihad Traditions in the “Long War” Derek Nelson, Thiel College
Alejandro Chavez Segura, University of Saint Andrews Daniel J. Peterson, Seattle University
Ethics of War and Violence in Buddhism: Compassion and Loving- Brenda Ihssen, Pacific Lutheran University
kindness, the Antidote for Violence and War Virginia Bartlett, Vanderbilt University
Gabriella Lettini, Starr King School for the Ministry Responding:
Witnessing Moral Injury: The First Truth Commission on Conscience Mark Bauerlein, Emory University
in War
Business Meeting:
Stacey M. Floyd-Thomas, Vanderbilt University, and Miguel A. De A30-109 C
La Torre, Iliff School of Theology, Presiding Theology and Religious Reflection Section and Feminist
Theory and Religious Reflection Group
A30-106 Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom D
Shelly Rambo, Boston University, Presiding
Philosophy of Religion Section
Theme: Responses to Serene Jones’s Trauma and Grace: Theology in a
Marriott Marquis, A701 Ruptured World (Westminster John Knox Press, 2009)
Sarah Coakley, University of Cambridge, Presiding Amy Carr, Western Illinois University
Theme: Analytic Philosophy of Religion Liturgies for the Living Dead: Jones, Lange, and the Tension between
Kaitlin Magoon, University of Chicago Trauma as Disabling Terror and Liberating Trope
Seeing God in the Dark: Recent Wittgensteinian Approaches to an Annie Hardison-Moody, Emory University
“Apophatic” Epistemology Gestures of Fragility and Hope: Reflections of Relationality in Serene
Jones’s Trauma and Grace: Theology in a Ruptured World
Jacob Sherman, Cambridge University
The Stubborn and Resplendent Weight of Things: Philosophy of Religion Peter Heltzel, New York Theological Seminary
Beyond the Linguistic Turn Dreams of Disruption: Serene Jones’s Theology of Grace and the
Future of Evangelical Feminism
Jonathan Teubner, University of Cambridge
Taste and See: Cooperation and Epistemic Transformation (A Response Jenny Daggers, Liverpool Hope University
to Sarah Coakley) The Promise of Maternality and the Kindness of God: Trinitarian
Reflections on Serene Jones’s Maternal Loss
John Knight, Marist College
Falsification, Kripke’s Causal Theory of Reference, and Analytic Theology Responding:
Serene Jones, Union Theological Seminary
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 49
Program Sessions
Responding: A30-113
Paul Harvey, University of Colorado Gay Men and Religion Group
Business Meeting:
Marriott Marquis, A601
Anthea Butler, University of Pennsylvania, and Kathryn Lofton,
Donald L. Boisvert, Concordia University, Presiding
Yale University, Presiding
Theme: Exploring Gay Male Desire
W. Scott Haldeman, Chicago Theological Seminary
A30-111 Playing Desire Ritually: Thinking Compassionate Strippers and
Seductive Preachers from the “Pew”
Chinese Religions Group and Confucian Traditions Group
Patrick S. Cheng, Union Theological Seminary, New York
Hyatt Regency, Hanover D “I am Yellow and Beautiful”: Queer Asian Reflections on Gay Male
Thomas A. Wilson, Hamilton College, Presiding Cyberculture and Theology
Theme: Ritual and Its Malcontents Catherine Roach, University of Alabama
Michael Ing, Harvard University Men Who Love Men and the Women Who Love to Read About It: Gay
The Ancients Did Not Fix Their Graves: Failures in Early Confucian and Slash Romance in the “Erotic Faith” of Popular Romance Fiction
Ritual Roger A. Sneed, Furman University
Kenneth Holloway, Florida Atlantic University Who Is He And What Is He To You? The Internet, the Down Low, and
Ritual as a Marker of Religious Community in Pre-Qin China the Virtual Performance of Black Gay Masculinities
Catherine Hudak Klancer, Boston University Responding:
The Play’s Not the Thing: Religious Belief and Ritual Infraction in the Paul J. Gorrell, Stockton, NJ[
Analects
Keith Knapp, The Citadel
Daughter-in-law, There is a Maggot in My Soup: Medieval Accounts
of Unfilial Children
Responding:
Ute Huesken, University of Oslo
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
50 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-114 F A30-116 S
Indigenous Religious Traditions Group Religion and Popular Culture Group
Marriott Marquis, A705 Marriott Marquis, M301
Jace Weaver, University of Georgia, Presiding John Lardas Modern, Franklin and Marshall College, Presiding
Theme: Trickster, Game, and Struggles for Self-Determination Theme: Religion and Humor in Popular Culture: The Sacred, the
Karyna Do Monte, Florida International University Satirical, and the Scatological
Politics of Language in the Brazilian Amazon: A Case Study of the Kelly J. Baker, University of Tennessee
Madeira River Dam Complex “Dum, Dum, Dumb, Dumb, Dumb”: Humor, Religious Intolerance,
Angela D. Blaver, Kennesaw State University, and Kathleen J. and South Park
Martin, California Polytechnic State University David Feltmate, University of Waterloo
“Trickster’s Art and Artifice”: Indigenous Peoples, Missionary It’s Funny Because It’s True? Religion and Humor in The Simpsons
Interpretations Steven A. Benko, Meredith College
Anais Spitzer, University of New Mexico The Passion and Monty Python’s Life of Brian: Laughter and
A Hedging Toss: The Role of Game and the Game of Roles in Navajo Religious Laughter
Cosmology Rudy V. Busto, University of California, Santa Barbara
Michelene Pesantubbee, University of Iowa “It’s the Same Shit!”: Nostalgia, Alienation, and the Chicana Sacred in
Tracking the Celestial Tiger Across the Sky George Lopez’s Comedy
Responding: Business Meeting:
Roger Maaka, Eastern Institute of Technology Lisle Dalton, Hartwick College, and Gregory Grieve, University of
North Carolina, Greensboro, Presiding
A30-115
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Islamic Mysticism Group
A30-117 J
Hyatt Regency, Hanover FG Science, Technology, and Religion Group
Omar Ali-De-Unzaga, Institute of Ismaili Studies, Presiding Marriott Marquis, A602
Theme: Revisiting al-Qushayri and His Legacy Francisca Cho, Georgetown University, Presiding
Matthew Ingalls, Yale University Theme: The Science of Morality: Recent Trends and Future Prospects
Recasting the Risala in Fifteenth-Century Egypt Ki Joo Choi, Seton Hall University
Kristin Sands, Sarah Lawrence College Moral Praiseworthiness: Scientific and Theocentric Assessments in
On the Subtleties of Method and Style in the Lata’if al-isharat of al- Dialogue
Qushayri Greg Peterson, South Dakota State University
Alan Godlas, University of Georgia Can There Be a Eudaimonics?
Influences of al-Qushayri’s Lata’if al-isharat on the Qur’anic Joseph Bankard, Northwest Nazarene University
Commentaries of Ruzbihan al-Baqli and the Kubrawi School Moral Instincts and the Problem with Reductionism: A Critical
Francesco Chiabotti, Provence University Exploration into the Work of Marc Hauser
The Spiritual and Physical Progeny of ‘Abd al-Karim al-Qushayri Responding:
Martin Nguyen, Fairfield University Jeffrey Schloss, Westmont College
Al-Tafsir al-kabir: The Influence and Authenticity of al-Qushayri’s Lori Marino, Emory University
Major Commentary
Michel Spezio, Scripps College
Responding:
Annabel Keeler, University of Cambridge
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 51
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
52 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-122 A30-124 S
Body and Religion Consultation and North American Childhood Studies and Religion Consultation
Hinduism Consultation Marriott Marquis, M101
Marriott Marquis, M105 Bonnie Miller-McLemore, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
Rebecca Sachs Norris, Merrimack College, Presiding Theme: Children’s Agency in Contested Spaces
Theme: Deities, Humans, and Temples: Hindu Bodies in Transnational Cristina Traina, Northwestern University
Contexts Children as Workers: Deconstructing Christian Traditions
George Pati, Valparaiso University Jon Waind, McGill University
Construction and Deconstruction of Temple Bodies and Identities The Language of Rights and the Order of Love: Tracing Feminist
Arthi Devarajan, Emory University Trajectories of Justice to a Good Place for Children
Dancing “From Within”: Pedagogies of South Indian Identity among Sean O’Neil, University of Florida
Suburban American Hindus At Play in Peril: Children’s Spiritual Points of View in Films Treating
Shana Sippy, Carleton College Latin American Military Regimes of the 1970s
The Desecration of Divine Bodies: Tracing the Development of a Hindu Responding:
Discourse, Moving From Bodies in Pain to Models of Moral Virtue
Kristin Herzog, Durham, NC
Tulasi Srinivas, Emerson College Business Meeting:
Truant Ascetics? Transnationalism, Salvation, and the Contested Body
in the Sathya Sai Movement John Wall, Rutgers University, and Laurie Zoloth, Northwestern
University, Presiding
Responding:
Vasudha Narayanan, University of Florida
A30-125 S
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
A30-123 S F Latina/o Critical and Comparative Studies Consultation
Marriott Marquis, L506
Buddhism in the West Consultation and Religion and
Migration Consultation Laura Perez, University of California, Berkeley, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, A708 Theme: Islam in the Borderlands: Remixing Mestizaje
Wakoh Shannon Hickey, Alfred University, Presiding Harold Morales, University of California, Riverside
Luces Sobre Islam: Locating Latino/a Muslims within Virtual Borders
Theme: Buddhist Women Migrants, Migrating Women’s Buddhism: The
Complexities and Challenges for Buddhist Women in Oceania Patrick Bowen, University of Denver
Culture and Identity in The Latino Muslim Voice Newsletter
Amy Holmes-Tagchungdarpa, University of Alabama
Genealogies of Nonviolent Resistance between Oceania and the Adan Stevens-Diaz, Temple University
Himalayas: Women as Participants and Symbols in the Parihaka The Muslim Narrative among United States Latinos/as
Community and the Tibetan Satyagraha Protest Movement Responding:
Bante Sujato, Santi Forest Monastery Ruth Mas, University of Colorado
The Trials of Ordination for Buddhist Nuns in Contemporary Australia Business Meeting:
and Ancient India
Luis Leon, University of Denver, Presiding
Kalzang Dorjee Bhutia, University of Alabama
Evoking Buddhist Landscape in Aotearoa: Women as Agents of the
Adaptation of Buddhism to New Zealand Soil
Ruth Gamble, Australian National University
Laying out the Dead: The Shifting Traditions of Tibetan Women’s Role
in the Disposal of the Dead, from Tibet, to Exile, to Australia
Business Meeting:
Marie Marquardt, Agnes Scott College, Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 53
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
54 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-130 S F A30-132 G
Religion in Southeast Asia Consultation Ricoeur Consultation
Marriott Marquis, L503 Hyatt Regency, Hanover C
Jason Carbine, Whittier College, Presiding Jeffrey F. Keuss, Seattle Pacific University, Presiding
Theme: Religious Borders, Identities, and Hybridities within and beyond Theme: Ricoeur, Liturgy, and the Phenomenology of Religious Experience
Southeast Asia Mark Godin, Glasgow, United Kingdom
Francis Bradley, University of Wisconsin Paul Ricoeur and Worshipful Inventions: Tracing Liturgical
The Patani Scholarly Network and the Rise of Islamic Educational Imagination through the Art of Narrative Identity
Institutions in Southeast Asia Michele Petersen, University of Iowa
Catherine Newell, University of London Paul Ricoeur and the Heart of Meaning
Dhammakaya Meditation: The “Unorthodox” Heart of a Global Brian A. Butcher, Pacific College
Buddhist Movement Figuring Liturgically: A Ricoeurian Approach to Liturgical Theology
Eu Kit Lim, Iliff School of Theology and University of Denver
“What’s this Hybridity Stuff ?” Examining the Promise of Resistance
in Constructions of Hybrid Identities Among Malaysian Pentecostal
Chinese
A30-133 S
Jessica Lee Patterson, University of San Diego Space, Place, and Religious Meaning Consultation
A Buddha’s Identity Crisis Marriott Marquis, A702
Responding: David Simonowitz, Pepperdine University, Presiding
Elizabeth Collins, University of Ohio Theme: Portmanteau Space: Bringing Religious Meanings to Nonreligious
Business Meeting: Space
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Jason Carbine, Whittier College, and Anna M. Gade, University of Joanne Punzo Waghorne, Syracuse University
Wisconsin, Presiding Space without Place: Borderless “Spirituality” within a Global City in
Asia
Alain Epp Weaver, University of Chicago
A30-131 S Palestinian Refugee Cartography and the Sacralization of Space
Daniel Sack, University of Chicago
Religion, Memory, History Consultation Prayer at the Crossroads: The O’Hare Airport Chapel as Religious Space
Hyatt Regency, Hanover AB
Responding:
Anne Murphy, University of British Columbia, Presiding
David Bains, Samford University
Theme: Remembering Loss: The Work of Memory in Facing the Violence
of the Past Business Meeting:
Leigh Sangster, Emory University Jeanne Halgren Kilde, University of Minnesota, and Leonard
Collective Memory, Postmemory, and Buddhist Imagery in Norman Primiano, Cabrini College, Presiding
Contemporary Tibetan Art
Brian Britt, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Memory of Disaster: From Simulacra to Agency
A30-134 S H
Mona Hassan, Duke University Transformative Scholarship and Pedagogy Consultation
Remembering Baghdad: Visual, Musical, and Literary Marriott Marquis, M108
Commemorations of the City’s Fall to the Mongols in 1258 Tina Pippin, Agnes Scott College, Presiding
Brandi Denison, University of North Carolina Theme: Teaching for Transformation: Examining the Lessons, Challenges,
Redemption in the American West: Confounding Colonial Memories and Possibilities of Community-based Pedagogy
through Powwows
Panelists:
Business Meeting: Nathaniel Smith, Emory University
David Reinhart, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater, Presiding Jennie S. Knight, Emory University
Charon Hribar, Union Theological Seminary
Charlene Sinclair, Union Theological Seminary
Colleen Wessel-McCoy, Union Theological Seminary
Business Meeting:
Shannon Craigo-Snell, Yale University, Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 55
Program Sessions
A30-138 N D M30-101 C S
Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum Tour
Colloquium on Religion and Violence
Saturday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, L404
Buses pick up at Hyatt Regency-Baker Street Exit
Martha Reineke, University of Northern Iowa, Presiding
Ellen Ott Marshall, Emory University, Presiding
Theme: Jon Pahl’s Empire of Sacrifice: The Religious Origins of
Sponsored by the Religion and Politics Section and the Religions, American Violence (New York University Press, 2010)
Social Conflict, and Peace Group
Panelist:
The Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum is home to
the presidential papers of the Carter Administration. An exhibit of Jon Pahl, Lutheran Theological Seminary, Philadelphia
significant events occurring during Carter’s life and political career Responding:
includes photographs with interpretative text. Several exhibits Kathryn Lofton, Yale University
focus on important twentieth century issues such as war and peace, Michael Hardin, Preaching Peace
disarmament, and the economy. 10:45 am Business meeting, open to all interested persons.
Tour fee: $20. The Colloquium on Religion and Violence is an international
association founded in 1990, which is dedicated to the exploration,
criticism, and development of René Girard’s mimetic model of
the relationship between violence and religion in the genesis and
Symbol Key: maintenance of culture.
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
56 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
M30-102 C M30-108 S
Dharma Academy of North America (DANAM) Niebuhr Society
Saturday, 9:00 am–10:30 am Marriott Marquis, International 6
Marriott Marquis, International 2 John D. Carlson, Arizona State University, Presiding
Kusumita P. Pedersen, St. Francis College, and Jeffery Long, Theme: Reinhold Niebuhr and Martin Luther King, Jr. in the Era of
Elizabethtown College, Presiding Obama
Theme: Panel Discussion of Interpreting Ramakrishna, by Swami Panelists:
Tyagananda and Pravrajika Vrajaprana (Motilal Banarsidas, 2010) Christopher Evans, Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School
Panelists: William D. Hart, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Francis X. Clooney, Harvard Divinity School David Little, Harvard University
Gerald James Larson, Indiana University, Bloomington (Emeritus), Business Meeting:
University of California, Santa Barbara (Emeritus)
Kevin Carnahan, Central Methodist University, Presiding
June McDaniel, College of Charleston
Joseph Prabhu, California State University, Los Angeles
Anantanand Rambachan, Saint Olaf College M30-109
Responding: International Society for Chinese Philosophy
Swami Tyagananda, Hindu Chaplain, Harvard University and Saturday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm
Massachusetts Institute of Technology Ramakrishna Vedanta
Society, Boston Marriott Marquis, International B
Pravrajika Vrajaprana, Sarada Convent, Vedanta Society of Chung-ying Cheng, University of Hawai’i, Presiding
Southern California Theme: Seeking New Meanings of God and Dao: Dao of God and God of
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Dao
Chung-ying Cheng, University of Hawai’i
M30-104 CANCELLED On Supreme Sincerity and Ultimate Enlightenment as Divinity: Dao
of God and God of Dao in Zhong Yong
Jesuit College and University Chairs
Robert Neville, Boston University
Saturday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm Making Ultimate Reality Intimate: Contrary Images of Buddha-mind,
Dao, and God
M30-106 Joseph Grange, University of Maine
God as Rising Up, Soul as Expression: Dao as Unsayable, Dao as
North American Paul Tillich Society Livable
Saturday, 9:00 am–11:30 am Chad Meister, Bethel College
Marriott Marquis, International 4 God of Dao and Theosis in Christian Philosophical Theology
Responding:
Chung-ying Cheng, University of Hawai’i
M30-107 J Robert Neville, Boston University
Cognitive Science of Religion Consultation
Saturday, 9:00 am–11:00 am
Marriott Marquis, International A
M30-110 S
Theme: Reductionism in the Cognitive Science of Religion Society for Buddhist–Christian Studies
Laura Weed, College of Saint Rose Marriott Marquis, International 7
Against Reductivism in Causation Terry C. Muck, Asbury Theological Seminary, Presiding
Paul Cassell, Boston University Theme: Can/Should Buddhists and Christians Do Buddhology/Theology
Ritual, Religious Experience, and Adaptive Social Organization Together?
Andrew Aghapour, University of North Carolina Panelists:
Biocognitive Straw Men and Sui Generis Defensives: Science, Religion, Grace Burford, Prescott College
and the Rhetoric of Reductionism Wendy Farley, Emory University
John Makransky, Boston College
Amos Yong, Regent University
11:00 am Business meeting
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 57
Program Sessions
58 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
M30-124 M30-117 S
Søren Kierkegaard Society Christian Theological Research Fellowship
Saturday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm Saturday, 10:00 am–12:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, International 3 Hyatt Regency, Vinings
John Davenport, Fordham University, Presiding Joel Scandrett, Wheaton College, Presiding
Theme: Selfhood, Church, and Society Theme: Edinburgh and Ecumenism — 100 Years On
Robert L. Perkins, Stetson University On the centennial of the historic Edinburgh Missionary Conference,
Kierkegaard’s Political Theology this session will explore that event’s ongoing influence, particularly in
J. Michael Tilley, Georgetown College the area of ecumenical promise and challenge.
Immersion and Reflective Action: Kierkegaard and Social Theory Marilyn McCord Adams, University of North Carolina
Recent Developments in the Anglican Communion, or Ecumenism
Will Williams, Baylor University
Misapplied
Irony as the Birth of Kierkegaard’s “Single Individual”
Joseph Bracken, Xavier University
Catholicism, Ecumenism, and “the One and the Many”
M30-125 S Hans Boersma, Regent College
Heavenly Participation: Ecumenical Dialogue and the Recovery of a
Psychology, Culture, and Religion Group Sacramental Mindset
Saturday, 9:00 am–11:30 am Business Meeting:
Hyatt Regency, Piedmont Bernie A. Van De Walle, Ambrose University College, Presiding
Greg Schneider, Pacific Union College, Presiding
Theme: Works in Progress/Business Meeting
A30-141 L H
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Special Topics Forum
M30-126
Saturday, 11:45 am–12:45 pm
Mennonite Scholars and Friends Forum Hyatt Regency, Lenox
Saturday, 9:00 am–11:00 am Melissa M. Wilcox, Whitman College, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, International C Theme: LGBTIQ Mentoring Lunch
Sponsored by the Status of LGBTIQ Persons in the Profession Task
Force
M30-116
All graduate students and junior scholars who identify outside of
Art/s of Interpretations Group normative gender histories and/or sexualities are welcome to join us for
Saturday, 10:00 am–12:00 pm an informal lunch. No fee or preregistration is required; please bring
your own lunch.
Hyatt Regency, Techwood
Panelists:
Jennifer Reid, University of Maine, Farmington, Presiding
Rebecca Alpert, Temple University
Theme: Remembering Eliade — Mircea Eliade and the Imagination of
Matter: An Empirical Approach Rudy V. Busto, University of California, Santa Barbara
Panelists: Monica A. Coleman, Claremont School of Theology
David Carrasco, Harvard University Horace Griffin, Pacific School of Religion
Charles Long, University of California, Santa Barbara W. Scott Haldeman, Chicago Theological Seminary
Jennifer Harvey, Drake University
Jay E. Johnson, Pacific School of Religion
Laurel Schneider, Chicago Theological Seminary
Daniel T. Spencer, University of Montana
Traci C. West, Drew University
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 59
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
60 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Panelists:
A30-201 F Michael Patrick Murphy, University of San Francisco
Special Topics Forum Theodore Vial Jr., Iliff School of Theology
Marriott Marquis, L506 Anne E. Monius, Harvard University
Tim Jensen, University of Southern Denmark, Presiding Charles Mathewes, University of Virginia
Theme: Beyond the Rainbow Generation? Religion and Pluralism in a Amir Hussain, Loyola Marymount University
Globalized World Jacob N. Kinnard, Iliff School of Theology
Sponsored by the International Connections Committee Karen Jackson-Weaver, Princeton University
Religious and cultural diversity has evolved from, at times, parochial Cynthia Read, Oxford University Press
efforts to encourage members of the majority culture in the world to Patricia Thomas, Oxford University Press
move beyond their comfort zone to face new challenges, as we struggle
to forge a world community out of disparate individuals connected by
globalization and commodification. What are the challenges we face
as a world community and how might we meaningfully rethink our
A30-203
new roles and collective responsibilities as global citizens? In what Arts, Literature, and Religion Section and Mormon Studies
ways do religions help and/or hinder these idea(l)s of and efforts for Consultation
a world community? How do people of faith seeking to participate as
responsible global citizens evoke their faith traditions as inspiration in Marriott Marquis, M302
this quest and, conversely, how might loyalty of and commitment to Kelly J. Baker, University of Tennessee, Presiding
respective faith tradition inhibit their quest for global citizenship? In Theme: Mormon Art and Literature
addition to religious pluralism, what about pluralisms that exist within
a religious tradition? What might these intrareligious pluralisms Margaret Young, Brigham Young University
signify in terms of possibilities and limitations for community? Mormon Literature: Where are We Going? Where have We Been?
Panelists: Sara Patterson, Hanover College
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Diana Eck, Harvard University This Is the (Right) Place: Memorializing Sacred Space and Time in
Salt Lake Valley
Mike Grimshaw, University of Canterbury
Gideon Burton, Brigham Young University
Changgang Guo, Shanghai University The Scope of Mormon Cinema
Simeon O. Ilesanmi, Wake Forest University Colleen McDannell, University of Utah
Marion Maddox, Macquarie University The Story Lives Here: Faith, History, and the Instructional Film
Paul Morris, University of Wellington Responding:
David Morgan, Duke University
A30-202 L H
Special Topics Forum A30-204 J
Marriott Marquis, A703 Buddhism Section
Kimberly Connor, University of San Francisco, Presiding Marriott Marquis, A706
Theme: How to Get Published Frances Garrett, University of Toronto, Presiding
Sponsored by the Publications Committee Theme: Buddhist Medicine: Transnational Traditions and Local Contexts
Based on notions that scholars have an understanding of the books Amy Paris Langenberg, Brown University
needed in the fields of religion, religious studies, and theology, the Obstetrical Buddhism: Pregnancy According to the Mūlasarvāstivāda
AAR publishing program with Oxford University Press (OUP) Vinaya
produces quality scholarship for religious scholars and their students.
OUP is an outstanding international publisher and the AAR has Pierce Salguero, Johns Hopkins University
published hundreds of titles, many of which have become critical tools How to Read a Buddhist Medical Treatise: The Social Logic of Medical
in the development of our fields and in training new scholars. AAR/ Metaphors in Early Medieval Chinese Buddhism
OUP books include five published series: Academy Series; Reflection Joshua Capitanio, University of the West
and Theory in the Study of Religion Series; Religion, Culture, and Indian and Chinese Conceptions of the Body in the Medical Writings of
History Series; Religion in Translation Series; and Teaching Religious Tiantai Zhiyi
Studies Series.
Juhn Ahn, University of Toronto
The panel provides an opportunity to hear from experienced OUP Worms, Germs, and Technologies of the Self: Buddhism and Medicine in
and AAR editors, and to ask any and all questions you might have Early Modern Japan
regarding the AAR/OUP series. Also, the JAAR Editor will discuss
essay publishing. You will have opportunities to speak with individual Erik J. Hammerstrom, Pacific Lutheran University
editors. In addition, come meet an author who has journeyed from Microbiology and Buddhist Discourses on Science in Early Twentieth
start to finish in the publishing process and can answer your most Century China
pressing questions. Responding:
Janet Gyatso, Harvard University
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 61
Program Sessions
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
62 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Kevin O’Neill, University of Toronto Mimi Hanaoka, Columbia University
The Passion of Guatemala: The Politics of Truth and Resurrection The Politics of Piety in Early Islamic Persia
Responding: Mona Hassan, Duke University
Jean Bethke Elshtain, University of Chicago Islamist Remembering and Longing for a Lost Caliphal Ideal: The
Politics of Memory, Culture, and Emotion
Rachel Scott, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
A30-210 The Concept of the Golden Age in the Thought of Muhammad Salim
al-Awwa
Religion and the Social Sciences Section
Adam Gaiser, Florida State University
Marriott Marquis, M101 Dueling Hajjis: Race, Ritual, and Authority in the Hajj Accounts of
John D. Carlson, Arizona State University, Presiding Malcolm X and Elijah Muhammad
Theme: Twenty-first Century Christianity in Social Context Responding:
James Fenimore, United Methodist Church Omid Safi, University of North Carolina
High-tech Worship: Christian Worship Technology and Gender Politics
Philip Webb, DePaul University
Family Values, Social Capital, and Contradictions of American A30-213 S
Modernity
Augustine and Augustinianisms Group
Seth M. Walker, University of South Florida and Valencia Marriott Marquis, L401
Community College
“Hic Fribus Conficiat Ceruisa”: The Economic Dimensions of Monastic Phillip Cary, Eastern University, Presiding
Brewing in the Contemporary World Theme: Rhetoric and Soteriology
Stephen Pardue, Wheaton College
Intellectual Humility in Augustine: A Christological and Linguistic
A30-211 S Account
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Religion in South Asia Section Amalia Jiva, Boston University
Between Fear of Reification and Gratitude for Revelation: Augustine’s
Marriott Marquis, M304 Linguistics of Incarnation
John E. Cort, Denison University, Presiding
Christopher A. Stephenson, Lee University
Theme: New Directions in the Study of Religion in South Asia “Aware How Ill I Was, Unaware How Well I Was Soon to Be”: The
Brian Collins, University of Chicago Rhetoric of Medicine and Healing in Augustine’s Soteriology
Apaddharma as a State of Exception; or, Parashurama the Werewolf Jonathan Teubner, University of Cambridge
Simone Barretta, University of Pennsylvania Peripatetic Prepositions: The Soteriological Significance of Pilgrimage
The Tantric Self: Body, Mind, and Society in the Tantric Saivism of Images in Augustine’s Enarrationes in Psalmos
Medieval Kashmir Business Meeting:
Carole Barnsley, Transylvania University Phillip Cary, Eastern University, Presiding
Isma’ili Ginans (Hymns) as a Means of “Boundary Maintenance”
Elliott McCarter, University of Texas
Tales from Kuruksetra A30-214 S
George Pati, Valparaiso University Buddhist Critical–Constructive Reflection Group
Sneham as Bhakti: Bhakti as Emancipation in the Modern Malayalam
Poems of Kumaran Asan Hyatt Regency, Hanover AB
Responding: Kalzang Dorjee Bhutia, University of Alabama, Presiding
John Stratton Hawley, Columbia University Theme: Remembering What is Forgotten: Reassessing the Traveling Oral
Archive as a Source of Empowerment for Buddhist Women
Business Meeting:
Leah Weiss Ekstrom, Boston College
John E. Cort, Denison University, and Robin Rinehart, Lafayette Disrupting Gender Disparity in Contemporary North American Buddhism:
College, Presiding Remembering and Fostering Women Teachers, Students, and Buddhist Feminism
Amy Holmes-Tagchungdarpa, University of Alabama
A30-212 Forgotten Lives: Forgetting and Remembering Women in Tibetan
Buddhist Traditions of the Himalayas through Oral Life Stories
Study of Islam Section Ruth Gamble, Australian National University
Marriott Marquis, A704 Forgotten Conversations: Disruptions in the Transmission of Oral
Instructions for Women from Tibet, through Exile, to the West
Ahmet T. Karamustafa, Washington University, Saint Louis, Presiding
Theme: Rethinking History, Reimagining Community Responding:
Matthew Pierce, Boston University Rita M. Gross, University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire
Killing the Imams: Classical Shi’i Narratives of the Twelve Imams and Business Meeting:
the Necessity of Martyrdom Roger Jackson, Carleton College, and John J. Makransky, Boston
College, Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 63
Program Sessions
A30-216 S A30-218
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Daoist Studies Group Hinduism Group and Yoga in Theory and Practice
Marriott Marquis, L507 Consultation
David Mozina, University of North Carolina, Charlotte, Presiding Hyatt Regency, Hanover D
Theme: World of an Object: The Social and Cosmic Networks of Daoist Vijaya Nagarajan, University of San Francisco, Presiding
Material Culture
Theme: Yoga, Divinity, and Power in the Hindu Purāṇas
David Boyd, Indiana University
The Embodiment of Immortality Shaman Hatley, Concordia University
Yoginīs, Yāmala Tantras, and the Mother Goddesses of Koṭivarṣa: A
Suzanne Cahill, University of California, San Diego Study of the Skanda Purāṇa
Mirrors and Daoism in Han through Tang Dynasty China
Andrew J. Nicholson, Stony Brook University
Jonathan Pettit, Indiana University Lords of Yoga in the Īśvara Gītā: Mainstreaming the Yoga of the
Resurrecting Maoshan: The Renovation of Temple Ruins in Medieval Pāśupatas
Daoism
Sucharita Adluri, Cleveland State University
Neil McGee, Columbia University Actualizing Viṣṇu: Defining Yoga in the Viṣṇu Purāṇa
Wang Liyong’s Transformations of Lord Lao and Its Place in the
Visual Propaganda Program of Song Gaozong (r. 1127–1162) Travis L. Smith, University of Florida
“A Gentle Approach”: The Early Skanda Purāṇa on the Pāśupata
Responding: Appropriation of Varanasi
Gil Raz, Dartmouth College Responding:
Business Meeting: James Fitzgerald, Brown University
Xun Liu, Rutgers University, and Gil Raz, Dartmouth College,
Presiding
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
64 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-219 S A30-221 S F
Kierkegaard, Religion, and Culture Group Qur’an Group
Marriott Marquis, A701 Marriott Marquis, M103-104
Wilberforce O. Mundia, Shaw University, Presiding Ludmila Zamah, University of Winnipeg, Presiding
Theme: Kierkegaard on Politics, Justice, and the Single Individual Theme: Varieties of Qur’anic Issues
Deidre Green, Claremont Graduate University Toni Tidswell, Curtin University
Works of Love in a World of Violence: Feminism, Kierkegaard, and the The Qur’an as Critique and Standard for the Hadith: The Case of Bilqis
Limits of Self-Sacrifice Bahar Davary, University of San Diego
Tamara Monet Marks, Florida State University Ecology and Islam: Contemplation of Water, Wind, Coral, and Fish
The Martyr is the Suffering Single Individual Nermeen Mouftah, University of Toronto
David R. Law, University of Manchester Making English an Islamic Language: Redefining Authority and
Redeeming the Penultimate: Discipleship and Church in the Thought of Meaning through Modern English Translations of the Qur’an
Søren Kierkegaard and Dietrich Bonhoeffer Joel Blecher, Princeton University
Ashley Cake, Syracuse University Variants, Mistakes, and Conceptions of Inimitability in a Medieval
Cornel West as Kierkegaard’s “Single Individual”: A Christian Qur’an Commentary: Notes on an Early Fragment of al-Khaṭīb al-
Conscience in Pursuit of Social Justice Iskāf ī’s Durrat al-Tanzīl wa-Ghurrat al-Tawīl
Business Meeting: Isra Yazicioglu, Saint Joseph’s University
Andrew J. Burgess, University of New Mexico, and Sylvia Walsh, Perhaps Their Harmony is Not that Simple: Said Nursi’s Interpretation
Stetson University, Presiding of the Relationship between Modern Science and the Qur’an
Business Meeting:
Anna M. Gade, University of Wisconsin, and Gordon D. Newby,
A30-220
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Emory University, Presiding
Psychology, Culture, and Religion Group
Marriott Marquis, A708 A30-222
Kirk A. Bingaman, Fordham University, Presiding
Religion in Latin America and the Caribbean Group
Theme: “Who am I Anyway?” Psychological and Religious Perspectives on
Identity Marriott Marquis, A702
Alberto Varona, California Institute of Integral Studies Sylvia Marcos, Universidad Autonoma del Tierra, Chipas, Mexico,
Soul-splitting Headache: Imagining a Soul by Leaving the Best for and Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Presiding
Last and the Worst Left Behind Theme: Critical Feminist and Decolonial Readings of Mary
Leanna Fuller, Vanderbilt University Jorge A. Aquino, University of San Francisco
The Role of Collective Identification in Congregational Conflict Gestures Toward a Decolonial Guadalupan Theology
Anisah Bagasra, Claflin University Elina Vuola, University of Helsinki
Religious Commitment, Acculturation, and Identify Formation among Decolonializing the Virgin Mary? Costa Rica’s La Negrita and the
Twenty-first Century Muslim-Americans Hierarchies of Race, Gender, Religion, and Class
David Hogue, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary Nancy Pineda-Madrid, Boston College
Making/Breaking Connections: Implications of Cognitive Social Overturning Gendered Stereotypes of Latinas: Guadalupe and
Neuroscience and Attachment Theory for Religion, Ritual, and Human Malinche
Bonding Lilian Dube, University of San Francisco
Marirose Lescher, Claremont Graduate University Imaging Mary in Africa: Grassroots Feminist Ecumenical Movements
A Most Peculiar Self David Sanchez, Loyola Marymount University
From Patmos to the Barrio: Subverting Imperial Myths
Responding:
Rosemary Ruether, Claremont Graduate University
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 65
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
66 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-227 S A30-229 S C
Sacred Space in Asia Group World Christianity Group
Marriott Marquis, A705 Marriott Marquis, M109
Eve Mullen, Emory University, Presiding Dale T. Irvin, New York Theological Seminary, Presiding
Theme: Pilgrimage, Volunteerism, and Mapping Religion Theme: Panel Discussion on the Cambridge Dictionary of Christianity
Juan E. Campo, University of California, Santa Barbara (Cambridge University Press, 2010)
Mass Pilgrimage and the Modern State: Spatial and Ritual Panelists:
Transformations in a Hindu Pilgrimage Peter C. Phan, Georgetown University
Dominick Scarangello, University of Virginia Susanna Snyder, Emory University
Overcoming the Nation State, Neoliberal Economics, and
Edward Phillip Antonio, Iliff School of Theology
Depopulation: The Revivification of a Japanese Local Sacred Site
through the Rise of New Communities of Volunteerism and One Maria Pilar Aquino, University of San Diego
Stubborn Man’s Vision of “Nature Religion” Amos Yong, Regent University
Albertus Bagus Laksana, Boston College Valerie Karras, Southern Methodist University
Muslim Saints in the Island of the [Hindu] Gods: Pilgrimage, Identity, Responding:
and Hybridity in Bali
Cristina Grenholm, Church of Sweden
Jason Carbine, Whittier College
Sāsanasuddhi, Sīmāsammuti: Historical and Global Thoughts about a Daniel M. Patte, Vanderbilt University
Spatial Basis of the Buddha’s Religion Business Meeting:
Responding: Jane Carol Redmont, Guilford College, Presiding
Brian J. Nichols, Rice University
J
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Business Meeting: A30-230
Eve Mullen, Emory University, and Steven Heine, Florida
International University, Presiding Animals and Religion Consultation and Cognitive Science of
Religion Consultation
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom A
A30-228 Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara, Presiding
Womanist Approaches to Religion and Society Group and Theme: Fellow Primates: A Conversation with Frans de Waal on
Religion and Sexuality Consultation Cognition, Animals, and Religion
Marriott Marquis, M301 Panelists:
Heather White, New College of Florida, Presiding Kimberley Patton, Harvard University
Theme: Rethinking Womanist Sexual Ethics in the Twenty-first Century Armin W. Geertz, University of Aarhus
Monique Moultrie, Vanderbilt University Frans de Waal, Emory University
Passionate and Pious: A Womanist and Cultural Analysis of Black Responding:
Women’s Sexual Decision-making Gabriel Levy, University of Aarhus
Alexis S. Wells, Emory University Aaron Gross, University of San Diego
“I Just Wanna ‘Sex-tify!’”: Sexual Testimony and the Construction of
Black Female Desire in the Religious Discourse of Juanita Bynum
Stephanie M. Crumpton, Columbia Theological Seminary
Crafting: A Womanist Pastoral Theological Exploration of African-
American Women’s Use of Cultural Aesthetics to Heal from Sexual
Violence
Michelle R. Jackson, Vassar College
A Womanist Theological Approach to Constructing an Inclusive Sexual
Ethic: A Liberatory Message for Single African-American Christian
Women
Phillis I. Sheppard, North Park Theological Seminary
Mourning the Loss of Cultural Self-objects: Black Embodiment and
Religious Experience after Trauma
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 67
Program Sessions
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
68 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-235 S M30-105 C
Sociology of Religion Consultation North American Association for the Study of Religion
Marriott Marquis, L505 Marriott Marquis, International 3
Titus Hjelm, University College London, Presiding Arvind Mandair, University of Michigan, Presiding
Theme: Religion and the Sociology of Pierre Bourdieu Theme: Talal Asad, Three Decades in Review: The Use and Abuse of
Jens Köhrsen, University of Bielefeld Anthropologies of Islam, Genealogies of Religion, and Formations of
Religious Taste: A Theoretical Model to Explain Individual Religious the Secular
Practice and Choices Ananda Abeysekara, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
Randy Reed, Appalachian State University University
Prophetic Capital: An Application of Pierre Bourdieu to Modern The Untranslatability of Religion, the Untranslatability of Life: What
Apocalyptic Fundamentalism Remains Unthought about Talal Asad’s Thinking within Religious
Studies
Rebekka King, University of Toronto
The Academe, the Author, and the Atheist: The Reception of the Study of Markus Dressler, Istanbul Technical University
Religion by Progressive Christians From Sacred-Profane Binaries, Towards the Religo-Secular
Continuum, and Back
Terry Rey, Temple University
Catholic Religious Capital and the Haitian Revolution: The Priest and Rosemary Hicks, Tufts University
the Prophetess Asad, W. C. Smith, and Liberal Critiques of Individualist Ethics and
Studies of Islam
Christopher Brittain, University of Aberdeen
Religion as a “Field”: Bourdieu as a Resource for Analyzing the Ruth Mas, University of Colorado
Conflict over Homosexuality in the Anglican Communion The Distanciation of the Secular
Responding:
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Sean McCloud, University of North Carolina, Charlotte M30-200
Business Meeting:
Association of Practical Theology
Titus Hjelm, University College London, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, International 7
Bonnie Miller-McLemore, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
A30-236 S Theme: The Clerical Paradigm Revisited: Does Interdisciplinary Evidence
of “Wise Practice” Make Us Want to Reclaim the Clerical Paradigm for
Theology of Martin Luther King Jr. Consultation Practical Theology?
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom B Larry Golemon, Virginia Theological Seminary
Hak Joon Lee, New Brunswick Theological Seminary, Presiding Reclaiming a Professional (Not Clerical) Paradigm for Practical
Theme: The Promised Land: Political Theology and Contemporary Social Theology
Movements Ruthanna Hooke, Virginia Theological Seminary
Lane Van Ham, University of Arizona Performance Practices in the Teaching of Preaching
Undocumented Immigration and the “World House”: Spirituality in the John Falcone, Boston College
Immigrant Advocacy Movement “Wise Practice” and Class Habitus in Practical Theology
Rosemary P. Carbine, Whittier College Responding:
Transforming Spaces for Social Change: Prophetic Praxis in the United
Courtney Goto, Boston University
States Civil Rights and New Sanctuary Movements
Karen V. Guth, University of Virginia
Beyond Nonviolence: The Feminist/Womanist Political Theology of M30-201
Martin Luther King Jr.
Frederick L. Ware, Howard University College Theology Society Board Meeting
“Prophesy the Common Good!”: The Promise and Problem of Moral Saturday, 1:00 pm–6:00 pm
Realism in the Political Theology of Martin Luther King Jr. Hyatt Regency, Kennesaw
Responding:
Rosetta E. Ross, Spelman College
Business Meeting:
Johnny B. Hill, Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary,
Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 69
Program Sessions
Responding:
Special Topics Forum
Petra Turner Harvey, University of Virginia Marriott Marquis, L401-402
Matthew Puffer, University of Virginia Fred Glennon, Le Moyne College, Presiding
Theme: Making the Case for the Importance of Religion
Sponsored by the Academic Relations Committee
M30-203 At a time when it is clear that religion needs to be taught in colleges
Liverpool Hope and University of Manchester Symposium and universities now more than ever, colleges and universities are
threatening to eliminate faculty or whole departments and to reduce
on Early Methodism: Texts, Traditions, and Theologies the role of religion in the general education curriculum. This Special
Saturday, 1:15 pm–4:45 pm Topics Forum will address the difficulties faced by departments
Marriott Marquis, International 10 of religion and discuss ways to reverse this trend, such as taking
advantage of the way in which the field is emerging (comparative,
Theme: New Horizons and Frontiers: Evangelical Preachers and interdisciplinary, critical, etc.) in ways that mirrors what the American
Preaching Association of Colleges and Universities sees as central to the future of
1:00 pm Welcome higher education.
1:10 pm Short papers on evangelical preachers and preaching in Panelists:
Britain, North America, and the Caribbean. Rosalind Hackett, University of Tennessee
Panelists: Vasudha Narayanan, University of Florida
Andrew Cheatle, Liverpool Hope University Christine E. Gudorf, Florida International University
Ryan N. Danker, Boston University
Sharon Jaye Grant, Southern Methodist University
Rex D. Matthews, Emory University
Mark R. Teasdale, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary
2:30 pm Questions and roundtable discussion.
Gareth Lloyd, University of Manchester, Presiding
4:15 pm Conclusion
For additional information, contact Gareth Lloyd at gareth.lloyd@
manchester.ac.uk.
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
70 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-301 A30-304 C
Special Topics Forum History of Christianity Section
Marriott Marquis, A703 Hyatt Regency, Hanover E
Shaun Allen Casey, Wesley Theological Seminary, Presiding Martha Finch, Missouri State University, Presiding
Theme: Is the God Beat Dead? Theme: The Body and Society at Twenty: Peter Brown and the History
Sponsored by the Public Understanding of Religion Committee of Christianity
This panel of scholars and journalists will examine the evolution of Panelists:
religion coverage in various media, including the social, political, and Margaret R. Miles, Berkeley, CA
economic factors shaping the media’s treatment of religion. Constance Furey, Indiana University
Susan Ashbrook Harvey, Brown University
Panelists:
Matthew Day, Florida State University
Adelle Banks, Religion News Service
Sarah Posner, Religion Dispatches
Mark Silk, Trinity College A30-305 F
Bob Smietana, The Tennessean Religion and the Social Sciences Section
Marriott Marquis, M101
A30-302 D Rebecca Todd Peters, Elon University, Presiding
Theme: Social Justice and Religion
Arts, Literature, and Religion Section and Music and
Religion Consultation Tonya Nashay Sanders, University of Illinois, Chicago
From Isolation to Collaboration: African-American Faith-based
Marriott Marquis, M106-107 Partnerships in Local Community Development
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Theodore Trost, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Presiding Melissa James, Graduate Theological Union
Theme: Music of the American Southeast The Meaning of Service: Service and Meaning-making among
Roy Whitaker, Claremont Graduate University Lutheran Volunteer Corps Participants
Hip-Hop as Sacred Canopy: KRS-One, Peter Berger, and La Frontera Sarah Fredericks, University of North Texas
Alisha Lola Jones, University of Chicago Incorporating Environmental Justice into Sustainability Indicators:
In the Pocket: A Sacred Go-Go Beat Movement of Peculiar People A Case Study of the Participation of Religious Studies Scholars in the
Development of Policy Indicators
Jon Gill, Claremont Graduate University
The Ethereal Etched into the Existential: Auerbach and Benjamin’s Responding:
Literary Philosophy as Displayed Theologically by Tori Amos and Illogic Paul Morris, University of Wellington
M. Cooper Harriss, University of Chicago
A Sense of Ending: The Album, Narrative, and Eschatology in Time
(the Revelator) and The Tennessee Fire A30-306 C
Religion in South Asia Section
A30-303 S Marriott Marquis, M304
Simon Brodbeck, Cardiff University, Presiding
Buddhism Section and Ritual Studies Group Theme: The Mahabharata: End and Endings
Marriott Marquis, M109 Christopher Austin, Dalhousie University
Timothy Lubin, Washington and Lee University, Presiding Draupadi’s Fall: Narrative Continuity and the Problem of Symmetries
Theme: Begging Bowls and Rice Balls: Exoteric South Asian Buddhist in the Mahabharata
Ritual in Comparative Perspective Luis Gonzalez-Reimann, University of California, Berkeley
Panelists: Ending the Mahabharata: A Look at Some Closing Strategies
Robert DeCaroli, George Mason University Michael Baltutis, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh
Vanessa Rebecca Sasson, Marianopolis College and McGill The Reinvention of Orthopraxy: Refuting Royal Performances in Book
University Fourteen of the Mahabharata
Todd Lewis, College of the Holy Cross Tamar C. Reich, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Ends and Closures in the Mahabharata
Alexander von Rospatt, University of California, Berkeley
Amy Paris Langenberg, Brown University Responding:
Responding: Bruce M. Sullivan, Northern Arizona University
Ute Huesken, University of Oslo
Business Meeting:
Janet Gyatso, Harvard University, and Charles Hallisey, Harvard
University, Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 71
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
72 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-311 A30-314 S
Bible in Racial, Ethnic, and Indigenous Communities Chinese Religions Group
Group; Bible, Theology, and Postmodernity Group; and Marriott Marquis, M102
Latina/o Religion, Culture, and Society Group James A. Benn, McMaster University, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, M108 Theme: Crossing Boundaries in Chinese Religions
Fernando F. Segovia, Vanderbilt University, Presiding Joshua Capitanio, University of the West
Theme: Latino/a Theology and the Bible “Un Taoisme Tantrique” Revisited: Tantric Elements and Paradigms in
Panelists: Daoist Ritual
Cecilia Gonzalez-Andrieu, Loyola Marymount University Megan Bryson, Stanford University
Jorge A. Aquino, University of San Francisco The Transformations of Baijie Shengfei and Mahakala: Religion and
Loida Martell-Otero, Palmer Theological Seminary Ethnicity in Dali, Yunnan
Luis R. Rivera, McCormick Theological Seminary Wu Hongyu, University of Pittsburgh
Michael E. Lee, Fordham University The Nonregressing Path to the Rebirth in the Pure Land: The Pure
Nora O. Lozano, Baptist University of the Americas Land Thought of Peng Shaosheng
Frederick Shih-Chung Chen, University of Oxford
The Great God of the Five Paths: A Blood-sacrifice Pagan Cult During
A30-312 S the Reign of Emperor Wu of Liang, or a Religious Propagandist Story
Fabricated by the Song Buddhist Vegetarian Reformists?
Black Theology Group
Business Meeting:
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom B
James A. Benn, McMaster University, and Mark Halperin,
Dianne Diakité, Emory University, Presiding University of California, Davis, Presiding
Theme: African-Centered Thought and African Religions in Black Theology
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Ralph Watkins, Fuller Theological Seminary
From Black Theology to Africana Theology: A Methodological Shift in
the Construction of an African-centered Theology
A30-315 S
Christian Spirituality Group
Jawanza Eric Clark, Spelman College
Reconceiving the Doctrine of Jesus as Savior in Terms of the African Marriott Marquis, M103-104
Understanding of an Ancestor: A Model for the Black Church David Johns, Earlham School of Religion, Presiding
Adam Clark, Xavier University Theme: The Digital Spirit? Spirituality and the New Social Media
Black Theology, Afrocentricity, and the Womanist Challenge Theo Zijderveld, Utrecht University
Bryson White, Fuller Theological Seminary Prayer 2.0: Online Prayer and the Transformation of Religion in a
Africana Theology, Ancestor Veneration, and George Washington Media Age
Business Meeting: Elizabeth Drescher, Santa Clara University
Tweet if U ♥ Jesus: Spiritual Authority, Identity, and Community in
Monica A. Coleman, Claremont School of Theology, and Stephen the Digital Reformation
G. Ray Jr., Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, Presiding
Mary Hess, Luther Seminary
New Media, Ministry, and Mission: Teaching in the Global Classroom
A30-313 S J Alyssa Ninan Nickell, Graduate Theological Union
Real Friendships in Virtual Reality: Embodying Spirituality in the
Buddhist Philosophy Group Digital Age
Hyatt Regency, Hanover FG Business Meeting:
Robert Sharf, University of California, Berkeley, Presiding Tim Hessel-Robinson, Brite Divinity School, Presiding
Theme: Cognitive-Scientific Studies of Buddhist Thought and Practice:
Philosophical Interrogations of the Issues
David McMahan, Franklin and Marshall College
Buddhist Meditation as Scientific Practice? Sorting Out the
Implications of the Neuroscientific Study of Meditation
William S. Waldron, Middlebury College
Buddhism and Cognitive Science: Convergent Methods, Divergent Aims
Jay Garfield, Smith College
Ask Not What Buddhism Can Do for Cognitive Science; Ask What
Cognitive Science Can Do for Buddhism
Georges Dreyfus, Williams College
On the Very Idea of a Buddhism Science Dialogue
Business Meeting:
Daniel A. Arnold, University of Chicago, Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 73
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
74 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-320 A30-323 S
Feminist Theory and Religious Reflection Group Practical Theology Group
Hyatt Regency, Hanover C Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom D
Mary Keller, University of Wyoming, Presiding Teresa Snorton, Association for Clinical Pastoral Education, Inc.,
Theme: Feminist Rethinkings: Evolution and Strategic Essentialism and Jeanne Stevenson Moessner, Southern Methodist University,
Presiding
Donovan Schaefer, Syracuse University
Tight Genes: Evolutionary Theory and the Dancing Religious Body Theme: Disorderly Conduct: Creative Collaboration among Women Who
are Practitioners and Academics in Practical Theology
Adriaan van Klinken, Utrecht University
Beyond the Patriarchy Framework: Feminist Theory and the Study of Panelists:
Masculinities and Religion Insook Lee, Hood Theological Seminary
Tara Flanagan, Loyola University, Chicago Kathleen Greider, Claremont School of Theology
Opacity, Agency, and Relationality at the End of Life: Models of Self- Beverly Wallace, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Constitution from Judith Butler and M. Shawn Copeland Sophia Park, Care and Counseling Center of Georgia
Leah McKeen, Wilfrid Laurier University Jacqueline Kelley, Princeton Baptist Medical Center and Ingalls
Evangelical Women and Theories of Agency Center of Pastoral Ministries
Angella M. Pak Son, Drew University
A30-321 S Responding:
Pamela Cooper-White, Columbia Theological Seminary
New Religious Movements Group
Business Meeting:
Marriott Marquis, A708
Thomas Beaudoin, Fordham University, Presiding
Catherine Wessinger, Loyola University, New Orleans, Presiding
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Theme: New Religious Identity and Popular Religious Idealism
(Christian Science and New Thought) A30-324
Panelists: Pragmatism and Empiricism in American Religious Thought
Dawn Hutchinson, Christopher Newport University Group
John K. Simmons, Western Illinois University Marriott Marquis, L504
Janine Villot, University of South Florida Randy L. Friedman, Binghamton University, Presiding
Dell deChant, University of South Florida Theme: New Perspectives on James and Dewey
J. Gordon Melton, Institute for the Study of American Religion Panelists:
Business Meeting: Stuart E. Rosenbaum, Baylor University
Douglas E. Cowan, University of Waterloo, Presiding John J. Stuhr, Emory University
Responding:
A30-322 Melvin Lee Rogers, University of Virginia
Michael Slater, Georgetown University
Nineteenth-Century Theology Group and Religion and
Humanism Consultation
Marriott Marquis, A701
Todd Gooch, Eastern Kentucky University, Presiding
Theme: Nineteenth Century Proposals for a Religion of Humanity
Beth Eddy, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
The Cathedral of Humanity on Halstead Street: Jane Addams, Auguste
Comte, and Edward Caird
Ernest Rubinstein, Drew University
From Naturalism towards Humanism: An Emersonian Trajectory
John Halsey Wood, Saint Louis University
Whither the Church? Richard Rothe’s Challenge to the Dutch Church
Emily R. Mace, Princeton University
“Fellowship Will Be Our Symbol”: Practicing Religion in Felix Adler’s
Society for Ethical Culture
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 75
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
76 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Brett Hendrickson, Arizona State University
A30-329 S Mexican-American Religious Healing and the American Spiritual
Marketplace
Wesleyan Studies Group
Responding:
Marriott Marquis, A702
Tisa Wenger, Yale University
Douglas M. Strong, Seattle Pacific University, Presiding
Business Meeting:
Theme: Methodism and the Civil Rights Movement
Quincy Newell, University of Wyoming, Presiding
Ellen J. Blue, Phillips Theological Seminary
That White Preacher Who Took His Daughter to School: Andy Foreman
and the New Orleans School Desegregation Crisis of 1960
Kevin M. Watson, Southern Methodist University
A30-332 S
In the Shadow of Segregation: Methodist Seminaries and the Civil Queer Theory and LGBT Studies in Religion Consultation
Rights Movement Marriott Marquis, A707
Joseph T. Reiff, Emory and Henry College Claudia Schippert, University of Central Florida, Presiding
Born of Conviction: Methodist Ministers Provoking Civil Rights Theme: Queering Race, Politics, and Religion: Queer Values, Queer
Debate in 1963 Mississippi Worldmaking
Responding: Nessette Falu, Rice University
F. Douglas Powe Jr., Saint Paul School of Theology Invisible Hands: An Epistemology of Black Religious Thought and
Business Meeting: Queer Sexual Desire Disrupting “Crystallized Culture”
Priscilla Pope-Levison, Seattle Pacific University, Presiding Thelathia Young, Emory University
Black Queer Family Values: Moral Agency Through Creative Resistance
Alicia Juskewycz, Princeton University
A30-330 S “It’s Not About Religion”: LGBTQ-Related Problems, Uganda, and
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Managing Religion’s Intersections Under United States Foreign Policy
Comparative Philosophy and Religion Seminar
B. Howell Belser, Emory University
Marriott Marquis, A705 A Revolution We Can Dance To: Queer Worldmaking and Sacred
Tsingsong Vincent Shen, University of Toronto, Presiding Practice at MondoHomo
Theme: Comparative Philosophy and Religion Responding:
Francis X. Clooney, Harvard University Janet Jakobsen, Barnard College
The Necessarily Religious and Interreligious Context of a Robust Business Meeting:
Philosophy of Religion
Claudia Schippert, University of Central Florida, and Melissa M.
Morny Joy, University of Calgary Wilcox, Whitman College, Presiding
Is There a Postcolonial Ethics?
Tinu Ruparell, University of Calgary
The Golden Mean A30-333 S H
Takushi Odagiri, Stanford University Religion Education in Public Schools: International
Rationalism within Empiricism: Nisdida Kitaro and William James Perspectives Consultation
Business Meeting: Marriott Marquis, A601
Morny Joy, University of Calgary, Presiding Tim Jensen, University of Southern Denmark, Presiding
Theme: Religion Education and Citizenship in Europe and Beyond
A30-331 S Robert Jackson, University of Warwick
Religious Diversity in Education: The Toledo Guiding Principles
Religion in the American West Seminar (2007) and The Ministerial Recommendation from the Council of
Marriott Marquis, L507 Europe (2008)
Jane Naomi Iwamura, University of Southern California, Presiding Janet Bordelon, New York University
Religion Knows No Boundaries: The Translation of Toledo by the Tony
Travis Ross, University of Nevada, Reno
Blair Faith Foundation
Sectionalism in California’s Religious Periodicals: Place in Religious
Rhetoric Wolfram Weisse, University of Hamburg
Religious Education in Public Schools and the Challenge of Religious
Jonathan William Olson, Florida State University
Diversity at the University Level: Policy Recommendations of the
“Not Merely Asiatic but Pagan”: Religion, Chinese Exclusion, and the
REDCo Project
American West
Jeffrey Thibert, University of Illinois
Barry Joyce, University of Delaware
The Ambiguous Relationship between Public Religion Education and
Creating an Axis Mundi in the American Southwest: Religion, Science,
the Promotion of Religious Freedom
and the Sacred at the Chaco Culture National Historical Park
Business Meeting:
Bruce Grelle, California State University, Chico, Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 77
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
78 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
M30-300 M30-303 K
North American Association for the Study of Religion Religion Dispatches Reception
Marriott Marquis, International 3 Saturday, 5:00 pm–7:00 pm
Paul Johnson, University of Michigan, Presiding Hyatt Regency, Dunwoody
Theme: The Legacy of Lévi-Strauss
Jens Kreinath, Wichita State University Saturday, 6:00 pm and Later
Bricolage and the Fractal Dynamics of Ritual: Claude Lévi-Strauss
and His Legacy for the Study of Religion and Practice
Christopher I. Lehrich, Boston University
A30-401
Overture and Finale: Lévi-Strauss, Music, and Religion Special Topics Forums
Paul-François Tremlett, University of London Saturday, 6:00 pm–8:00 pm
Lévi-Strauss and Religious Studies
Almeda Wright, Pfeiffer University, Presiding
Responding: Theme: Beyond the Boundaries Public Lecture Series I
Ivan Strenski, University of California, Riverside Shannon Montgomery, Georgia State University
“An Influence Among Humanity”: Internal Religious Debate over
Narrative Paradigms
M30-301 S Montgomery’s project examines a 1911 controversy at Brigham Young
Society for Hindu–Christian Studies University which ended in three professors being fired for teaching
Marriott Marquis, International B evolution. After detailing the basic controversy both nationally and
at Brigham Young specifically, the project hones in on a letter signed
Amy L. Allocco, Elon University, Presiding by more than 80 percent of the student body in that year. The letter,
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
Theme: Performance as a Site for Hindu–Christian Encounter written in support of the teachers, offered a contrasting narrative
Zoe Sherinian, University of Oklahoma to that of the school administration. Lodged between embattled
Religious Encounters through Tamil Outcaste Folk Drumming professors and school administration (with church officials), the
students had to demonstrate fidelity to the religious institution even
Brenda Beck, University of Toronto as they sought the widest academic vision. Montgomery also considers
A Hindu Folk Epic Ripe with “Christian” Motifs implications for the Church of Latter Day Saints over the next
Eliza F. Kent, Colgate University century. She argues that ultimately, the controversy represents a missed
Battle Cries: Songs of the Salvation Army in South India opportunity for the church to be viewed as relevant in secular discourse
and opens up a discussion about the potential of religious organization
Responding: in general to better engage in secular discourse.
George Pati, Valparaiso University
Business Meeting to follow at 6:00 pm.
M30-304 K
Harvard University Reception
M30-302
Saturday, 6:00 pm–7:30 pm
Journal of Inter-Religious Dialogue French America Brasserie, 30 Ivan Allen Jr. Blvd.
Saturday, 4:30 pm–6:30 pm The Harvard University Reception (sponsored by the Harvard
Marriott Marquis, International 8 Divinity School, the Center of the Study of World Religions, and
Joshua Stanton, Hebrew Union College, and Stephanie Varnon- the Committee on the Study of Religion in FAS) at the AAR will
Hughes, New York, NY, Presiding take place on Saturday, October 30, 2010 from 6:00 pm–7:30 pm at
the French American Brasserie at 30 Ivan Allen Jr. Blvd., Atlanta,
Theme: The Promise and Challenges of Interreligious Dialogue Georgia 30308 (phone: 1-404-266-1440),a 5–10 minute walk from
Panelists: the conference hotels.
Aimee Upjohn Light, Dusquesne University
Stephen Butler Murray, Endicott College
M30-418
Amir Hussain, Loyola Marymount University
Nancy Fuchs-Kreimer, Reconstructionist Rabbinical College Oxford Bibliographies Online
Bud Heckman, Religions for Peace International Saturday, 6:00 pm–8:00 pm
Christy Lohr, Duke University Hyatt Regency, Spring
Or Rose, Hebrew College
Madhuri Yadlapati, Louisiana State University M30-400 K
The Fund for Theological Education
Saturday, 6:15 pm–8:00 pm
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 79
Program Sessions
M30-424
Celebrating the Life of Professor N. G. Barrier
Saturday, 6:45 pm–7:45 pm
Marriott Marquis, L403
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
80 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A30-404 M30-407
Presidential Address International Society for Chinese Philosophy
Saturday, 8:00 pm–9:00 pm Saturday, 7:00 pm–8:30 pm
Hyatt Regency, Centennial II-IV Marriott Marquis, International 6
Kwok Pui Lan, Episcopal Divinity School, Presiding
Theme: Ann Taves: “Religion” in the Humanities and the M30-408
Humanities in the University
In recent discussions of the concept of religion, Polanyi Society
scholars of religion have paid considerable attention Saturday, 7:00 pm–9:30 pm
to the relationship between the “religious” and
Marriott Marquis, International 1
the “secular.” In doing so, they have focused
our attention outward on the relationship Theme: The Next Generation Engages Polanyi, Part Two
between religion and the state and the historical
Ann Taves developments we associate with modernity. If we
turn our attention inward to the academy, we can ask how our M30-409
subject matter is positioned in relation to the subject matters of
other disciplines in the humanities. What, we might ask, is the Unitarian Universalist Scholars and Friends Discussion
relationship between the subject matter of departments devoted Saturday, 7:00 pm–9:30 pm
to religious studies, art, literature, philosophy, music, and theater?
Marriott Marquis, International A
This question focuses our attention on the place of religious
studies in the humanities and in the academic landscape of Theme: Practical Theology and Spirituality for Religious Liberals
the modern university more generally. Taves will suggest that Our annual conversation will explore how the discipline of practical
an evolutionary perspective, which focuses on the emergent theology can inform efforts to deepen spiritual disciplines within
SATURday, OCTOBER 30
capacities that give rise to the subject matters that we study in Unitarian Universalist congregations. Bringing practical and systematic
the humanities, highlights the essential role that the humanistic theologians together with theologically reflective ministers, we will
disciplines play in our understanding of the human animal. explore both particular practices and scholarly approaches to practice.
Panelists: Is there a distinctly liberal approach to practical theology or spiritual
practice? What can systematic and practical theologians learn from one
Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara
another, and from dialogue with congregational ministers?
Panelists:
Sharon Welch, Meadville Lombard Theological School
M30-405 J K Michelle Walsh, Boston University
Science and Religion Hospitality Event Sponsored by ZCRS, Myriam Renaud, University of Chicago
CTNS, and IRAS Elaine Peresluha, South Church Unitarian Universalist
Saturday, 7:00 pm–10:00 pm Congregation
Hyatt Regency, Fairlie Mary McClintock Fulkerson, Duke University
The Zygon Center for Religion and Science (ZCRS), a partnership Clyde Grubbs, Pasadena, CA
of the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago, and the Center for Responding:
Advanced Study in Religion and Science (CASIRAS) offers seminary Anthony David, Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Atlanta
courses, academic conferences, and public lectures, and shares offices
with Zygon: Journal of Religion and Science; zygoncenter.org. A separate reception (M31-408) will be held Sunday evening.
Sponsored by Starr King School for the Ministry, Meadville Lombard
The Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences (CTNS) supports Theological School, Harvard Divinity School, and the Unitarian
research, provides MDiv and doctoral courses through the Ian G. Universalist Association Panel on Theological Education.
Barbour Chair at the Graduate Theological Union, and publishes the
peer-reviewed journal Theology and Science; www.ctns.org.
The Institute on Religion in an Age of Science (IRAS) is an open–
membership organization that holds annual summer conferences and
M30-420 C
copublishes the peer-reviewed journal Zygon: Journal of Religion and Korean North American Systematic Theology
Science; www.iras.org. Saturday, 7:00 pm–9:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, L503
M30-406 Theme: Panel Discussion of Sang Hyun Lee’s New Book From a Liminal
Place: An Asian American Theology (Fortress Press, 2010)
Society for Pentecostal Studies and Wesleyan Theological
Society
Saturday, 7:00 pm–8:30 pm
Hyatt Regency, Greenbriar
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 81
Program Sessions
M30-410 K
Graduate Theological Union Reception
Saturday, 8:00 pm–10:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, International 9
M30-411 K
Mid-Atlantic American Academy of Religion Regional
Reception
Saturday, 8:00 pm–10:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, International B
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
82 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
M30-412 K M30-423 K
New Religious Movement Group/Nova Religio Reception Hispanic Theological Initiative Reception
Saturday, 8:00 pm–11:00 pm Saturday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm
Hyatt Regency, Marietta Hyatt Regency, Piedmont
Sponsored by Baylor University Press
M30-413 K
Vanderbilt University Reception M30-425 K
Saturday, 8:00 pm–9:30 pm University of Virginia Reception
Marriott Marquis, A601 Saturday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm
M31-2 K
A30-408 K Temple University Breakfast
Sunday, 7:00 am–8:45 pm
AAR Members’ Party
Hyatt Regency, Greenbriar
Saturday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, Atrium A
AAR members are invited to join one another at the Members’
Party for music and dancing.
M31-5 K C
SUNday, October 31
Center of Theological Inquiry Reception
Sunday, 7:00 am–8:30 am
Hyatt Regency, Courtland
M30-416 K The Center of Theological Inquiry in Princeton warmly welcomes
members, friends, and prospective applicants to a breakfast reception.
De Gruyter and Brill Publishers Joint Reception David Ford and Peter Ochs will launch the book they completed with
Saturday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm Daniel Hardy, Wording a Radiance: Parting Conversations on God and
the Church.
Hyatt Regency, Roswell
M30-417 K
Fortress Press Reception A31-1 S K
Saturday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm AAR Annual Business Meeting
Marriott Marquis, A602 Sunday, 7:30 am–8:45 am
AAR members are invited to join Fortress Press for something to Hyatt Regency, Dunwoody
drink…something to eat…and lots of good conversation!
Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara, Presiding
Join the AAR Board of Directors for a continental breakfast and
M30-422 K a brief business meeting, including an important vote on new
bylaws for the Academy.
Pro Ecclesia Reception
Saturday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, International 4
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 83
Program Sessions
Sunday, October 31 Whether the indigenous was understood as the decadent or noble
savage, “indigeneity” always carried what Johannes Fabian calls “a
denial of coevalness;” that is, an othering of the indigenous in time
A31-2 K and space. Today, globalization exacerbates the symbolic violence and
power asymmetries generated by colonialism. The local knowledge and
International Members’ Breakfast religions of indigenous peoples are often expropriated to become the
raw material for deterritorialized and heavily commodified religious
Sunday, 7:30 am–8:45 am movements that circulate through global electronic media. At the
Hyatt Regency, Centennial I same time, ancestral lands and livelihoods of indigenous peoples are
Tat-siong Benny Liew, Pacific School of Religion, Presiding threatened by rapid economic change and ecological degradation.
Globalization’s “time-space compression” has also put various peoples
Breakfast, including a question and answer session, for international in each other’s backyards, challenging the colonial denial of coevalness.
members of the AAR. Thus, indigenous actors can now have access to global media to build
transnational networks of resistance and solidarity on the basis of
Sunday, 9:00 am–11:30 am emerging pan-indigenous identities.
Panelists on this forum will explore critically the genealogy of and
contradictions within the category of “indigeneity,” as well as religion’s
A31-100 H changing role in the articulation and (de)construction of this category.
Special Topics Forum Panelists:
Marriott Marquis, A704 Frank Brennan, Australian Catholic University
Grace Ji-Sun Kim, Moravian Theological Seminary, Presiding Roger Maaka, Eastern Institute of Technology
Theme: The Past, Present, and Future of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in Mary MacDonald, Le Moyne College
the Profession Lynda Newland, University of the South Pacific
Sponsored by the Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in the Jace Weaver, University of Georgia
Profession Committee Andrea Smith, University of California, Riverside
The session is a discussion concerning the state of religion scholars
of color within the AAR. Leading the discussion are the past chairs
of the Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in the Profession
Committee (REM). The panelists will discuss the difficulties scholars
A31-102 H
of color have historically faced and the problems they presently must Special Topics Forum
overcome. In addition, they will explore the challenges and obstacles Marriott Marquis, M303
that the future may bring.
Stephanie McAllister, Brookline High School, Brookline, MA,
Panelists: Presiding
Dwight Hopkins, University of Chicago Theme: AAR Guidelines for Teaching about Religion in K–12 Public
Peter Paris, Princeton Theological Seminary Schools in the United States: Responses from Teachers and Teacher
SUNday, October 31
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
84 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
John Senior, Emory University
A31-103 S Tradition Reconsidered: Political Theology, Narrative, and the
Formation of Political Identities
Arts, Literature, and Religion Section
Robert F. Shedinger, Luther College
Marriott Marquis, M103-104 Resisting Religionization: The Academic Study of Religion and Islamic
Eric Ziolkowski, Lafayette College, Presiding Revivalism in America
Theme: Protestant Aesthetics Business Meeting:
Glenn Whitehouse, Florida Gulf Coast University Andrew Murphy, Rutgers University, Presiding
Reforming the Literary God: Paul Ricoeur’s Protestant Aesthetics
Gisela Kreglinger, Samford University
The Protestant Imagination: Novalis’s Hymns to the Night as an A31-106 S
Expression of the Poet as Priest
Religion and the Social Sciences Section
David H. Perkins, Vanderbilt University Marriott Marquis, M301
Hell Yeah! Pairing Southern Religion and Punk/Postmodern Aesthetics
in the Construction of Southern Gothic Music Carol B. Duncan, Wilfrid Laurier University, Presiding
Regina L. Walton, Boston University Theme: Religion and Secularization
“Contrary Reports”: The Beauty of Holiness and Contemptus Mundi Jennifer Veninga, Graduate Theological Union
at Little Gidding Imagining Theology in a Secular Age: Social Imagination as
Business Meeting: Methodology
Diane Apostolos-Cappadona, Georgetown University, and Eric Jeffrey Guhin, Yale University
Ziolkowski, Lafayette College, Presiding The Sources of Religion and the Future of Secularism: What the
Founders Really Said and Why It Matters
George Gonzalez, Harvard University
A31-104 C Spiritual Discipline and the New Metaphors of Contemporary Business
Management: A Methodological Proposal for Engaging Late Capitalist
Philosophy of Religion Section and the Society of Christian Cosmologies
Philosophers Business Meeting:
Marriott Marquis, L401-402 Carol B. Duncan, Wilfrid Laurier University, Presiding
Andrew Chignell, Cornell University, Presiding
Theme: Analytic Theology: Authors, Editors, and Critics
Panelists: A31-107 M
Ray Paul Bitar, Claremont Graduate University Study of Islam Section and Contemporary Islam Group
Jesse Covenhoven, Villanova University Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom B
SUNday, October 31
William Wood, University of Oxford Simon Wood, University of Nebraska, Presiding
Responding: Theme: Islam and Ecology: A Reassessment Ten Years after the Earth
Sarah Coakley, University of Cambridge Charter
Michael Rea, University of Notre Dame David L. Johnston, University of Pennsylvania
Intra-Muslim Debates about Ecology: Is Shari’a Still Relevant?
Oliver Crisp, University of Bristol
Anna M. Gade, University of Wisconsin
Trends in “Green Islam” in Indonesia
A31-105 S F Ahmed Afzaal, Concordia College
Sacred Stewardship in a Reenchanted World? Lynn White Jr., Max
Religion and Politics Section Weber, and Muhammad Iqbal
Marriott Marquis, A706 Eleanor Finnegan, University of Florida
Marion Maddox, Macquarie University, Presiding Cultivating Nature on American-Muslim Farms: A Study of New
Theme: Religion and Politics in Theory and Practice Medinah, the Bawa Muhaiyaddeen Fellowship Farm, and the
Dayempur Farm
Bronwyn Roantree, Harvard University
The Political Self and the Religious Self: Negotiating Multiple Sarra Tlili, University of Florida
Identities in Contemporary Europe The Qur’anic Concept of “Animal” and Its Impact on the Status on
Nonhuman Animals
Lucia Faltin, Cambridge Theological Federation
Religious Identity and the Development of Secular Constitutionalism F. Canguzel Zulfikar, University of North Carolina
in Pluralistic Democratic Culture The Ecospiritual Ethics of Samiha Ayverdi
David Buckley, Georgetown University Responding:
Secular Evolution: Understanding Democratic Change in State- Jonathan E. Brockopp, Pennsylvania State University
Religion Relations
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 85
Program Sessions
A31-109 A31-112 S
Theology and Religious Reflection Section Asian North American Religion, Culture, and Society Group
Hyatt Regency, Hanover FG Marriott Marquis, A708
Susan Abraham, Harvard University, Presiding Mimi Khúc, University of California, Santa Barbara, Presiding
Theme: Polydoxy: Theologies of the Manifold Theme: Discipline, Depth, and Agency of Silence
Panelists: Panelists:
Catherine Keller, Drew University Wilburn Hansen, San Diego State University
Mayra Rivera, Harvard University Patrick S. Cheng, Union Theological Seminary
Laurel Schneider, Chicago Theological Seminary Rachel Bundang, Marymount School
John Thatamanil, Vanderbilt University Brett Esaki, University of California, Santa Barbara
SUNday, October 31
Responding:
Jane Naomi Iwamura, University of Southern California
A31-110 Business Meeting:
Women and Religion Section Nami Kim, Spelman College, and Michael Masatsugu, Towson
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom C University, Presiding
Emily Culpepper, University of Redlands, Presiding
Theme: Celebrating and Cerebrating Mary Daly (1928–2010)
Panelists:
Mary E. Hunt, Women’s Alliance for Theology, Ethics, and Ritual
Zayn Kassam, Pomona College
Xochitl Alvizo, Boston University
Laura S. Levitt, Temple University
Judith Plaskow, Manhattan College
Carol J. Adams, Dallas, TX
Traci C. West, Drew University
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
86 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-113 J A31-116 S
Bioethics and Religion Group and Science, Technology, and Comparative Theology Group and Mysticism Group
Religion Group Marriott Marquis, A602
Marriott Marquis, L506 June McDaniel, College of Charleston, Presiding
Theme: Making Good: Synthetic Biology and the Creation of the World Theme: Divine Union or Divine Relation? Mystical Marriage as a Third
Panelists: Way beyond Mutuality and Elisio Alteritatis
Laurie Zoloth, Northwestern University Panelists:
Michael Jewett, Northwestern University Francis X. Clooney, Harvard University
Cristina Traina, Northwestern University Wendy Farley, Emory University
Paul Wolpe, Emory University Kurt Anders Richardson, McMaster University
Joshua Leonard, Northwestern University Paul Collins, University of Chichester
Leor Weinberger, University of California, San Diego Responding:
Thomas Cattoi, Graduate Theological Union
Business Meeting:
A31-114
Thomas Cattoi, Graduate Theological Union, Presiding
Bonhoeffer: Theology and Social Analysis Group and
Kierkegaard, Religion, and Culture Group
Marriott Marquis, M106-107
A31-117 S
Geffrey B. Kelly, LaSalle University, Presiding Cultural History of the Study of Religion Group
Theme: Bonhoeffer’s Relation to Kierkegaard Hyatt Regency, Hanover D
Matthew David Kirkpatrick, University of Oxford Angela Zito, New York University, Presiding
Nachlass Dietrich Bonhoeffer: A Guide to Understanding the Influence Theme: “Religion” in the Making: Social, National, and Global
of Søren Kierkegaard on Dietrich Bonhoeffer Formations
Brian Gregor, Boston College J. Barton Scott, Montana State University
On the Sociality of Revelation: A Dialogue Between Kierkegaard and Priestly Nation: Religion, Empire, and Quaker Dissent
Bonhoeffer
Richard J. Callahan, University of Missouri
Jonathan Malesic, King’s College, PA Globalization, Religion, and the Work of the Sea
Secrecy or Martyrdom: The Options for Bourgeois Discipleship in
Kierkegaard and Bonhoeffer Rupa Viswanath, University of Pennsylvania
Religion, Rights, and the Social: Pariahs in Colonial South India
Philip G. Ziegler, University of Aberdeen
SUNday, October 31
Promeity in the Christologies of Bonhoeffer and Kierkegaard Richard Amesbury, Claremont School of Theology
Interreligious Declarations of Human Rights: Grounding Rights or
Constructing “Religion”?
A31-115 S Responding:
Paul Christopher Johnson, University of Michigan
Comparative Studies in Hinduisms and Judaisms Group
Business Meeting:
Marriott Marquis, M105
Tomoko Masuzawa, University of Michigan, and Randall Styers,
Tamar C. Reich, Indiana University of Pennsylvania, Presiding University of North Carolina, Presiding
Theme: Women’s Leadership: Embodied Dialogue Across Religions
Jennifer Thompson, Emory University
“He Wouldn’t Know Anything”: Christian Women’s Leadership in
Jewish Communities
Angela Yarber, Graduate Theological Union
Ritual and Subversion: Bharatanatyam and Israeli Folk Dance
Empowering Women’s Leadership in Hinduism and Judaism
Sherry Fohr, Converse College
Ideal Women and Sati-Narratives in Hinduism and Jainism
Yudit K. Greenberg, Rollins College
The HindJew in the Guru: Hybridity in Female Spiritual Leadership
Responding:
Amy L. Allocco, Elon University
Business Meeting:
Yudit K. Greenberg, Rollins College, Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 87
Program Sessions
Responding:
Theme: “The Karma of Words Remains”: A Tribute to William R.
LaFleur (1936–2010) Suzanne J. Crawford O’Brien, Pacific Lutheran University
Panelists: Business Meeting:
Jacqueline Stone, Princeton University Kenneth Mello, Southwestern University, Presiding
Stephen Miller, University of Massachusetts
Linda Chance, University of Pennsylvania
Richard A. Gardner, Sophia University
Responding:
Gary L. Ebersole, University of Missouri, Kansas City
Business Meeting:
Barbara Ambros, University of North Carolina, and James L. Ford,
Wake Forest University, Presiding
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
88 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-122 A31-125 S
Platonism and Neoplatonism Group Religion, Film, and Visual Culture Group
Marriott Marquis, L404 Marriott Marquis, M304
Douglas Hedley, University of Cambridge, Presiding Tony Michael, York University, Presiding
Theme: Henology in Plotinus and Origen Theme: Modes of Storytelling: New Currents in Film and Visual Culture
Daniel Moseson, Syracuse University Michael Pittman, Albany College of Pharmacy and Health
Self, Language, and Apophasis in Plotinus and Merleau-Ponty Sciences
Kathleen Gibbons, University of Toronto Majid Majidi’s The Color of Paradise: Reflections of Rumi and
Hierarchy before Henadology in Origen of Alexandria Reflections on Majidi in the Classroom
Kevin Corrigan, Emory University Bradley L. Herling, Marymount Manhattan College
The Meaning of “One”: Plurality and Unity in Plotinus Religious Extremity in Michael Haneke’s The White Ribbon
Daniel Regnier, University of Saskatchewan Kevin Cryderman, Emory University
One and the Possibility of Many in Greek and Indian Philosophy: Songs of the Living Dead: The Jesus Archetype and the Paralysis of
Plotinus and Ramanuja Historical Imagination in Roy Andersson’s Songs from the Second
Floor
J. Ryan Parker, Graduate Theological Union
A31-123 Choice Matters: The Evolution of Video Games as Locations for Ethical
and Theological Reflection
Qur’an Group Rachel Wagner, Ithaca College
Marriott Marquis, A705 In Other Worlds: Immersive Technology and the Hunger for the Real
Martin Nguyen, Fairfield University, Presiding Business Meeting:
Theme: And Among His Signs…Is the Diversity of Tongues and Colors: John Lyden, Grand View University, Presiding
Non-Arabic Qur’anic Engagement
Homayra Ziad, Trinity College
The Qur’an Commentaries of ‘Abd al-Majid Daryabadi (1892–1977) A31-126
Travis Zadeh, Haverford College Roman Catholic Studies Group
“Save in the Language of His Own People”: Isfarā’īnī’s Tāj al-tarājim
and the Rise of Persian Commentaries of the Qur’an Marriott Marquis, A701
Nargis Virani, The New School Theme: Conversations with the Vatican
Echoes of the Qur’an in Isma’ili Ginan Literature Marian Ronan, New York Theological Seminary
Sister Trouble: A Butlerian Reading of Women’s Religious Life in
Kristian Petersen, University of Washington Light of the Vatican Visitations/Investigation of United States Catholic
The Treasure of the Heavenly Scripture Engaging the Qur’an in China
SUNday, October 31
Sisters, 2009–2011
Responding: Sheila McCarthy, University of Notre Dame
Bruce B. Lawrence, Duke University Rethinking Centrality and Marginality: Bell Hooks and John Paul II
on Capitalism, Work, and Family
Gerard Jacobitz, Saint Joseph’s University
A31-124 Benedict XVI’s Mission to the Anglicans in Light of the Vatican’s
Religion and Disability Studies Group Homosexual Double Bind
Hyatt Regency, Hanover E Kyle Bell, Franciscan University, Steubenville
The SSPX and the Holy See: Tradition Under Attack
Molly Haslam, Nashville, TN, Presiding
Theme: Remembering Nancy Eiesland: Disability Perspectives on
Theology and the Academy
Jason Hays, Brite Divinity School
Queering Eiesland’s Christ
Troy Mack, Drew University
Healing in the Triune God: Understanding Eiesland’s Disabled God as
Trinity, for the Liberation of the Traumatized
Courtney Wilder, Midland Lutheran College
On Christ and Healing: Eiesland, Tillich, and Disability Theology
Devorah Greenstein, Yale University
It’s in Our Hands: The Academy’s Crucial Role in Fostering Full
Participation of People with Disabilities in the Life of the Christian
Church
Responding:
Sharon Betcher, Vancouver School of Theology
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 89
Program Sessions
A31-128 S J C A31-130 G S
Tibetan and Himalayan Religions Group Christian Zionism in Comparative Perspective Seminar
Marriott Marquis, A707
Marriott Marquis, L503
Andrew Quintman, Yale University, Presiding
Goran Gunner, Church of Sweden, Presiding
Theme: “Scientific Buddhism” among Tibetans and their Western
Theme: Setting the Stage for Christian Zionism Studies
Interlocutors: Reflections on Donald Lopez’s Buddhism and Science
(University of Chicago Press, 2008) William Girard, University of California, Santa Cruz
Christian Zionism in Copán Ruinas, Honduras
Paul G. Hackett, Columbia University
Patterns of Engagement: From “Hinduism and Science” to “Buddhism Gershon Greenberg, American University
SUNday, October 31
and Science” Christian and Jewish Religious Zionism in the Shadow of the
Holocaust
Holly Gayley, University of Colorado
Science versus Superstition: Repositioning Tibetan Buddhism in the Matt Westbrook, Drew University
People’s Republic of China Israel as “Lieu de Memoire”: Christian Zionism as an Example of
Modern Structural Changes in the Mode of Believing
Douglas S. Duckworth, East Tennessee State University
Tsültrim Lodrö on Philosophy, Science, and Buddhism Rosemary Ruether, Claremont Graduate University
Christian Zionism in Mainline Churches
David McMahan, Franklin and Marshall College
Science, Meditation, and Multiple Modernities: Tibetan Buddhism in Faydra Shapiro, Wilfrid Laurier University
Three Keys Christian Zionism: Navigating the Jewish–Christian Border
Responding: Andrew Crome, University of Manchester
Lobsang Tenzin Negi, Emory University The Historical Approach in the Study of Christian Zionism
Business Meeting: Responding:
Frances Garrett, University of Toronto, and Andrew Quintman, Robert O. Smith, Baylor University
Yale University, Presiding Business Meeting:
Robert O. Smith, Baylor University, Presiding
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
90 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-131 S M A31-133 S
Religion, Food, and Eating Seminar Body and Religion Consultation
Marriott Marquis, L507 Marriott Marquis, M102
Nora L. Rubel, University of Rochester, Presiding Richard M. Carp, Appalachian State University, Presiding
Theme: Religion, Food, and Eating in North America Theme: Among Plants, Demons, and Robots: Defining and Shaping
Amanda Baugh, Northwestern University (Human) Bodies
When the Lord Brings You into the Land: Food and Environmentalism Margaret Withgott, Stanford University
in an African American Church Is a Plant a Body? Traditional and Biological Views of Non-animal
Kate Holbrook, Boston University Agency
Good to Eat in the Nation of Islam Robyn Neville, Emory University
Jeremy Rapport, College of Wooster Tracking the “Useful Adversary”: The Role of Demons in the Eastern
“Join Us! Come, Eat!” Vegetarianism in the Formative Period of the Christian Contemplative Tradition
Seventh-day Adventists and the Unity School of Christianity Michal Raucher, Northwestern University
Rudy V. Busto, University of California, Santa Barbara Negotiating Autonomy and Divine Intervention: The Embodied
Consuming Transgressions: The American Taste for (Some) Asian Experiences of Pregnant Haredi Women in Jerusalem
Cuisines and Asian Religions Beverley Foulks, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Rachel Gross, Princeton University Living Karma: Ethicized Bodies in Chinese Buddhism
Draydel Salad: The Serious Business of Jewish Food and Fun in Alexander Darius Ornella, Graz University
Postwar America Utopia as Dystopia? Reflections on Visions of the Natural Human Body
Elizabeth Perez, University of California, Berkeley, and Dartmouth Business Meeting:
College Richard M. Carp, Appalachian State University, and Rebecca
Crystallizing Subjectivities in the African Diaspora: Sugar and the Sachs Norris, Merrimack College, Presiding
Gods of Afro-Cuban Santería
Business Meeting:
Benjamin Zeller, Brevard College, Presiding A31-134 G S
International Development and Religion Consultation
A31-132 G S Marriott Marquis, M101
Nathan R. B. Loewen, McGill University, Presiding
African Diaspora Religions Consultation
Theme: Religious Dimensions of International Development
Marriott Marquis, L504
David P. King, Emory University
Maha Marouan, University of Alabama, Presiding World Vision: Religious Identity in the Discourse and Practice of
SUNday, October 31
Theme: Claiming Africa, Claiming the Americas: Religion and Identity in Development
the Diaspora John Rees, University of Notre Dame, Australia
Robert R. Henry, Florida State University The Dynamics of Religion at the World Bank
Obeah in Text and Context Cynthia Holder Rich, Western Theological Seminary
Kimberly Eberhardt Casteline, University of Colorado To Develop, or Not, or To Shift the Paradigm: A Case Study from
Media and Religion in the Lives of Ghanaian Pentecostals in Diaspora Madagascar
Adam Clark, Xavier University Almas Zakiuddin, University of British Columbia
Maat: A Neo-African Religion “Modernising” Islam: Gender, Politics, and International Development
Elonda Clay, Lutheran School of Theology, Chicago in Bangladesh
The Curious Case of Oprah the Zulu: DNA Ancestry, Celebrity Business Meeting:
Narratives of Genetic Return, and Motherland Utopias Nathan R. B. Loewen, McGill University, and Scott Kline,
Responding: University of Waterloo, Presiding
Jacob Olupona, Harvard University
Business Meeting:
Maha Marouan, University of Alabama, Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 91
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
92 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-137 A31-139 H
Plenary Address Teaching Religion Section and the Wabash Center for
Sunday, 11:45 am–12:45 pm Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion
Hyatt Regency, Centennial II-IV Sunday, 11:45 am–12:45 pm
Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara, Presiding Hyatt Regency, Dunwoody
Theme: Jonathan Z. Smith—Reading Religion: A Life in Paul Myhre, Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology
Scholarship and Religion, Presiding
Jonathan Z. Smith is a historian of religion Theme: Teaching Roundtable Discussions
whose research has focused on such wide-ranging John P. Falcone, Boston College
subjects as ritual theory, Hellenistic religions, Image Theater as an Emotional “Container” in Critical Classroom
nineteenth-century Maori cults, and the notorious Practice
events of Jonestown, Guyana. Smith graduated Velma Love, Florida A&M University
Jonathan Z. Smith
with a PhD in the history of religions from Autoethnography, Religious Autobiography, and the Scholarship of
Yale University in 1969; with a dissertation on Teaching and Learning
anthropological thought, focused on James Frazer’s The Golden
Bough and the method that Frazer used in the comparison Dianne L. Oliver, University of Evansville
of different religions. Since then much of Smith’s work has Faith, Truth and Advocacy in the Classroom
focused on the problem of comparison and how best to Florian Pohl, Emory University
compare data taken from societies that are very different from Critical Thinking and Inquiry in the Study of Religion
one another. After holding positions at Dartmouth College
and the University of California, Santa Barbara, Smith began Julius Bailey, University of Redlands
teaching at the University of Chicago, where he served as Dean Confronting Confusion: The Perils and Prospects of Introducing New
of the College from 1977–1982 and was appointed Robert O. Assignments
Anderson Distinguished Service Professor of the Humanities. Ellen Ott Marshall, Emory University, and Michael Turner,
Smith has written on pedagogy and the reform of undergraduate University of Chicago
education in the United States. His recent research has focused Preparing Students for the Assigments We Require
on Western theories of difference ranging from contemporary
Laura Stivers, Pfeiffer University
accounts of alien abduction to Greek and Roman ideas about the
Teaching with Case Studies
way that climate shapes human character.
Panelists: Arthur Sutherland, Loyola University, Maryland
The Second Thoughts Presentation as a Learning Activity in
Jonathan Z. Smith, University of Chicago Undergraduate Religion and Theology Courses
A31-138 L H M31-100 H
SUNday, October 31
Special Topics Forum Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies
Sunday, 11:45 am–12:45 pm
Sunday, 11:45 am–12:45 pm
Hyatt Regency, Baker
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom C
Theme: Consultation on Teaching and Research Resources
Theme: SWP, REM, and LGBTIQ Women’s Mentoring Lunch
Sponsored by the Status of Women in the Profession Committee, the
Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in the Profession Committee,
and the Status of LGBTIQ Persons in the Profession Task Force
M31-102 C
We invite women who are graduate students and new scholars to a Christian Theological Research Fellowship
luncheon with over thirty womanist and feminist midcareer and senior Sunday, 12:00 pm–1:00 pm
scholars. Women will have the opportunity to mentor and be mentored
in a context where every question is valued. The lunch costs $10 per Hyatt Regency, University
person; sorry, no refunds. Registration is limited to 100. Register at Theme: A Discussion of Beth Felker-Jones’ New Book Touched by a
www.aarweb.org/Jump/WomensMentoring. Vampire: Discovering the Hidden Messages in the Twilight Saga
Panelists: (Multnomah Books, 2009)
Ellen T. Armour, Vanderbilt University This session will welcome Beth Felker-Jones to interact with those in
Julie Byrne, Hofstra University attendance on her new book, Touched by a Vampire. Felker-Jones notes
Monica A. Coleman, Claremont School of Theology that the Twilight saga isn’t just another fantasy — it teaches girls about
Stacey M. Floyd-Thomas, Vanderbilt University love, sex, and purpose. With 48 million copies in print and a succession
Melanie L. Harris, Texas Christian University of upcoming blockbuster films, Felker-Jones ask the important
Mary E. Hunt, Women’s Alliance for Theology, Ethics, and Ritual questions about Twilight: Can vampires teach us about God’s plan for
Anne Joh, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary love? And, can the story’s redemptive qualities outshine its darkness?
Namsoon Kang, Brite Divinity School
Karen Pechilis, Drew University
Judith Plaskow, Manhattan College
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 93
Program Sessions
A31-201 B H A31-203 O
SUNday, October 31
Wildcard Session
Special Topics Forum
Hyatt Regency, Hanover C
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom A
Néstor Medina, Seminario Evangélico de Teología, Matanzas, Cuba,
Tina Pippin, Agnes Scott College, and Joseph A. Favazza, Stonehill Presiding
College, Presiding
Theme: Enrique Dussel’s Transmodernity Philosophical Project and
Theme: Conversation with Bobbi Patterson, 2010 Excellence in Teaching Theology
Award Winner
Inspired by the work of Enrique Dussel on transmodernity and his
Sponsored by the Teaching and Learning Committee and proposal of a global philosophical project that seeks to transcend
the Teaching Religion Section European or North American modernity and engage in dialogue with
The Teaching and Learning Committee is pleased to what Dussel calls “discarded, devalued, and judged useless among
announce Barbara (Bobbi) Patterson is the recipient of the global cultures, including colonized or peripheral philosophies,” and by
2010 Excellence in Teaching Award. Patterson, a senior the works of other authors from the working group on globalization,
lecturer in the department of religion at Emory University, modernity/coloniality, and the geopolitics of knowledge, the panel will
Bobbi Patterson will make remarks and engage questions and answers from examine some of the new voices in theology that have emerged from
the audience. similar cultural contexts and their ignored potential as other ecologies
Panelists: of knowledge that could contribute to epistemic diversity and to the
development of other ways of doing theology.
Bobbi Patterson, Emory University
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
94 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Engaging the work of Lee Cormie, who has been a leading voice
over the past few decades in articulating the theological significance A31-206
of the new voices from the cultural margins, the panelists will give
presentations on a variety of concrete historical situations and Christian Systematic Theology Section
explore the potential of some emerging intercultural theologies as Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom C
other possible ways of doing theology that respond to the epistemic
challenges of pluralism in today’s world. John Thiel, Fairfield University, Presiding
Panelists: Theme: Revelation, Experience, and Interpretation: Schillebeeckx
Revisited
Alison Hari Singh, University of Toronto
Panelists:
Grace Ji-Sun Kim, Moravian Theological Seminary
Anthony J. Godzieba, Villanova University
Michel Andraos, Catholic Theological Union
Kevin Hart, University of Virginia
Responding:
Lieven Boeve, Katholieke Universiteit, Leuven
Lee Cormie, Saint Michael’s College
A31-207
A31-204 O Comparative Studies in Religion Section
Wildcard Session
Marriott Marquis, L503
Marriott Marquis, A704
Gustavo Benavides, Villanova University, Presiding
Katie Day, Lutheran Theological Seminary, Philadelphia, Presiding
Theme: Politics of Faith in Asia: Local and Global Perspectives of
Theme: Engaging Global Issues as Public Theologians Christianity in Asia
The Global Network for Public Theology is a network of twenty- William Silcott, Wichita State University
four centers of public theology based in universities and theological Transformations of a Religious Nation in a Global World: Evangelism
schools on seven continents formed in 2007. In its short history it has and National Identity in South Korea
developed a website, a journal, and is planning its second international
meeting. The purpose of the network is to foster international Edwin Zehner, Saint Lawrence University
communication and collaboration on global issues, particularly The Politics of Being Successful: Conflicts and Discourses of the Local
economic and ecological concerns. The network desires to create an and the Translocal in Two Thai Religious Movements
additional forum from a variety of disciplines to connect around these Jonathan Miles-Watson, Tallinn University
shared interests among an expanded community of scholars on global The Evangelical Challenge to the Processes of Postcolonial Christian
issues that deserve our best theological thinking and leadership. Landscapes in Shimla, India
Panelists: Responding:
J. Jayakiran Sebastian, Lutheran Theological Seminary, Simon Michael Coleman, University of Sussex
Philadelphia
William Storrar, Center of Theological Inquiry
SUNday, October 31
David Hadley Jensen, Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary A31-208
Sebastian Kim, York Saint John University Ethics Section
Eduardus Van der Borght, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam Hyatt Regency, Hanover FG
Marvin M. Ellison, Bangor Theological Seminary, Presiding
A31-205 Theme: Sexuality and Spirituality Revisited
Panelists:
Buddhism Section and Japanese Religions Group
Miguel A. De La Torre, Iliff School of Theology
Marriott Marquis, M103-104
Patrick S. Cheng, Union Theological Seminary, New York
Galen Amstutz, Acton, MA, Presiding
Kelly Brown Douglas, Goucher College
Theme: Workshop: Defining Shin Buddhist Modernity
Carter Heyward, Episcopal Divinity School
Panelists:
Responding:
Melissa Anne-Marie Curley, University of Iowa
Ellen T. Armour, Vanderbilt University
Daniel Friedrich, McMaster University
Dennis W. Wiley, Covenant Baptist Church
Orion Klautau, Tohoku University
Jessica Main, University of British Columbia
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 95
Program Sessions
God’s Emotional Commands and Their Rational Tale? Divine Marriott Marquis, M101
Command Theory, Neuroscience, and the Space between Reason and Robin Rinehart, Lafayette College, Presiding
Emotion
Theme: Rethinking Punjabi Religion: Vernacularization, Sakhi Sarwar,
Business Meeting: and Sikh Mysticism
Joseph Prabhu, California State University, Los Angeles, and Harpreet Singh, Harvard University
University of Chicago, and Ludger Viefhues, LeMoyne College, Religious Identities and the Vernacularization of the Panjab
Presiding
Caroline Sawyer, State University of New York, Old Westbury
The “Man on the Horse” and the Enchanted Universe of Religious Life
in Indian Punjab
Balbinder Bhogal, Hofstra University
The Animal Sublime: Rethinking the Sikh Mystical Body
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
96 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-213 A31-216
Study of Islam Section Afro-American Religious History Group
Marriott Marquis, A703 Marriott Marquis, A702
Kecia Ali, Boston University, Presiding James Logan, Earlham College, Presiding
Theme: Educating Muslims Theme: African-American and Latino/a Mennonites: Marginal No More
Brannon Ingram, University of North Carolina Tobin Miller Shearer, University of Montana
Islam 101 for Muslims: Fashioning Publics in Three Muslim “Primers” More than Fresh Air: African-American Children’s Influence on
from South Asia Mennonite Religious Practice, 1950–1979
Mashal Saif, Duke University Regina Shands Stoltzfus, Chicago Theological Seminary
Pedagogical Politics and Madrasas in British India: Manazir Ahsan Black, Female, and Mennonite: Navigating Cultural, Political, and
Gilani’s Educational Reform Proposal Religious Identity
Margaret Rausch, Lawrence, KS Felipe Hinojosa, Texas A&M University
Islamic Reform, Moroccan Berber Women’s Rituals, and the Cultivation “Jesus Christ Made Me a Macho!”: Latino/a Identity and Activism
of Moral Selfhood: Language, Body, and Affect within the Mennonite Church, 1968–1974
Responding: Responding:
Ebrahim E. I. Moosa, Duke University Curtis Evans, University of Chicago
A31-214 A31-217
Study of Judaism Section Black Theology Group and Religion, Holocaust, and
Marriott Marquis, M105 Genocide Group
Sarah Imhoff, University of Chicago, Presiding Marriott Marquis, L401-402
Theme: Judaism in Critical Perspective Rebecca Alpert, Temple University, Presiding
Cody Bahir, California Institute of Integral Studies Theme: Exodus in America: Religion, Memory, and the Signification of
Yin Yang and the Tree of Life: A Comparison of Kabbalistic and Suffering for Black Christians and White Jews in America
Chinese Scriptural Interpretation Panelists:
Pinchas Giller, American Jewish University W. David Nelson, Brite Divinity School
“The Secret of the Act”: The Mystique of Religious Practice for a Minor Stacey M. Floyd-Thomas, Vanderbilt University
Tzaddik of the Interwar Period
Juan Floyd-Thomas, Vanderbilt University
Natalie C. Polzer, University of Louisville
“A System at War With Itself ”: An Evaluation of Mary Douglas’s Responding:
SUNday, October 31
(1924–2007) Contribution to Contemporary Scholarship on Ritual Richard Sarason, Hebrew Union College
Purity and Impurity
A31-215
A31-218 M
Buddhist Critical-Constructive Reflection Group and
African Religions Group Comparative Religious Ethics Group
Marriott Marquis, M102 Hyatt Regency, Hanover E
Teresia Mbari Hinga, Santa Clara University, Presiding Jonathan Schofer, Harvard University, Presiding
Theme: Blurred Boundaries in Scholarship and Lived Religious Theme: Nondualist Ecology: Perspectives on the Buddhist
Experience in Africa: Insider/Outsider, Traditional/Christian, Environmentalism of David Loy
Ethnography/Theology David Loy, Xavier University
David Ngong, Baylor University Healing Ecology: A Buddhist Perspective on the Ecocrisis
Rethinking the Other in Contemporary African Christian Theology Responding:
Elijah Obinna, University of Edinburgh Grace Kao, Claremont School of Theology
Negotiating Boundaries: Experience-based Reflections on the Insider/
Outsider Dilemma in the Study of Ogo Society, Amasiri, Nigeria Stephanie Kaza, University of Vermont
Scott Edmondson, University of Michigan
Powers Against Powers: Ethnography, Pentecostalism, and Anti-
Witchcraft Consultations in Ghana
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 97
Program Sessions
Sunday, 1:00 pm–2:30 pm Etin Anwar, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
How Feminist is Islamic Feminism in Indonesia? A Genealogical
Inquiry
A31-219 Business Meeting:
Christine E. Gudorf, Florida International University, and Rita M.
Comparative Theology Group and Mysticism Group Gross, University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, A602
Janet Bregar, California State University, Fullerton, Presiding
Theme: What has Bhakti to Do with Mysticism? Embodiment, Aesthetics,
A31-222 S
and Models of Realization Lesbian-Feminist Issues and Religion Group
Panelists: Marriott Marquis, A601
Barbara A. Holdrege, University of California, Santa Barbara Yvonne Zimmerman, Methodist Theological School in Ohio,
Michelle Voss Roberts, Rhodes College Presiding
Tracy Sayuki Tiemeier, Loyola Marymount University Theme: Bedazzling Diversity: Mary Daly’s Transformative Influence on
Charlotte Radler, Loyola Marymount University Lesbian, Gay, and Feminist Identities
Responding: Panelists:
Michael T. McLaughlin, Saint Leo University Tiffany Steinwert, Boston University
Jennifer Rycenga, San Jose State University
Dirk von der Horst, Claremont Graduate University
A31-220 Sheila Briggs, University of Southern California
Eastern Orthodox Studies Group Robyn Henderson-Espinoza, Iliff School of Theology and
Hyatt Regency, Hanover D University of Denver
Thomas Cattoi, Graduate Theological Union, Presiding Business Meeting:
Theme: Soteriological Models in the East and in the West Yvonne Zimmerman, Methodist Theological School, Ohio,
Presiding
Valerie Karras, Southern Methodist University
Irenaeus and Athanasius: “Atonement” Soteriologies?
Daniel J. Lattier, Duquesne University
A Ground of Disunion: The Absence of Epektasis in Western Soteriology
and Eschatology COFFEE BREAK
Kyle David Bennett, Fuller Theological Seminary
Cooperation and Participation: An Analysis of the Soteriological Models
of Vladimir Lossky and LeRon Shults Sponsored by the Israel Ministry
SUNday, October 31
of Tourism
A31-221 S
Feminist Theory and Religious Reflection Group
Marriott Marquis, A705
Visit the Israel Ministry of
Christine E. Gudorf, Florida International University, Presiding Tourism Booth (#706) for a
Theme: Emerging Feminist Theories in Third Wave, Global, and/or
Postcolonial Contexts viewing of a special video and
Christine Demian-Boulos, University of South Florida
(De)Constructing the Hindu Female Ascetic: Examining Perceptions of
the Body and Behavior in Constituting Gender
get a free cup of coffee. Coffee
Melissa Browning, Loyola University, Chicago
Women’s Agency and the African AIDS Pandemic: Reflections on
available while supplies last.
Gender and Sacrifice by HIV Positive Women in Tanzania
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
98 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-223 A31-226
Nineteenth-Century Theology Group Religions, Social Conflict, and Peace Group
Marriott Marquis, M106-107 Marriott Marquis, M301
Lori K. Pearson, Carleton College, Presiding Megan Shore, University of Western Ontario, Presiding
Theme: Theology and Race Theme: Whiteness, Ethnic Identity, and Other Religious Violence
Ben Sanders III, Iliff School of Theology David Krueger, Temple University
The Nature of “We”: On the Theological Ramifications of Interpreting Vikings Red with Blood and Dead: White Martyrdom and Frontier
Kant’s Anthropology Conquest
Terence Keel, Harvard University Elina Hankela, University of Helsinki
Permanent Racial Types and the Regularity of God/Nature in the Limits to Humanity: The Dynamics between Ethnicity and Ubuntu in
Thought of Josiah C. Nott a South African Inner-city Church
David Torbett, Marietta College James W. Perkinson, Ecumenical Theological Seminary
Race and Conservative Protestantism: Princeton Theological Seminary The Ghost in the Global Machine: Categorical Whiteness as “Religious”
and the Unity of the Human Species Violence
Jack Downey, Fordham University
A World of Pain: Self-mortification and the Cult of Martyrs in
A31-224 Militant Irish Nationalism
Psychology, Culture, and Religion Group
Marriott Marquis, A707 A31-227
Lallene Rector, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, Presiding
Wesleyan Studies Group
Theme: The Wounding and Survival of the Religious Self:
Psychoanalytical, Theological, and Intergenerational Perspectives on Marriott Marquis, A701
Trauma Jason Vickers, United Theological Seminary, Presiding
Lisa M. Cataldo, Fordham University Theme: The State of Wesleyan and Methodist Studies
I Know that My Redeemer Lives: A Relational Perspective on Trauma, Panelists:
Dissociation, and Faith
Reginald Broadnax, Hood Theological Seminary
Pamela Cooper-White, Columbia Theological Seminary
Denial, Victims, and Survivors: Post-traumatic Identity Formation Thomas E. Frank, Emory University
and Monuments in Heaven Douglas Koskela, Seattle Pacific University
Trina Armstrong, Claremont School of Theology Rebekah Miles, Southern Methodist University
Healing Generations of Self-hatred: The Intersection of Religion and Susie Stanley, Messiah College
SUNday, October 31
Post-trauma Psychology Towards the Healing of Intergenerational
Transmission of Self-hatred within African-American Family Systems
Robert F. Mullen, California Institute of Integral Studies
Stigmata, Anorexia, and Self-mutilation: Parallels in Pain and
A31-228 H
Imagining Childhood Studies and Religion Consultation and Religion
Education in Public Schools: International Perspectives
Consultation
A31-225 Marriott Marquis, L508
Religion and Popular Culture Group John Wall, Rutgers University, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, M304 Theme: Children’s Education and Religious Pluralism
Chad Seales, George Mason University, Presiding Jeffrey Guhin, Yale University
Did They Give Away Too Much? Religious Contestations of School
Theme: Religious Travel and Tourism: Imagined and Practiced Reform in Egypt and the United States
Robert Geraci, Manhattan College John Howell, University of Chicago
A Landscape of the Religious Imagination: Travel and Tourism in the Pupils of the Lost Cause: Confederate Textbooks and the Construction
Work of Neil Gaiman of Southernness
Ben Brazil, Emory University Kendall Busse, University of California, Santa Barbara, and
“Vagabonding” as Religious Practice: Ed Buryn’s Countercultural Colleen Windham–Hughes, University of California, Santa
Guidebooks, the New Age, and Spiritual Seeking Barbara
Hillary Kaell, Harvard University Children’s Experiences, Religious Literacy, and Character Formation: A
Souvenir Buying and Giving as Gendered Activity on Holy Land Collaboration with Marymount Academy
Pilgrimage
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 99
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
100 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Sunday, 3:00 pm–4:30 pm
A31-252 O
Wildcard Session
A31-250 L H K Marriott Marquis, M102
Special Topics Forum James W. Watts, Syracuse University, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, L401-402 Theme: Material Scripture
Whitney Bauman, Florida International University, Presiding A mass-produced Bible is both highly-designed and, to an ever-
Theme: If I Knew Then What I Know Now: Lessons from Academic Life increasing degree, a “designer” object. Published Bibles that reflect
from Those Who Have Gone Before the demographics of certain aspects of American culture and lifestyle
preferences are becoming prevalent in the marketplace, and this
Sponsored by the Graduate Student Committee and the Wabash
trend is not necessarily well addressed by the current methods of
Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion
biblical criticism. The panelists will offer varying perspectives on a
This panel will feature four scholars from different fields at various more “materialist” approach to the printed Bible. These explorations
stages in their academic careers. They will be sharing their “hindsight” of the physicality and genealogy of printed Bibles open up avenues
wisdom on issues such as teaching, completing the dissertation, of ideological and theological critique that stretch far back into
publishing, getting the first job, tenure-process issues, balancing family the history of modern versions of Scripture and into the history of
and academics, and much, much more! The panel will answer a set of Western print culture itself.
questions posed by the moderator, with plenty of time for questions
Panelists:
and discussion from the audience. A light reception will be provided
by the Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and James S. Bielo, Miami University
Religion. Timothy Beal, Case Western Reserve University
Panelists: David Dault, Christian Brothers University
Melissa Conroy, Muskingum University Responding:
Carol B. Duncan, Wilfrid Laurier University Dorina Miller Parmenter, Spalding University
Marion S. Grau, Graduate Theological Union
Oren Baruch Stier, Florida International University
A31-253 O
Wildcard Session
A31-251 B Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom D
Special Topics Forum Nevin Reda, University of Toronto, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom B Theme: The Last Frontier in Interreligious Dialogue: Dialogue with/
Sarah M. Pike, California State University, Chico, Presiding among Fundamentalists, Theory, and Practices
Theme: The Marty Forum: Elaine Pagels Fundamentalism is one of the most important forces in religion today,
SUNday, October 31
yet dialogue with and among fundamentalists remains arguably the
Sponsored by the Public Understanding of Religion Committee
last unexplored frontier in contemporary interreligious dialogue. Too
The recipient of the 2010 Martin E. Marty Public frequently academic interreligious dialogue excludes in practice and
Understanding of Religion Award is Elaine Pagels, theory persons from religious traditions labelled apologetic, missionary,
Harrington Spear Paine Foundation professor of religion conservative, traditionalist, antimodernist, and fundamentalist.
at Princeton University. Perhaps best known as the author Dialogue with and among fundamentalists (broadly defined), however,
of The Gnostic Gospels (Random House Publishing, 2004), is in fact going on, for the most part without significant contributions
The Origin of Satan (Vintage Books, 1996), and Adam, from scholars and religious leaders who advocate versions of the
Eve, and the Serpent (Vintage Books, 1989), she has pluralist paradigm. This panel discussion seeks to make the case for
Elaine Pagels
published widely on Gnosticism and early Christianity the expansion of the circle of dialogue to include fundamentalist
and continues to pursue research interests in late antiquity. Her most groups and individuals. Panelists will argue for an empathetic
recent books include Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas (Knopf appreciation of the fundamentalist phenomenon as a significant aspect
Doubleday Publishing Group, 2004; was on the New York Times of contemporary religious experience. Panelists will also examine
bestseller list) and Reading Judas: The Gospel of Judas and the Shaping of the need for and viability of dialogue between fundamentalists and
Christianity, coauthored with Karen L. King (Penguin Group, 2007). nonfundamentalists and among fundamentalists themselves, citing
The Marty Forum provides an informal setting in which Pagels will case studies of multifaith encounters where meaningful exchange has
talk about her work with Karen King, Hollis professor of divinity, already taken place.
Harvard University.
Panelists:
Panelists:
Susan K. Harrison, Emmanuel College
Elaine Pagels, Princeton University
Maura O’Neill, Chaffey College
Karen King, Harvard University
Peter A. Huff, Centenary College of Louisiana
Mohammad Ali Shomali, Imam Khomeini Education and
Research Institute
Responding:
Catherine Cornille, Boston College
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 101
Program Sessions
Sunday, 3:00 pm–4:30 pm Moreover, the contributors make a strong case that combining the two
affords a new perspective on some of the thorniest issues in religious
studies, such as the perennialist–constructivist debate over mysticism
A31-254 O and the challenge of religious pluralism.
Panelists:
Wildcard Session Jorge Ferrer, California Institute of Integral Studies
Marriott Marquis, M106-107 Jacob Sherman, Cambridge University
Louis Komjathy, University of San Diego, Presiding Beverley Lanzetta, University of New Mexico
Theme: Contemplative Studies: Problems and Prospects G. William Barnard, Southern Methodist University
In the context of a roundtable panel, members of the leadership Lee Irwin, College of Charleston
group of the proposed AAR Contemplative Studies Consultation will
Responding:
discuss the emerging interdisciplinary field of contemplative studies,
especially as it relates to the academic study of religion. Panelists will Jeffrey J. Kripal, Rice University
discuss contemplative practice and experience, considered inclusively
and comprehensively, as well as the application of contemplative
practice to academic life and university culture. Topics will include A31-256
comparative meditation, contemplative pedagogy, contemplative
practice, contemplative psychology, meditation and mysticism, social Christian Systematic Theology Section and the Karl Barth
applications of contemplative practice, typologies of contemplative Society of North America
practice, as well as neuroscience and meditation. Panelists will also Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom C
consider the contributions, limitations, and challenges of employing
a “contemplative approach” to teaching, research, and publication David Stubbs, Western Theological Seminary, Presiding
in religious studies. Short presentations will be followed by open Theme: Unveiling Barth on Revelation
conversation. Matthew Myer Boulton, Harvard University
Panelists: Conceiving God: Karl Barth, the Virgin Birth, and a Theological
Thomas Coburn, Naropa University Poetics of Scriptural Interpretation
Fran Grace, University of Redlands Kathryn L. Reinhard, Fordham University
Perpetuating Paradox: The Doctrine of Revelation in Maximus and
Anne Klein, Rice University Barth
Judith Simmer-Brown, Naropa University
Petra Turner Harvey, University of Virginia
Harold D. Roth, Brown University The Givenness of Faith: Karl Barth as Corrector of Marion’s Account of
Revelation
A31-255 C O
Wildcard Session A31-257 C
SUNday, October 31
Marriott Marquis, A707 Ethics Section and Kierkegaard, Religion, and Culture
Ann Gleig, Rice University, Presiding Group
Theme: The Participatory Turn: Studying Religion Beyond the Hyatt Regency, Hanover FG
Philosophies of Consciousness and Constructivism M. Jamie Ferreira, University of Virginia, Presiding
This panel revolves around Jorge Ferrer and Jacob Sherman’s recently Theme: Kierkegaard, Divine Authority, and Divine Command Morality
edited collection The Participatory Turn: Spirituality, Mysticism, Neil Arner, Yale University
Religious Studies (State University of New York Press, 2008). This The Intellectual Context for Evaluating Evans’s Attempt to Reconcile
text articulates an emerging academic ethos in the field of religious Moralities Based on Divine Command and Human Nature
studies that challenges the prevalent methodological dominance of
the cultural–linguistic paradigm. Ferrer and Sherman’s basic project R. Zachary Manis, Southwest Baptist University
is the integration of religious experience and practice with modern Kierkegaard and Evans on the Problem of Abraham
critical thinking and postmodern epistemological insights about the James E. Bruce, John Brown University
constructed nature of human knowledge. What emerges from this High-festival Conceptions in Kierkegaard’s Works of Love
both/and endeavor is a pluralistic vision of spirituality that accepts
the role of context and language in religious phenomena while Responding:
simultaneously recognizing the importance of nonlinguistic factors in C. Stephen Evans, Baylor University
shaping religious experiences and affirming the ontological value of
spiritual realities.
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
102 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-258 A31-261 S
North American Religions Section Theology and Religious Reflection Section
Hyatt Regency, Hanover AB Hyatt Regency, Hanover E
Gary M. Laderman, Emory University, Presiding Anne Joh, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary, Presiding
Theme: Keywords in the Study of North American Religion: Theme: The God Question
Anthropomorphism, Agency, and Vernacular Matthew Schunke, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
W. Clark Gilpin, University of Chicago Eagleton, Ditchkins, and Methodology in Religious Studies
Anthropomorphism: Human Connection to a Universal Society Omar Shaukat, University of Virginia
Elizabeth Jemison, Harvard University Islam and the God Debate: Islamist Violence as the Paradigm of
Writing Agency: Reconsidering Agency in the Study of American Religious Irrationality
Religion Wendy Wiseman, Ozyegin University, Istanbul
Rachel Lindsey, Princeton University Nietzsche’s Labyrinth: The Absence of God and Divinity in the Flesh
The Light of the World: Vernacular Photography and American Business Meeting:
Religion, 1839–1910
Susan Abraham, Harvard University, and Mayra Rivera, Harvard
University, Presiding
A31-259
Religion and the Social Sciences Section A31-262
Hyatt Regency, Hanover D Women and Religion Section
Ann B. McClenahan, Harvard University, Presiding Marriott Marquis, M301
Theme: Psychology, Religion, Clinical, and Field Work Su Yon Pak, Union Theological Seminary, Presiding
John Seitz, Fordham University Theme: Religious Difference and Interreligious Dialogue: Women’s
Fieldwork Methods and Psychoanalytic Practice: The Meanings and Experience and Analysis
Limits of Research Relationships
Emily A. Holmes, Christian Brothers University
Nichole Phillips, Vanderbilt University “ You Who Will Never Be Me Nor Mine”: Toward a Feminist
Sisters and Brothers, Struck By the Spirit: Shouting’s Role in Healthy Apophatic Theology of Religious Difference
Self-development
K. Christine Pae, Denison University
Feminist Interfaith Spiritual Activism Countering Transnationalized
Militarism: Empathetic Power of Suffering in Dorothee Soelle and
A31-260 H J Sister Chan Khong
Teaching Religion Section and Religions, Medicines, and Monica Schaap Pierce, Fordham University
SUNday, October 31
Healing Group From Brokenness to Planetary Wholeness: Emerging Themes in
Ecofeminist Interreligious Dialogue
Marriott Marquis, M101
Carolyn Medine, University of Georgia, Presiding Joke Lambelin, Katholieke Universiteit, Leuven
Mapping the Contact Zones in No Man’s Land: An Intersectional
Theme: Approaches to Teaching Comparative Religions, Medicines, and Framework for Muslim–Christian Dialogue?
Healing
Responding:
Kevin Boyd, University of Chicago
Death and Dying: Teaching Professionals about Religion, Medicine, Isra Yazicioglu, Saint Joseph’s University
and Practice
Eliza Kent, Colgate University
Skeptics and Converts: Teaching Health and Healing in Asian
Religions
Brenda Appleby, Saint Francis Xavier University, and Rose M.
Tekel, Saint Francis Xavier University
Religion, Spirituality, and Health: A Thematic Introduction to
Religious Studies
Responding:
Lance D. Laird, Boston University
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 103
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
104 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-267 S A31-270
Islamic Mysticism Group Native Traditions in the Americas Group
Marriott Marquis, A706 Marriott Marquis, L508
Vernon James Schubel, Kenyon College, Presiding Michael McNally, Carleton College, Presiding
Theme: Prophecy, Knowledge, and Performance in Sufism Theme: Cherokees, Choctaws, and Native Religion in the Southeast
Kazuyo Murata, Yale University Michelene Pesantubbee, University of Iowa
Adam in the Mystical Prophetology of Ruzbihan Baqli Shirazi Choctaw Women Wailing for the Dead and the Living
Tehseen Thaver, University of North Carolina Michael J. Zogry, University of Kansas
Hagiography, History, and Oral Performative Tradition: A Study Change Comes Unto These Hills: Retelling Cultural Narratives
of Imam Ja’far al-Sadiq’s Entry in Farid al-Din ‘Attar’s Tadhkirat Carrie McLachlan, Western Carolina University
al-Awliya Revisioning the Cherokee Cosmos
Ata Anzali, Rice University Responding:
A Genealogy of “Erfan” as a Comparative Category
Mary C. Churchill, Sonoma State University
Hussein Rashid, New York, NY
With Every Breath Call Ali: Modern Qawwali and Immigrant
Belonging A31-271
Business Meeting:
Omid Safi, University of North Carolina, and Laury Silvers,
New Religious Movements Group
Wilfrid Laurier University, Presiding Marriott Marquis, A703
Douglas E. Cowan, University of Waterloo, Presiding
Theme: New Religions and the Media
A31-268 S Joseph Laycock, Decatur, GA
Latina/o Religion, Culture, and Society Group Where Do They Get These Ideas? Changing Ideas of “Cults” in Popular
Marriott Marquis, M103-104 Media
Jeremy Cruz, Boston College, Presiding Franz Winter, University of Vienna
A Japanese New Religion and the Media: Kōfuku No Kagaku and the
Theme: Las Musas Latinas: Retrieving Theological Voices from the “Friday Incident”
Convents of las Americas
James Beverley, Tyndale Seminary
Ivanessa Arostegui, Florida International University Handling Xenu: From South Park and Andrew Morton to Nightline
Sor Juana: The Theology Behind the Art and Oxford University Press
Neomi De Anda, Loyola University, Chicago Shannon Trosper Schorey, University of Colorado
Got Breast Milk? Trinitarian Conceptions in the Work of María Anna
SUNday, October 31
From Ufology to Abductees: The MUFON UFO Journal and the
Águeda de San Ignacio Construction of a UFO Community
Responding:
Gilberto Cavazos-González, Catholic Theological Union
Business Meeting: A31-272
Néstor Medina, Seminario Evangélico de Teología, Matanzas, Practical Theology Group and Liberal Theologies
Cuba, and Carmen Marie Nanko-Fernandez, Catholic Consultation
Theological Union, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, A601
Clyde Grubbs, Pasadena, CA, Presiding
A31-269 Theme: Practices of Reconciliation and Forgiveness
Law, Religion, and Culture Group Amy Levad, University of Saint Thomas
The Moral Imagination of Restorative Justice
Marriott Marquis, A708
Annie Hardison-Moody, Emory University
Grace Kao, Claremont School of Theology, Presiding “Remember Me that I was Fighting for Peace”: The Paradox of Risk
Theme: Bodies and Law: Torture, Sex Change, and Same-Sex Marriage and Hope in the Film Pray the Devil Back to Hell
Kathleen M. Self, Saint Lawrence University Responding:
Medieval Judicial Ordeal and the Body as Evidence
Mary McClintock Fulkerson, Duke University, and Michael
Hillel Gray, Miami University, Ohio Battle, Episcopal Church
The Transitioning of Jewish Biomedical Law: Rhetorical and Practical
Shifts in Halakhic Discourse on Sex Change Surgery
Kathleen Sands, University of Hawai’i
Religion, Race, and Colonialism in Hawai’i’s Civil Union Battle
Responding:
Randall Styers, University of North Carolina
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 105
Program Sessions
Lea Schweitz, Lutheran School of Theology, Chicago, Presiding The Root of Sin and the Mistrust of God: Problems With an
Ambivalent, Violent God-image
Responding:
A31-275 Thomas Oord, Northwest Nazarene University
Scriptural Reasoning Group
Hyatt Regency, Dunwoody
Nicholas Adams, University of Cambridge, Presiding
A31-279 S
Theme: Domestic Disputes and Family Dysfunction in the Abrahamic Religion and Colonialism Consultation
Traditions Marriott Marquis, A701
Panelists: Caleb Elfenbein, New York University, Presiding
Steven Kepnes, Colgate University Theme: Tolerance in Colonial and Imperial Contexts
Catriona Laing, University of Cambridge G. A. Lipton, University of North Carolina
Homayra Ziad, Trinity College Secular Sufis: Neoliberalism, Ethnoracism, and the Reformation of the
Muslim Other
Jessica Van Denend, Union Theological Seminary
Empathy and the Colonial Other: Reconceptualizing the Historical
Origins of Einfühlung/Empathy
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
106 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
J. Barton Scott, Montana State University Panelists:
Bad Publicity: The Satyarth Prakash and the Law of Tolerance in Late Rosemary R. Hicks, Tufts University
Colonial India Immigration, Pluralism and Religion: Challenges in Muslim-
Business Meeting: American Identities and Outreach Work
Mark Elmore, University of California, Davis, Presiding Edward Curtis, Indiana University-Purdue University
Religion, Politics and Race: Challenges to Islam Pedagogies
Nathan Carlin, University of Texas Medical School
A31-280 O D Mourning, Memorials, and Religion
Wildcard Session Jeanne Halgren Kilde, University of Minnesota
Marriott Marquis, Atrium Ballroom Worship Sites as Contested Spaces: Memorialization, Religion and
Politics
Johnny B. Hill, Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, and
Karen Jackson-Weaver, Princeton University, Presiding
Theme: The Black Freedom Struggle Today: The Civil Rights Movement: M31-300
Then and Now
In 2010, the AAR will be meeting in the city of Atlanta, Georgia, North American Hindu Association of Dharma Studies
considered the organizing base of the modern American civil rights Sunday, 4:00 pm–5:00 pm
movement. In this session, a public forum will take place on the Hyatt Regency, Vinings
state of the civil rights struggle, with an awareness of the burgeoning
nuances of the black freedom struggle on the backdrop of the nation’s Arvind Sharma, McGill University, Presiding
first black president, Barack Obama. This session will explore the Theme: Are Americans Really Becoming Hindus?
legacy of the civil rights movement in today’s social and political Panelists:
context, and also the ways in which the Obama administration poses
challenges and opportunities for advancing the cause of civil and Jeffrey Long, Elizabethtown College
human rights, particularly concerning issues of healthcare, housing Rita Sherma, Binghamton College
reform, the prison industrial complex, public education, and the Ramdas Lamb, University of Hawai’i
persistence of militarism. This session will also feature some of the
nation’s pioneers in the area of civil and human rights, including Laurie Louise Patton, Emory University
Congressman John Lewis, Ambassador Andrew Young, Raphael For additional information, please contact arvind.sharma@mcgill.ca.
Warnock, Rev. Bernice King, and former mayor of Atlanta, Shirley
Franklin. This session will emphasize dialogue and critical reflection on
contemporary issues of peace and justice in local spaces, nationally and M31-305
internationally as well.
Council on Foreign Relations
Sunday, 4:00 pm–5:00 pm
A31-281 Marriott Marquis, L403
SUNday, October 31
Study of Islam Section; Contemporary Islam Group; and Theme: Religion and Foreign Policy Conversation: Religious Conflict in
Space, Place, and Religious Meaning Consutation Nigeria
Sunday, 3:00 pm–4:30 pm Join the Council on Foreign Relations for a conversation on the
nexus of religion and foreign policy in Nigeria. John Campbell,
Hyatt Regency, Centennial II-IV CFR senior fellow and former ambassador to Nigeria, and Jacob
Ruqayya Khan, Trinity University, Presiding Olupona, professor of African and African American studies at
Theme: Islam and Sacred Space in America: Zeroing in on the Park51 Harvard University, will discuss Muslim/Christian relations in Nigeria.
Controversy Refreshments will be served; anyone interested is encouraged to attend.
If you plan to attend, please stop by booth #217 in the exhibition hall
The controversy concerning the Cultural/Islamic Center near Ground prior to 3:00 pm on Sunday, October 31.
Zero throws into sharp relief some key issues germane to the study of
religion in general and of Islam in particular. This AAR round table
draws upon the expertise of a diverse group of Religion and Islam
scholars to explore different dimensions of the controversy. The table M31-301
will pay attention to contestations over worship and memorial sites Journal of Religious Ethics Editorial Board
in the context of American religious history as well as to how cultural
melancholia and mourning inform the current controversy especially Sunday, 4:30 pm–6:30 pm
given the approach of the tenth anniversary of 9/11. Moreover, Hyatt Regency, Techwood
discussants will illuminate the many interconnections between race,
immigration, religion and politics embedded in the controversy. The
round table also addresses challenges, in light of the controversy, as
regards Muslim American outreach and inter-faith work since 9/11.
For those engaged with “Islam pedagogies,” a salient issue the table
takes up is how, if at all, this controversy shapes the current teaching of
Islam at the college and/or university level in the U.S.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 107
Program Sessions
Sunday, 5:00 pm–6:30 pm graduating doctoral students in the field, one of the signature issues
of her presidency. This session will explore the current state of the
job market in religious studies by means of the latest data from just-
completed surveys of doctoral-granting departments and AAR student
A31-300 B members, as well as through data from the AAR’s online Job Postings
Special Topics Forum and its Job Center at the Annual Meeting. A distinguished panel
will join Taves and the audience in discussing the current situation,
Marriott Marquis, A701 projecting where the field may be headed, and positing some steps that
Terrence E. Dempsey, Saint Louis University, Presiding might be taken for the immediate and longer-range future of the field.
Theme: Conversation with Ena Heller, 2010 AAR Religion and the Arts Are we dealing with a temporary blip or a permanent paradigm shift
Award Winner in the way academic positions in religious studies are conceived and
positioned?
Sponsored by the Religion and the Arts Award Jury
Panelists:
Ena Heller has been named the 2010 Religion and the
Arts Award winner. She is the Executive Director of Timothy M. Renick, Georgia State University
the Museum of Biblical Art (MOBIA) in New York Alice Hunt, Chicago Theological Seminary
City. Heller’s professional career has focused on building Wayne Proudfoot, Columbia University
places of learning within museums. Heller learned the
Ena Heller workings of various museum departments through jobs Davina C. Lopez, Eckerd College
at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art. Albert G. Miller, Oberlin College
She then focused her attention on establishing new places of learning
through art, first at the Gallery at the American Bible Society (1998)
and later as founding director of the Museum of Biblical Art (2005).
MOBIA was conceived as a learning museum, whose unique mission
A31-302 C O
is illustrated by noteworthy exhibitions and publications. At MOBIA Wildcard Session
and elsewhere Heller has presented papers and public lectures that Marriott Marquis, L503
emphasize the need for teaching art, and the connection between
Vincent Biondo, California State University, Fresno, Presiding
art and religion. In parallel, her independent scholarly research has
resulted in contributions to volumes such as Margins: Women of the Theme: The Religion and Daily Life Project
Hebrew Bible and their Afterlives (Sheffield Phoenix Press Limited, How exactly does religion influence politics? In what ways does
2009) and Women’s Space: Patronage, Place, and Gender in the Medieval religion continue to shape culture? In the 2009–2010 Religion and
Church (State University of New York Press, 2005). Daily Life Project for Praeger, prominent international scholars
Panelists: authored chapters on Peacebuilding, Civil Religion, Religious
Nationalism, Education, Memorialization, Criminal Justice,
Ena Heller, Museum of Biblical Art
Economics, Science, and Nature in Volume Two to identify the role
Diane Apostolos-Cappadona, Georgetown University of religion in public life. In Volume Three, chapters on Art, Healing,
Cordula Grewe, Columbia University Children, Family, Women, Sport, Travel, Music, Humor, and Death
clarify the ways that religion continues to influence culture, even in
societies that claim to be secular. The AAR Annual Meeting makes it
SUNday, October 31
A31-301 H possible for the authors to join together to collate their findings and
form a consensus for the first time. Following the success of the three
Special Topics Forum volume set will be the opportunity for participants to design a one
Marriott Marquis, M106-107 volume trade paperback for use in college courses.
Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara, Presiding Panelists:
Theme: The Job Market for Academic Positions in Religious Studies: Ramdas Lamb, University of Hawai’i, Manoa
Recession, Depression, or Paradigm Shift? Monika Arnez, University of Hamburg
Sponsored by the Job Placement Task Force John Adams, University of California, Santa Barbara
The market for academic positions in religious studies has undergone Joseph Williams, Rutgers University
dramatic changes in recent years. In the aftermath of 9/11, there was a Colleen Windham–Hughes, University of California, Santa
shift away from advertised positions in subfields that used to constitute Barbara
the heart of the discipline (e.g., theology, New Testament) and towards
a range of new subfields. With the world economic crisis, the number
of positions listed through the AAR online Job Postings and the
Annual Meeting’s Job Center declined by as much as fifty percent over
a twelve-month period.
AAR President Ann Taves has made the shifting academic job
market, and the deep challenges it poses to the current generation of
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
108 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-303 O A31-306
Wildcard Session Ethics Section
Marriott Marquis, M103-104 Hyatt Regency, Hanover FG
Deborah Creamer, Iliff School of Theology, Presiding Klem-Mari Cajigas Chimelis, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
Theme: Theology and Technology: Intersecting Realities Theme: Race-ing Forward, Engendering Justice, and Embodying Ethics
This wildcard session will focus on how emerging technologies shape Hannah Ka, Claremont Graduate University
epistemology and identity, thus destabilizing power and reshaping Respectful Grace and Graceful Respect: A Korean Christian Feminist
theological discourse. Web 2.0 technologies (wikis, blogs, RSS, Ethicist’s Response to Alison M. Jaggar’s and Sara Ruddick’s
Facebook, Twitter, Delicious, YouTube, etc.) highlight new identity Integration of Justice and Care
spaces and issues of access, power, and knowledge construction. Robyn Henderson-Espinoza, Iliff School of Theology and
Because issues of power and access are prominent in communities University of Denver, and Heike Peckruhn, Iliff School of
of color and other marginalized communities, attention to the Theology and University of Denver
intersecting reality of theology and technology creates space of greater The Virtue of Queering Ethics: Stanley Hauerwas and Gloria
access to persons and communities who would otherwise be absent Anzaldúa on Agency and the Performative Nature of the Body
from this conversation. As technology continues to evolve at a rapid
pace, these issues will only become more complex. An ongoing AAR K. Christine Pae, Denison University
group dedicated to the intersection of theology and technology could A Solidarity-talk among Women of Color: Searching for a Liberative
provide a meaningful space in which to navigate these new realities. Feminist Methodology of Christian Ethics
This initial wildcard panel session will focus on a critical analysis of the
Postcolonial Theology Network (PTN), a Facebook group encouraging
new models of identity and epistemology through broad and diverse A31-307
theological discourse.
Panelists: North American Religions Section
Joseph Duggan, University of Manchester Hyatt Regency, Hanover AB
Michael Hemenway, Iliff School of Theology and University of Barbara McClure, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
Denver Theme: Souls in Extremis: Sex, Death, and Moral Insanity
Responding: Marie Pagliarini, Saint Mary’s College
Wei Hsien Wan, SEGi University College, Kota Damansara “ You Are All Mine, and I Am Entirely Thine”: Miracle Cures and the
Consummation of Spiritual Marriage in the Georgetown Visitation
Convent, 1824–1838
A31-304 Jodie Boyer, University of Toronto
Religion, “Moral Insanity,” and Psychology in Nineteenth Century
Arts, Literature, and Religion Section America
Marriott Marquis, M101
SUNday, October 31
Alana Vincent, University of Glasgow
James Thrall, Knox College, Presiding Ritualized Encounters with Death: Mourning and the First World
Theme: Multicultural Identity in Religion and the Arts War in Canada
Angela Yarber, Graduate Theological Union Responding:
Globalized Faith and Embodied Cultures: The Impact of Globalization Gary L. Ebersole, University of Missouri, Kansas City
on Multicultural Dances
Heidi Thimann, Graduate Theological Union
Hybridity at the Court of Akbar: The Case of an “Indian” Saint Jerome A31-308
Rana Choi, University of Chicago Religion and Politics Section
From Triumph to Sorrow: The Iconograpghy of the Crucifixion in Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom C
Byzantine Art
Cheryl Townsend Gilkes, Colby College, Presiding
Theme: International Irruptions
Youshaa Patel, Duke University
The Politics of Difference and the Syrian-Muslim Religious Elite
Christine E. Gudorf, Florida International University
Pentecostalism, Indonesian Law, and Interreligious Violence
Comfort Max-Wirth, Florida International University
The Occult in Ghanaian Politics
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 109
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
110 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-313 H A31-316
Black Theology Group and Transformative Scholarship and Christian Spirituality Group
Pedagogy Consultation Marriott Marquis, A706
Marriott Marquis, A602 Arthur Holder, Graduate Theological Union, Presiding
Johnny B. Hill, Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary, Theme: Multiple Religious Belongings in North American Spirituality
Presiding Lilan Laishley, Chattanooga, TN
Theme: The Activism of Black Theologians: Scholarship, Pedagogy, The Intersection of Alchemy, Christianity, and Labyrinths in the
Institution, and Society Nineteenth Century American Frontier Harmony Society
Panelists: Carole Spencer, George Fox University
Monica A. Coleman, Claremont School of Theology Hannah Whitall Smith: The Making of an Evangelical Heretic and
Karen Baker-Fletcher, Southern Methodist University Feminist Mystic
Harry Singleton, Benedict College Jennifer Wilken, Arizona State University
Son Salutations: Christian Yoga in the United States, 1989–2009
Anthony G. Reddie, Queens Theological Foundation
Jacquelyn Grant, Interdenominational Theological Center
A31-317
A31-314 Contemporary Islam Group
Bonhoeffer: Theology and Social Analysis Group Marriott Marquis, L508
Marriott Marquis, L401-402 Danielle Widmann Abraham, Harvard University, Presiding
Theme: Further Explorations on Secularity in the Prison Writings Theme: Negotiating Practice and Authority in Contemporary Islam
Jan H. Pranger, Concordia College Tehseen Thaver, University of North Carolina
Moving the Goalposts: Bonhoeffer’s Faith and the Secularity of a Post- Living Qur’an Communities and Female Religious Authority in
secular World “Secular” Turkey: A Study of CemalNur Sargut, “Shaikha” of the Rifa’i
Sufi Order
Jeremy D. Posadas, Emory University
Practicing to Be Religionless Christians among Post-Structuralist Sa’diyya Shaikh, University of Cape Town
People: Reading Bonhoeffer with Foucault Sex as “Ibadah”: Religion, Gender, and Subjectivity amongst South
African Women
Jeffrey C. Pugh, Elon University
Living In the “World Come of Age”: Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s Resistance to Amina Chaudary, Boston University
Modernity Deveiling and the American Muslim Woman’s Experience
Responding:
Juliane Hammer, George Mason University
SUNday, October 31
A31-315
Chinese Religions Group and Daoist Studies Group A31-318
Marriott Marquis, A707
Contemporary Pagan Studies Group
Clarke Hudson, University of Virginia, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, A705
Theme: Topics in Medieval Chinese Religion
Shawn Arthur, Appalachian State University, Presiding
Yan Liu, Harvard University
Healing by Incantation in Medieval China Theme: Idolatry and Tangible Sacrality: The Conversation Continues
Thomas Michael, Boston University Panelists:
Ge Hong and the Formation of the Medieval Daoist Xian Michael York, Academy for Cultural and Educational Studies,
Terry Kleeman, University of Colorado London
State and Religion in Early Celestial Master Daoism Margot Adler, National Public Radio
Bron Taylor, University of Florida
Amy Whitehead, Open University
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 111
Program Sessions
A31-320
A31-323 S M
Religion and Ecology Group
Hinduism Group
Marriott Marquis, L405-406
Hyatt Regency, Hanover E
Jimi Wilson, University of Florida, Presiding
Alf Hiltebeitel, George Washington University, Presiding
Theme: Pilgrimage, Place, and Dynamic Systems
Theme: Brahmins at the Court of the King: The Brahmin in Political
Office in Premodern India Elizabeth Allison, California Institute of Integral Studies
The Spiritual Significance of Glaciers
Panelists:
Susan Bratton, Baylor University
Mark McClish, Birmingham Southern College Interpretation of the Appalachian Trail as a Religious or Spiritual
Patrick Olivelle, University of Texas Landscape: Historic Roots, Twenty-first Century Beliefs, and Hiker
Timothy Lubin, Washington and Lee University Experience
Terra Rowe, Drew University
John Muir’s Aesth/ethics: A Postmodern, Postcolonial Interpretation of
A31-321 Muir, Wilderness Preservation, and the Transcendent in Nature
SUNday, October 31
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
112 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Sarah Haynes, Western Illinois University
A31-324 G On the Road: Ritual Adaptation in the Tibetan Diaspora
Religion in Latin America and the Caribbean Group and Responding:
International Development and Religion Consultation Donna Seamone, Acadia University
Hyatt Regency, Hanover C
David Shefferman, Manhattan College, Presiding A31-327
Theme: Bridging the Gaps: Theorizing Religion and Development in
Faith-based Organizations Roman Catholic Studies Group and Space, Place, and
Panelists:
Religious Meaning Consultation
Tim Fogarty, University of Florida Marriott Marquis, L404
Julie Adkins, Southern Methodist University Jeanne Halgren Kilde, University of Minnesota, Presiding
Bretton Alvaré, Widener University Theme: Space and Place in Catholic America
Laurie Occhipinti, Clarion University Judith Dupre, Yale University
The Collision of Hollywood and Heaven at the Cathedral of Our Lady
Jill DeTemple, Southern Methodist University of the Angels
Emily Hogue, United States Agency for International J. Terry Todd, Drew University
Development Making the Madonna a Star: Michelangelo’s Pieta at the New York
Alyson Rose-Wood, National Institutes of Health World’s Fair, 1964–1965
Responding: Bernadette McNary-Zak, Rhodes College
Jose Santos, Southern Methodist University Remembering in Silence: An American Carthusian Community
Stephanie Bilinsky, Arizona State University
Creating New Orleans: Race, Religion, Rhetoric, and the Louisiana
A31-325 C Purchase
Religion, Holocaust, and Genocide Group Responding:
Marriott Marquis, A702 Leonard Norman Primiano, Cabrini College
Gregory Kaplan, Rice University, Presiding
Theme: Susannah Heschel’s The Aryan Jesus: Christian Theologians
and the Bible in Nazi Germany: Author Meets Critics
A31-328 C
Robert Erlewine, Illinois Wesleyan University Theology and Continental Philosophy Group and Theology
Before Jesus was Aryan: Susannah Heschel and German-Jewish and the Political Consultation
Thought Marriott Marquis, A704
Eric Weed, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary Ellen T. Armour, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
SUNday, October 31
Susannah Heschel’s The Aryan Jesus and the Future of Related Theme: Mark L. Taylor’s The Theological and the Political: On the
Research Weight of the World
James McNutt, Thomas More College Panelists:
A Very Damning Truth: Walter Grundmann, Adolf Schlatter, and
Susannah Heschel’s The Aryan Jesus Corey D. B. Walker, Brown University
Laurel Schneider, Chicago Theological Seminary
Responding:
Responding:
Susannah Heschel, Dartmouth College
Mark Lewis Taylor, Princeton Theological Seminary
A31-326
Ritual Studies Group
Marriott Marquis, M102
Kerstin Radde-Antweiler, Universitaet Bremen, Presiding
Theme: Perspectives on Ritual Experience
Airen Hall, Syracuse University
“Over the Winding Trail Forward We Go”: Children and Pilgrimage
in the Latter-day Saint Tradition
Kimberly Hope Belcher, Saint John’s University
Does the Ritual Matter? The Body of the Baby and Adults’ Attitudes in
Roman Catholic Infant Baptism
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 113
Program Sessions
The Marginalization of Eastern Orthodoxy in the Study of World From Multiculturalism to Multireligiousity: Shifting Paradigms of
Christianity African-American Religious Studies in a Pluralistic Age with Special
Dorottya Nagy, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious Reference to Martin Luther King, Jr.
and Ethnic Diversity Whitaker’s paper tracks the shifting paradigms of African-American
Migrants: Agents of Christianity as a World Religion Religious Studies discovering that the pluralistic age is influencing
James Taneti, Union Presbyterian Seminary how scholars do Religious Studies with a greater sensitivity to religious
Women with Bibles: Origins and Development of the Office of diversity. In African-American Religious Thought: An Anthology (2003),
Biblewomen in South India Cornel West and Eddie Glaude map the intellectual shift among black
Melanie Trexler, Georgetown University thinkers/theologians’ singular focus on Christianity beginning to fade
Arab Baptist Christians: Relations with Muslims in the United States in the late 1960’s; after King’s assassination. James Cone’s Black Power
& Black Theology (1969) adds additional evidence as he clarifies in
Responding: his 1989 forward how he never considered Christianity the exclusive
Lalsangkima Pachuau, Asbury Theological Seminary religion of God. Yet, West and Glaude’s periodization may be pushed
back a bit if King and other black pluralists like Howard Thurman
Jonathan Tan, Xavier University
are factored into the schematization. Whitaker further emphasizes
that, in the end, Black Theology is not reducible to Christian Studies.
Race and religious pluralism both matter; and need to be part of the
contemporary black theological discourse.
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
114 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Sunday, 6:00 pm and Later
M31-433 K
Ecclesiological Investigations International Research
A31-400 K Network
Racial and Ethnic Minorities Reception Sunday, 6:30 pm–8:30 pm
Sunday, 6:30 pm–7:30 pm Marriott Marquis, Atrium Ballroom A
Hyatt Regency, Centennial I Theme: Assisi 2012, “Where We Dwell in Common”: Pathways for
Sponsored by the Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in the Dialogue in the 21st Century
Profession Committee The Ecclesiological Investigations International Reseach Network
invite s you to the launch reception of a gathering concerned with
“Thinking outside the Ecumenical Box” to be held in Assisi, Italy,
M31-400 17th–20th April 2012. This reception has been generously sponsored by
the Center for Catholic Thought and Culture at the University of San
American Journal of Theology and Philosophy Annual Lecture Diego and an anonymous benefactor. The parameters of this initiative
Sunday, 6:30 pm–8:00 pm and a call for papers will be introduced and information concerning
other EI and CCTC initiatives will be disseminated. Drinks and light
Hyatt Regency, Vinings food will be served. All are welcome.
M31-401 M31-403 K
Explorations in Theology and the Apocalyptic Center for Process Studies Reception
Sunday, 6:30 pm–9:00 pm Sunday, 7:00 pm–9:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, L403 Hyatt Regency, Fairlie
Benjamin Myers, Charles Sturt University, Presiding Join us for wine, cheese, and conversation. Greet Monica Coleman,
Theme: Aspects of the Political Theology of Johann Baptist Metz codirector at the Center and associate professor of constructive
This is the second of two sessions exploring apocalyptic themes in theology and African American religious at Claremont School of
contemporary Christian theology. Theology. Friends and members of CPS and anyone interested in
process-relational approaches to religious studies, theology, biblical
Matthew Eggemeier, College of the Holy Cross hermeneutics, and philosophy of religion are invited. Network, discuss,
Christianity or Nihilism? The Apocalyptic Discourses of Johann Baptist and schmooze. Informal, fun!
Metz and Friedrich Nietzsche
Jason McKinney, University of Toronto
The Sins of the Father: Suffering, Guilt, and Redemption in Benjamin
and Metz
M31-404 K
SUNday, October 31
Denver University and Iliff School of Theology Joint PhD
Christopher Craig Brittain, University of Aberdeen
Positivity and Negativity in Political Theology: Metz and Adorno on Reception
the Nature of Apocalyptic Hope Sunday, 7:00 pm–8:30 pm
Kyle Gingerich Hiebert, University of Manchester Hyatt Regency, Harris
The Architectonics of Hope: On the Tragic Configuration of Johann
Baptist Metz’s New Political Theology
M31-405 D
M31-402 H K Forum on Sports and Religion
Sunday, 7:00 pm–9:00 pm
Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Marriott Marquis, L401 & L402
Religion
Theme: Away Down South: Sports and Religion in Dixie
Sunday, 6:30 pm–8:00 pm
Eric Bain-Selbo, Western Kentucky University, Presiding
Hyatt Regency, Edgewood
The Sports and Religion Forum will present papers and discussions for
Theme: New Teachers’ Dinner its fourth annual meeting. Papers will address the following questions,
An annual gathering of new teachers for dinner and directed table though not limited to these:
conversations about the first years of teaching. By invitation only. • What distinguishes the relationship between sport and religion
in the American South?
• How has the relationship of sport and religion changed
historically in the American South?
• How has the fervent religiosity of the American South affected
the role of sport in that culture?
• How have race and gender played out at the intersection of
sport and religion in the American South?
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 115
Program Sessions
M31-408 K M31-432 K
Continuum Reception
Unitarian Universalist Scholars and Friends Reception
Sunday, 7:00 pm–9:00 pm
Sunday, 7:00 pm–9:00 pm
SUNday, October 31
M31-409 K M31-411 K
University of Iowa Reception
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Reception
Sunday, 7:30 pm–9:30 pm
Sunday, 7:00 pm–8:30 pm
Hyatt Regency, Courtland
Hyatt Regency, Piedmont
M31-410 K
Yale Divinity School Reception
Sunday, 7:00 pm–8:30 pm
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom Salon A
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
116 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
AWARDS CEREMONY
AND RECPTION (A31-401)
Sunday, October , 7:30 pm–8:30 pm
Hyatt Regency, Hanover C
John R. Fitzmier, American Academy of Religion, Presiding
Celebrate the achievements of the 2010 AAR award winners
Elaine Pagels at the ceremony and reception held in their honor.
Martin E. Marty Award for the 2010 Excellence in the Study of
Public Understanding of Religion Religion Book Awards
Elaine Pagels, Princeton University Analytical-Descriptive
Kimberley Christine Patton
Excellence in Teaching Award Religion of the Gods: Ritual, Paradox, and
Barbara A. B. Patterson, Emory Reflexivity. Oxford University Press
University
Barbara A. B. Patterson
Constructive-Reflective
Religion and the Arts Award Mark Johnston
Saving God: Religion after Idolatry.
Ena Heller, Museum of Biblical Art Princeton University Press
Historical
2010 Best In-depth Reporting on
Robert Ford Campany
Religion Awards Making Transcendents: Ascetics and
Social Memory in Early Medieval China.
Ena Heller
News Outlets with Circulations over University of Hawai’i Press
100,000:
First Place: Daniel Burke, Religion Textual
News Service Benjamin D. Sommer
Bodies of God and the World of Ancient Israel.
Second Place: Todd Jones, Columbus Cambridge University Press
SUNday, October 31
Dispatch
Third Place: Michael Paulson, Boston
Globe 2010 Best First Book in the History
Daniel Burke
of Religions
News Outlets with Circulations under Joseph Kip Kosek
100,000: Acts of Conscience: Christian Nonviolence
and Modern American Democracy.
First Place: Brett Buckner, Anniston Columbia University Press
(Ala.) Star
Second Place: John Dart, Christian 2010 International Dissertation
Century
Research Grant
Third Place: Adam Parker, Post and
Brett Buckner Courier (Charleston, S.C.) Kathleen Foody, University of North
Carolina Ehud Halperin
Opinion Writing:
First Place: David Gibson, 2010 Selva J. Raj Endowed
PoliticsDaily.com International Dissertation Research
Second Place: Tracey O’Shaughnessy, Grant
Republican-American (Waterbury, CT) Ehud Halperin, Columbia University
Third Place: Joel Engardio, Ilyese Morgenstein-Fuerst, University
David Gibson WashingtonPost.com and USA Today of North Carolina Ilyese Mogenstein-Fuerst
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 117
Program Sessions
M31-431
M31-412 K
SUNday, October 31
M31-429 K
Princeton University Reception
Sunday, 8:00 pm–10:00 pm
Marriott Marquis, M301
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
118 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A31-404 D A A31-406 J
Atlanta Artists: Guy Robinson and Keith Prossick Templeton Lecture — Francisco José Ayala: Darwin’s Gift to
Sunday, 8:30 pm–9:30 pm Science and Religion
Marriott Marquis, Imperial Ballroom Sunday, 8:30 pm–9:30 pm
This session is an opportunity for two of Hyatt Regency, Centennial II-IV
Atlanta’s premier artists who work with John M. Templeton Jr., John Templeton Foundation, Presiding
religious subject matter to discuss their work, Francisco J. Ayala is professor of biological sciences at the
its relation to religion, and their philosophies University of California, Irvine. He received his PhD in
of art. Some of their paintings will be displayed genetics from Columbia University. Ayala was awarded
in the Marriott Marquis’ Imperial Ballroom the 2010 Templeton Prize for his achievements as an
throughout the meeting, along with ten evolutionary geneticist and for his opposition to the
Buddhist oxherding paintings and four panels of entanglement of science and religion while also calling
the AIDS quilt. for mutual respect between the two. His research focuses
Francisco Ayala
Guy Robinson’s surrealists works have been on the genetic diversity of populations, the structure of
exhibited in numerous galleries and have a place parasitic protozoa, and the origin of malaria. He has been a major
Sacra Conversazione with St. in important collections including the Georgia voice on the ethical issues related to the study of human evolution
Peter and St. Francis, G. Robinson Museum of Contemporary Art. and a frequent spokesperson in the debate between evolution and
Keith Prossick, a self-taught artist, works with mandalic forms built creationism. He has published 1,000 articles and is author or editor
from the principles of sacred geometry. He has shown his work at of thirty-five books, including Darwin’s Gift to Science and Religion
many venues and events in both ( Joseph Henry Press, 2007) and Am I a Monkey? Six Big Questions
Georgia and New York. He lives about Evolution ( John Hopkins University Press, 2010). He is a
and works at the Colaboratory, member of the National Academy of Sciences, past president of the
a “maker-space” for self-defined American Association for the Advancement of Science, and recipient
artists to work on projects in of the 2001 National Medal of Science.
collaboration with others. Panelists:
Panelists: Francisco José Ayala, University of California, Irvine
Guy Robinson, Atlanta, GA
Keith Prossick, Atlanta, GA Spiritual Mitosis, K. Prossick
M31-413 K
Brown University Reception
A31-405 D A Sunday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm
Jazz Vespers by Dwight Andrews and the Atlanta Jazz Chorus Hyatt Regency, Kennesaw
Sunday, 8:30 pm–9:30 pm
SUNday, October 31
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom D
Associate professor of music theory and African
M31-414 K
American music, Andrews is also senior minister of the Claremont Reception
First Congregational United Church of Christ in Atlanta.
Sunday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm
In 1998 he formed the Atlanta Jazz Chorus, a group
whose mission is to perform the sacred works of famous Hyatt Regency, Dunwoody
jazz masters such as Duke Ellington and to bring out
Dwight Andrews spiritual aspects, ideas, and issues in public performances.
The group — composed of thirty-five singers from the
metro-Atlanta area — has rapidly gained an expansive and dedicated
M31-415 K
audience base. Columbia University Reception
Panelists: Sunday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm
Dwight Andrews, Atlanta, GA Marriott Marquis, A707
M31-416 K
Drew University Reception
Sunday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm
Hyatt Regency, Lenox
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 119
Program Sessions
M31-422 K M31-426 K J
Syracuse University Reception John Templeton Foundation Reception
Sunday, 9:00 pm–11:00 pm Sunday, 10:00 pm–12:00 am
Hyatt Regency, Baker Hyatt Regency, Hanover FG
Connect with your colleagues to hear the 2010 Templeton Prize
Laureate, Dr. Francisco Ayala in the Hyatt Centennial Ballroom II-IV
at 8:30 on Sunday, October 31, and then greet Dr. Aylala at a reception
that follows immediately in the Hyatt Hotel Hanover FG. Enjoy Jazz,
scrumptious deserts and conviviality!
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New Program Unit
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Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
120 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Monday, 9:00 am–11:30 am
Monday, November 1
M1-1 K A1-100 H
Special Topics Forum
Fuller Theological Seminary Breakfast
Marriott Marquis, A701
Monday, 7:00 am–9:00 am
Jennifer Harvey, Drake University, Presiding
Hyatt Regency, Dunwoody
Theme: Scholarship and Activism
Sponsored by the Status of LGBTIQ Persons in the Profession Task
M1-2 C Force
How do scholars interested in religion connect scholarship and
Society for Mormon Theology and Philosophy activism in the context of LGBTIQ communities? The panelists in
Monday, 7:00 am–9:00 am this Special Topics Forum will address the ways in which they bring
Marriott Marquis, L403 scholarship and activism together in their lives and careers.
Theme: Discussion of Grant Hardy’s Understanding the Book of Panelists:
Mormon (Oxford University Press, 2010) Edward Gray, Gill Foundation
Panelists: Sylvia Rhue, National Black Justice Coalition
Daniel Peterson, Brigham Young University Thelathia Young, Emory University
James McLachlan, Western Carolina University Orlando Espin, University of San Diego
Responding: Mary E. Hunt, Women’s Alliance for Theology, Ethics, and Ritual
Grant Hardy, University of North Carolina, Asheville
A1-101 C
A1-1 K Arts, Literature, and Religion Section
Program Unit Chairs’ Breakfast Marriott Marquis, A703
Monday, 7:15 am–8:45 am Virgil W. Brower, Northwestern University and Chicago Theological
Hyatt Regency, Centennial I Seminary, Presiding
John R. Fitzmier, American Academy of Religion, Presiding Theme: Regina Schwartz’s Sacramental Ethics: Poetics at the Dawn of
Secularism with Author Responding
Program Unit Chairs are invited to a continental breakfast featuring
information on upcoming program initiatives. Panelists:
Hent de Vries, Johns Hopkins University
Benjamin Myers, Charles Stuart University
A1-2 N D J Kevin Hart, University of Virginia
SOLD OUT Jennifer Geddes, University of Virginia
Thomas Altizer, Mt. Pocono, PA
Yerkes Primate Center Tour
Responding:
Monday, 8:30 am–11:30 am
Regina Schwartz, Northwestern University
Buses pick up at Hyatt Regency-Baker Street Exit
Frans de Waal, Emory University, Presiding
Sponsored by the Science, Technology, and Religion Group, the
MONday, NovEMBER 1
Animals and Religion Consultation, and the Cognitive Science of
Religion Consultation
The Yerkes National Primate Research Center of Emory University
is an international leader in biomedical and behavioral research. This
research provides a critical link between research with small laboratory
animals and clinical trials with humans. Yerkes Research Center is
dedicated to advancing scientific understanding of primate biology,
behavior, veterinary care, and conservation. The tour will be led by
Yerkes director and AAR plenary speaker Frans de Waal.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 121
Program Sessions
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AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
122 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Nawaraj Chaulagain, Harvard University
A1-106 Honoring the Bombs: Tantric Rites, Ritual Violence, and Maintenance
of Power
Philosophy of Religion Section
Robin Rinehart, Lafayette College
Marriott Marquis, L401-402 Of Swords, Rifles, and Riddles: The Sikh ‘Shastra-nam–mala
Michael Rea, University of Notre Dame, Presiding
Theme: Possible Futures of the Philosophy of Religion
Eric Bugyis, Yale University
A1-109
Overcoming Post-secular Oscillations: The Aesthetic Validity of Kant’s Study of Judaism Section
“Religion”
Marriott Marquis, L507
Tim Knepper, Drake University
The End of the Philosophy of Religion? Benjamin Pollock, Michigan State University, Presiding
Theme: Jews as Others See Them
J. Aaron Simmons, Hendrix College, and John Sanders, Hendrix
College April C. Armstrong, Princeton University
A Goldilocks God? The Future of the Philosophy of the Religious “Meet the American Jew”: How American Jews Introduced Themselves
between Presence and Absence to Southern Baptists
Thomas D. Carroll, Mount Ida College Muhamad Ali, University of California, Riverside
The Problem of Relevance and Analytic Philosophy of Religion: “They are Not Alike”: Indonesian Muslim Intellectuals Perceiving
Reflection on a Possible Future Judaism and Jews
Michael Karlin, Emory University
“Never Again!” Jewish Survival as a Model for African American
A1-107 Religion
Religion and Politics Section Craig Ginn, University of Calgary and Mount Royal University
Anti-Semitism in African American Spirituals: Imitating Protestant
Marriott Marquis, A706 Hymnody and Supersessionist Ecclesiology or Initiating Liberationist
Andrew Murphy, Rutgers University, Presiding Theology and Black Power?
Theme: American Cultures and Religious Identities
Richard Amesbury, Claremont School of Theology
“Emblems of Belief ”: Military Headstones as Markers of American
A1-110 H
National Identity Teaching Religion Section
Katherine Rousseau, University of Denver Marriott Marquis, L405-406
The Elasticity of Hope: The 2008 HOPE Poster and Eschatology in
Public Time John Knight, Marist College, Presiding
Theme: “Does It Fit?” The Classroom as a Context for the Making and
Cara Burnidge, Florida State University Testing of Knowledge
“Muhammad Was a Punk Rocker”: The Taqwacores and Muslim-
American Identity Politics Panelists:
David Decosimo, Princeton University Ann Burlein, Hofstra University
For Sacred Value: Waterboarding, Horrendous Evil, and the Wrongness Kathryn D. Blanchard, Alma College
of Torture Michel Andraos, Catholic Theological Union
Responding:
A1-108 Eugene V. Gallagher, Connecticut College
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 123
Program Sessions
A1-116 J
MONday, NovEMBER 1
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
124 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Brendan Ozawa-de Silva, Emory University
Brooke Dodson-Lavelle, Emory University A1-119 S
Andreas Doctor, Kathmandu University Comparative Religious Ethics Group
Wendy Hasenkamp, Emory University Marriott Marquis, L503
Responding: Anne R. Hansen, University of Wisconsin, Presiding
Martijn van Beek, Aarhus University Theme: Spatial, Narrative, and Embodied Production of Ethical Values
Faraz M. Sheikh, Indiana University
Practices of the Self in Muslim Moral Discourse: Authoritative
A1-117 Narratives, Emotions, and the Elusive Nature of Submission
Chinese Religions Group Jessica Wrobleski, Saint Mary’s College
Marriott Marquis, L508 The Space of Welcome: Ethics as Hospitality
Robert M. Gimello, University of Notre Dame, Presiding Irene Oh, George Washington University
Halal: Food, Gender, and Ethical Reflection in Modern Muslim
Theme: Repentance in Chinese Popular Religion
Communities
Mariko Namba Walter, Harvard University
“For the Sake of Not to Fall into Hell”: A Dunhuang Repentance Text Gabriel Robinson, University of Chicago
Cosmological Crossings and Christian Frames: Christian, Norse, and
Hudaya Kandahjaya, Numata Center for Buddhist Translation and Japanese Mythology in the Comic Series Lucifer
Research
The Origins of the Eighty-eight Buddhas Repentance Responding:
Elizabeth Bucar, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Kendall Marchman, University of Florida
Journey to the West: Personal Repentance for the Sake of All Business Meeting:
Beverley Foulks, University of North Carolina, Greensboro Jonathan Schofer, Harvard University, Presiding
Repentance Rituals for Eliminating Karma: The Penitential Practice of
Ouyi Zhixu (1599–1655)
Responding:
A1-120 S
D. Neil Schmid, North Carolina State University Contemporary Islam Group
Marriott Marquis, A602
Robert Rozehnal, Lehigh University, Presiding
A1-118
Theme: Mobilizing and Marketing Islam: Media, Technology, and
Christian Spirituality Group and Theology of Martin Luther Modernity
King Jr. Consultation Abbas Barzegar, Emory University
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom C Free Food and Martyrdom: Media Representations of the Islamic Right
in Iran’s Post-Election Crisis
Karen Jackson-Weaver, Princeton University, Presiding
Theme: Spirituality and the Civil Rights Movement Francis James Sanzaro, Syracuse University
Islam and the Architectural Avant Garde in Istanbul, Cairo, and
Peter Heltzel, New York Theological Seminary Dubai
The Mystical–Prophetic Spirituality of Howard Thurman and Martin
Luther King Jr. Robert Riggs, University of Pennsylvania
Global Networks, Local Concerns: Paradoxes in the Utilization of
J. Cayenne Claassen-Luttner, Emory University Emerging Technologies for Shi’i Religious Leaders
Co-opting Saint Martin? How a Radical Baptist Becomes an
Ecumenical Saint Edith Szanto, University of Toronto
Beyond Carnival and Spectacle: Contemporary Twelver Shi’i
John Roedel, Graduate Theological Union Muharram Rituals in Syria
Only the Samaritan Had Mercy: The Importance of Martin Luther
MONday, NovEMBER 1
King Jr.’s Moral Flaws for the Practice of Nonviolence Responding:
Luther E. Smith Jr., Emory University Kambiz GhaneaBassiri, Reed College
Howard Thurman: Spirituality as More Than an Implication Business Meeting:
Responding: Anna Bigelow, North Carolina State University, Presiding
Barbara A. Holmes, Memphis Theological Seminary
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 125
Program Sessions
Devotional Model Beth Eddy, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, and Eddie S. Glaude
Purushottama Bilimoria, Deakin and Melbourne Universities Jr., Princeton University, Presiding
How the Swamy Ayyappan Sect Captures Rural Imagination in the
South
Pankaj Jain, University of North Texas
How Can We Cut God’s Trees: Sacred Groves in Bhil Villages
Symbol Key:
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AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
126 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A1-125 A1-127 S
Reformed Theology and History Group Religion in Latin America and the Caribbean Group
Marriott Marquis, M105 Marriott Marquis, A702
Kang-Yup Na, Westminster College, Presiding Jennifer Scheper Hughes, University of California, Riverside,
Theme: Reformed Reflections on Mission Presiding
Joshua Ralston, Emory University Theme: Of Spirits and Virtual Bodies: New Research on the Crossings of
Gathered from All Nations: Refugees and Reformed Ecclesiology Body and Spirit in Latin American Religions
John Halsey Wood, Saint Louis University Sean O’Neil, University of Florida
John Livingston Nevius and the New Missions History Anointing Beyond the Grave? Assessing the Legacy of Padre Emiliano,
a Transnational Charismatic Catholic Priest
Shannon Nicole Smythe, Princeton Theological Seminary
The Apostolicity of Jesus Christ and Its Missional Correspondence in Katerina Kerestetzi, University Paris Ouest-Nanterre
Karl Barth’s Doctrine of Election Penetrating the World of the Dead: The Reproduction of Palo Monte’s
Religious Practice (Cuba)
David Y. Kim, Harvard University
Renovation of Citizenship and the Problem of the Erroneous Ramiro Jaimes Martínez, Universidad Autonoma de Baja,
Conscience California, and Rebecca Moore, San Diego State University
Religious Conversion and Rehabilitation: Neo-Pentecostal Treatment
Centers in Tijuana, Mexico
A1-126 Responding:
Mario I. Aguilar, University of Saint Andrews
Religion and Popular Culture Group
Business Meeting:
Marriott Marquis, M103-104
Jorge A. Aquino, University of San Francisco, and Jennifer Scheper
Lisle Dalton, Hartwick College, Presiding Hughes, University of California, Riverside, Presiding
Theme: 2-D Hierophanies: Religious Creativity and Cultural Critique in
Comic Books, Manga, Anime, and Graphic Novels
Catherine Prueitt, Emory University A1-128 C
In Medias Res: Tracing the Play of Divine Consciousness in
Revolutionary Girl Utena
Religion, Media, and Culture Group
Marriott Marquis, M302
Megan Goodwin, University of North Carolina
Conversion to Narrative: Magic as Religious Language in Grant Jonathan Boyarin, University of North Carolina, Presiding
Morrison’s Invisibles Theme: Responses to Jeremy Stolow’s Orthodox by Design
A. David Lewis, Boston University Panelists:
Ever-ending Battle: The Superhero Afterlife Subgenre and the Rupture Michele Rosenthal, University of Haifa
of Narrative Character
Shaul Magid, Indiana University
Andrew Tripp, Boston University
David Morgan, Duke University
Phallocracy in Alan Moore’s From Hell
John Durham Peters, University of Iowa
Franz Winter, University of Vienna
A Case Study in the Importance of the Manga-culture for Japanese Responding:
New Religions: The “Greek God” Hermes in Kōfuku no Kagaku Jeremy Stolow, Concordia University
MONday, NovEMBER 1
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 127
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
128 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Daniel Joslyn-Siemiatkoski, Graduate Theological Union
A1-133 Between Moriah and Golgotha: The Presence and Absence of the
Binding of Isaac in Traditions of the Maccabean Martyrs
Womanist Approaches to Religion and Society Group
Devorah Schoenfeld, Loyola University, Chicago
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom A The Near-sacrifice of Isaac in Medieval Christian Exegesis
Monique Moultrie, Vanderbilt University, Presiding Adam Ben Shea, Emory University
Theme: The Cultural Production of Femaleness in the Visual Arts The Binding that Ties: Ibrahim and the Intended Sacrifice
Pamela Lightsey, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary Responding:
“Ain’t Nothin’ An Old Man Can Do Fuh Me But…”: Moms Mabley Judith L. Bishop, Mills College
and the Need for Funny During the Civil Rights Movement
Business Meeting:
Tamura Lomax, Vanderbilt University
Tyler Perry’s Cinematic Theology and His Burden of Representation Martha Newman, University of Texas, Presiding
Zeena Regis, Columbia Theological Seminary
“I’m Not Here to Make Friends; I’m Here to Win”: Representations of
Black Female Friendships in Contemporary Christian Film
A1-136 S J
Tinesha J. Williams McNeill, Hillside, NJ Transhumanism and Religion Consultation
A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing: The Demystification of Tyler Perry’s Hyatt Regency, Hanover C
Subliminal Misogyny Calvin Mercer, East Carolina University, Presiding
Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan, Shaw University Theme: Perspectives on Human Enhancement
Signifying, Loving, and Relationality Embodied: Towards a Womanist
Theological Anthropology Amidst Selected Cultural Productions of Tyler Geoffrey Redmond, Center for Health Research
Perry Transhumanism: Ethical Insights from the Three Chinese Spiritual
Traditions
Kurt Miller, University of California, Santa Barbara
A1-134 When Humans Become Gods: Mormonism and Transhumanism
Michael Burdett, University of Oxford
Death, Dying, and Beyond Consultation N. F. Fedorov and Christian Transhumanism
Marriott Marquis, L504 Patrick D. Hopkins, Millsaps College
Lucy Bregman, Temple University, Presiding Transhumanism as a Theological Process
Theme: Spiritualism Joseph G. Wolyniak, University of Oxford
Corinne Dempsey, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point Transhumanism and the Baconian Project: The Theological Impetus for
The Curse and the Gift of Spirit Encounters in Contemporary Iceland Material Salvation
Nell Champoux, Syracuse University Business Meeting:
Approaching a World Beyond: Spiritualism and Death in the Thought Calvin Mercer, East Carolina University, Presiding
of William James
Cathy N. Gutierrez, Sweet Briar College
The Dead Tell of Dying: Reflections on Death in American
Spiritualism
Christa Shusko, York College of Pennsylvania
Beautiful Corpse: The Bones of Mary Cragin and the Acceptance of
Spiritualism in the Oneida Community
A1-135 S
MONday, NovEMBER 1
Religion in Europe and the Mediterranean World, 500–1650
CE Consultation
Marriott Marquis, L404
Constance Furey, Indiana University, Presiding
Theme: Interpreting Isaac and Ishmael across Religious Traditions
Deeana Klepper, Boston University
Isaac, Ishmael, and the Rejection of the Jews in Medieval Christian
Thought
Carol Bakhos, University of California, Los Angeles
Siblings and Rivals: Representations of Isaac and Ishmael in Jewish
and Muslim Sources
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 129
Program Sessions
spires that tower seventy-five feet. More than 12,300 tons of stone Tenzin Negi.
was quarried and shipped to the craftsmen in India. Then, the Tour fee: $30
nearly 35,000 pieces were shipped to Atlanta, where more than 900
volunteers dedicated their time in putting this marvel together.
Tour fee: $20
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
130 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Monday, 1:00 pm–3:30 pm
A1-141 J
Plenary Address A1-200 C H
Monday, 11:45 am–12:45 pm Special Topics Forum
Hyatt Regency, Centennial II-IV Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom C
Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara, Presiding Emmanuel Lartey, Emory University, Presiding
Theme: Anne Harrington: Religion and the Placebo Effect — Theme: Spiritual Practices, Religious Pluralism, and Theological
Historical Issues, Present-Day Challenges Education
We know that the human body sometimes Sponsored by the Theological Education Steering Committee
responds to a doctor’s reassuring words and the
solace of sugar pills as if they were real treatments. Contexts of theological education are increasingly pluralistic in terms
Medicine calls this “the placebo effect.” For the past of religious tradition and the diverse spiritual practices embraced by
decade, humanistic scholars of medical practice students and faculty. At the same time, “formation” as a dimension
have been interested in the complex, ambivalent of theological education remains an issue of deep significance. How
ways that medicine and medical science imagines should we attend to the rich pluralism of spiritual practice within
Anne Harrington
and employs this concept. contexts of theological education? What are the implications for how
we understand formation as a dimension of theological education?
What happens, though, when the concept of the placebo effect How might practical theology — and its analogues in diverse religious
is invoked as an explanation in contexts where the suffering traditions — provide resources for critical reflection upon spiritual
person has placed his or her faith, not in sugar pills or a fake practice, formation, and theological education? This session explores
injection, but in God’s divine mercy, or in the power of prayer? such questions through a dialogue with Jewish, Muslim, Buddhist, and
What changes? What is gained? What is at risk? We may not Christian scholars.
have to guess. Talk about the placebo effect can in fact be found
these days in a range of uneasy conversations at the boundaries Panelists:
of religion and medical science. We see it being invoked in Claire Wolfteich, Boston University
everything from arguments about the importance of the “faith Judith Simmer-Brown, Naropa University
factor” in healing, to projects designed to find out whether
prayer “really” works, to arguments that our brains are “wired” to Munir Jiwa, Graduate Theological Union
believe in God because doing so is good for our health. Where Or Rose, Hebrew College
did all these different conversations and projects come from?
How should we put the pieces together? And — most important
— what are the larger take home questions and challenges for
religious studies?
A1-201 O
Panelists: Wildcard Session
Anne Harrington, Harvard University Marriott Marquis, A708
Jonathan L. Walton, Harvard University, Presiding
Theme: What’s this “Religious” in Hip-Hop Culture? Shifting Theories
and Methods in the Study of African American Religion
A1-143 Recently published texts like KRS-One’s The Gospel of Hip Hop (Power
House Books, 2009) and Rza’s The Tao of Wu (Riverhead, 2009) make
Career Services Advisory Committee Meeting use of the religious in varied ways, and in part suggests something
Monday, 11:45 am–12:45 pm about how the religious is taken up in hip-hop cultural forms. While
Marriott Marquis, L501 it has been acknowledged that religious attention to hip-hop culture
is both important and necessary, left uninterrogated is a critical
Jessica Davenport, American Academy of Religion, Presiding examination of what the “religious” in hip-hop purports to do, and
more so, how attention to hip-hop necessitates a rethinking and
MONday, NovEMBER 1
retheorizing of the religious in African American religious studies. Is
A1-144 N D CANCELLED hip-hop changing theoretical formations of the religious in African
American religious studies, and if so, how? Through attention to this
Michael C. Carlos Museum Tour central question, this panel seeks to interrogate possible challenges
Monday, 12:30 am–4:00 pm to various theoretical foundations within African American religious
studies posed by the recent turn to hip-hop as both subject of study
and cultural hermeneutic.
Christopher Driscoll, Rice University
“Still Standing”: Hermeneutic of Style and Ethics of Perpetual
Rebellion as Liberative Praxis in the Work of Goodie Mob
Andre Willis, Yale University
Four Methods of African American Cultural Criticism: Scholarship on
Religion and Rap Music
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 131
Program Sessions
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AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
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Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
132 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Jonathan Young, Cornell University
A1-206 Monastic Politicians: Buddhist Monks in Twenty-first Century Sri
Lankan Government
North American Religions Section
Responding:
Marriott Marquis, M102
Mahinda Deegalle, Bath Spa University
Courtney Bender, Columbia University, Presiding
Theme: SeculaReligion: Moving Beyond the Secular/Religious Binary
Geoffrey Pollick, Drew University A1-209
The MassesPagan Revolt: Max Eastman and “Religion” among
Modern United States Radicals
Study of Islam Section
Marriott Marquis, Marquis Ballroom A
Healan Gaston, Harvard University
“A Pagan Philosophy from Abroad”: Secularism and Public Education Nargis Virani, The New School, Presiding
in the Interwar Catholic Imagination Theme: Law, Theology, and Politics
Benjamin Zeller, Brevard College Dale J. Correa, New York University
Science and Religion Beyond Scopes: When Physicists See the Light Between Reason and Revelation: The Theological Associations of Ijmā’
Responding: and Their Epistemological Ramifications
Tracy Fessenden, Arizona State University Nathan French, University of California, Santa Barbara
For the Benefit of Suicide? A Discussion of Martyrdom Operations
within Contemporary Fatwa Literature in the Digital Domain
A1-207 SherAli Tareen, Duke University
Can God Lie? Can God Produce a Second Muhammad? Intra-Muslim
Philosophy of Religion Section Polemics on the Boundaries of Divine and Prophetic Authority in
Marriott Marquis, A601 Nineteenth Century India
Sarah Hammerschlag, Williams College, Presiding Gregory Mack, McGill University
Theme: Post-Heideggerian Phenomenology of Religion The Modern Muhtasib: Religious Policing in the Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia
Bradley Onishi, University of California, Santa Barbara
The Hermeneutics of Absence: Marion’s Counter-experience and Philip Dorroll, Emory University
Bataille’s Inner Experience “The Turkish Understanding of Religion”: Sonmez Kutlu, Hanifi
Ozcan, and the Epistemology of Cultural and Religious Pluralism
Nathan Crawford, Loyola University, Chicago
Revelation as the Event of Attunement: A Reappropriation of
Heidegger through Marion
A1-210
Daniel Boscaljon, University of Iowa
Moving Beyond the Symbolic: The Material Potential of Post- Study of Judaism Section
Heideggerean Theology Marriott Marquis, L505
Troy Mack, Drew University Martin Kavka, Florida State University, Presiding
An Embodied History, Constantly Evolving: Embodiment, Evolution, Theme: Jewish Identity and Race in the United States
and Revelation in a Heideggerian Project
Sarah Imhoff, University of Chicago
Constructing the American Jewish Body: Medical, Racial, and Gender
Discourses
A1-208
Annalise Glauz-Todrank, University of California, Santa Barbara
Religion in South Asia Section How Racial Discourse Influences Jewish Legal Rights: An Analysis of
Marriott Marquis, M301 Three Cases
Ananda Abeysekara, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State Ruchama Johnston-Bloom, University of Chicago
MONday, NovEMBER 1
University, Presiding “I Declared Myself a Mutation”: Jewish Identity, Race, and Gender in
Theme: Taking Refuge in the State: Buddhists, Non-Buddhists, and the How I Became Hettie Jones
State in Contemporary Sri Lanka Aaron Gross, University of San Diego
Daniel W. Kent, Whitman College Idolaters are Not Called “Adam”
To Kill with Kindness: Buddhist Understandings of War and Responding:
Intentional Killing in Sri Lanka’s Civil War Nora L. Rubel, University of Rochester
Benjamin Schonthal, University of Chicago
Buddhism, Secularism, and the History of Religions in Sri Lanka’s
Constitutions
Oshan Fernando, East York, Ontario
(Re)Imagining the State: The Politics of Converting to Christianity in
Sri Lanka
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 133
Program Sessions
Cambodian America
Responding:
Edward K. Chan, Kennesaw State University
Symbol Key:
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AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
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Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
134 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A1-215 A1-218 S
Bible, Theology, and Postmodernity Group Comparative Theology Group
Marriott Marquis, A703 Marriott Marquis, A602
Anne Joh, Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary, Presiding Robert Smid, Curry College, Presiding
Theme: The Body of Christ Theme: Unacknowledged Pioneers of Comparative Theology
Panelists: Panelists:
Mark Lewis Taylor, Princeton Theological Seminary Karen Crozier, Fresno Pacific University
Shelly Rambo, Boston University Lawrence A. Whitney, Boston University
Adam Kotsko, Kalamazoo College Christian S. Krokus, University of Scranton
Jon L. Berquist, Westminster John Knox Press June-Ann Greeley, Sacred Heart University
Donald Wallenfang, Loyola University, Chicago
A1-216 S Responding:
Jay McDaniel III, Hendrix College
Bioethics and Religion Group Business Meeting:
Marriott Marquis, L504 Reid Locklin, University of Toronto, Presiding
Laura Kicklighter, Lynchburg College, Presiding
Theme: Four Religious Views for Four Bioethical Issues
Michal Raucher, Northwestern University
A1-219 S
Jewish Nazis: Abortion Ethics in Israel and the Rhetoric of the Critical Theory and Discourses on Religion Group
Holocaust
Marriott Marquis, M105
Purushottama Bilimoria, Deakin and Melbourne Universities
Jason C. Bivins, North Carolina State University, Presiding
A Hindu Bioethical Response: The Challenge of Euthanasia
Theme: Noncanonical Scholarship in the Study of Religion
Marcie Middlebrooks, Cornell University
Bioethics and Korean Buddhist Mobilizations around the Hwang Woo Brian Collins, University of Chicago
Suk Stem Cell Scandal Unmasking the Sovereign Sadist: Robert Eisler’s Man into Wolf
Raymond Ward, Boston College Alexander van der Haven, Webster University
Kathryn Tanner and John Milbank on Grace: Two Models for Scientific Immanence as Religion: Schreber as a Religious Thinker
Rationing Health Care Jeffrey J. Kripal, Rice University
Business Meeting: What We Have Damned: Reading (and Laughing with) Charles Fort
in Today’s Academy
Laura Kicklighter, Lynchburg College, Presiding
Paul Christopher Johnson, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
“Spirit Possession” and the Uses of Africa in the Work of Michel Leiris
A1-217 C and the Collège de Sociologie
Responding:
Buddhist Philosophy Group and Yogācāra Studies
Hugh B. Urban, Ohio State University, Columbus
Consultation
Business Meeting:
Marriott Marquis, A702
Jorunn Jacobsen Buckley, Bowdoin College, and Jens Kreinath,
A. Charles Muller, University of Tokyo, Presiding Wichita State University, Presiding
Theme: Philosophical Issues in the Madhyântavibhāga
Daniel McNamara, Emory University
MONday, NovEMBER 1
On the Status of the Trisvabhāvanirdeśa in Contemporary Conceptions
of Yogācāra Thought
Ching Keng, National Chengchi University
Two Models for the Three-Nature Theory in the Early Yogācāra
Tradition
Jonathan Gold, Princeton University
Mining Vasubandhu’s Commentary on the Madhyântavibhāga for
Yogācāra Philosophical Motives
Mario D’Amato, Rollins College
A Semiotic Soteriology: A Reading of Three Key Doctrines in
“Distinguishing the Middle from the Extremes”
Responding:
Robert M. Gimello, University of Notre Dame
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 135
Program Sessions
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AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
136 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A1-224 A1-226 S
Lesbian-Feminist Issues and Religion Group Platonism and Neoplatonism Group
Marriott Marquis, M108 Marriott Marquis, A701
Christine Libby, Indiana University, Presiding John Peter Kenney, Saint Michael’s College, Presiding
Theme: Carving Spaces for Lesbian–Feminist Identities in Religion Theme: Medieval Platonism: Islam and Christianity
Catherine Lafuente, Claremont Graduate University A. David Owen, Harvard University
Lesbianism and Islamic Law: Examining the Boundary Between Love Collaring the Dove: Ibn Hazm and the Reception of Plato’s
and Legality Symposium
Eziaku Nwokocha, University of California, Santa Barbara Shatha Almutawa, University of Chicago
Ezili Dantò: Rethinking Sexuality and Gender Discourse in Haitian Al-Farabi and Plato’s Laws
Vodou Danielle Dubois, Johns Hopkins University
Heike Peckruhn, Iliff School of Theology and University of Henological and Trinitarian Structures in Marguerite Porete’s Mirror
Denver of Simple Souls
Sexing Atonement: Irigarayan Readings of Otherness, Difference, and Ahmed Abdel Meguid, Emory University
the Cross The Platonic Origin of al-Junayd’s Conception of Islamic Monotheism
Jacob J. Erickson, Drew University as the Separation of the Transcendent and the Immanent
The Law Queers: Reimagining Luther’s Theology of Justification Business Meeting:
Marie Cartier, Claremont Graduate University John Peter Kenney, Saint Michael’s College, Presiding
“Theelogy”: The “Not Necessarily Christian Alternative” Available to
Pre-Stonewall Gay Women
Responding: A1-227 S
Susan E. Henking, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Religion and Disability Studies Group
Marriott Marquis, L401-402
A1-225 S J Deborah Creamer, Iliff School of Theology, Presiding
Nineteenth-Century Theology Group Theme: Disciplinary Perspectives on Disability
Marriott Marquis, M106-107 Julia Watts Belser, Missouri State University
Reading Talmudic Bodies: Disability, Narrative, and the Gaze in
Theodore Vial Jr., Iliff School of Theology, Presiding Rabbinic Judaism
Theme: Science, Secularism, and Values Taylor S. Hines, University of California, Santa Barbara
Robert Segal, University of Aberdeen Mastering the Body: Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century
E. B. Tylor’s Reconciliation of Religion with Science American Religious Healing, Contemporary Medicine, and the
Jeffrey A. Wilcox, Wabash College Othering of Disability
A “Manly” Religion: Paul Carus and the Religion of Science Robyn Neville, Emory University
Lori K. Pearson, Carleton College The Case for the Study of Disability in the Middle Ages: Debilitas and
Troeltsch on Religion, Secularity, and Cultural Values Its Representations
J. Thomas Howe, Regis University Mary E. Lowe, Augsburg College
Affirmations after God: Friedrich Nietzsche and Richard Dawkins on Disability Theology and Sin Redefined
Atheism Business Meeting:
Business Meeting: Deborah Creamer, Iliff School of Theology, Presiding
Lori K. Pearson, Carleton College, Presiding
MONday, NovEMBER 1
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 137
Program Sessions
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AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
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Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
138 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A1-232 S A1-234 S
Jain Studies Consultation Religion and Humanism Consultation
Marriott Marquis, M302 Hyatt Regency, Hanover E
Anne E. Monius, Harvard University, Presiding Verna Ehret, Mercyhurst College, Presiding
Theme: Jain Bodily Practices and Representations of the Body Theme: The Rhetorics of Humanism
Mari Jyvasjarvi, Harvard University Terence Martin, Saint Mary’s College
Adapting Ascetic Practices for the Female Body: The Case of Jain The Ironic Rhetoric of Erasmus
Monastic Texts Santiago Pinon, University of Chicago
Lisa Owen, University of North Texas Defending Human Rights Openly but Not Directly: Francisco Vitoria
Monastic Bodies: The Roles of Portraiture in Ellora’s Jain Caves and the Use of Rhetoric
Anne Vallely, University of Ottawa W. David Hall, Centre College
The Discursive and Phenomenological Body within Jainism Shades of Irony: Giambattista Vico’s Criticism of the Ironic Viewpoint,
M. Whitney Kelting, Northeastern University the (Post)Modern Glorification of the Ironist, and the Possibilities for a
Jinamatas: Pregnant with the Embodiments of Jainism Theological Reappropriation of Irony
Business Meeting: Douglas Harrison, Florida Gulf Coast University
The Repurpose Driven Life: Contemporary Evangelicalism’s Covert
Christoph Emmrich, University of Toronto, and Anne E. Monius, Appropriation of Humanism
Harvard University, Presiding
Responding:
Maria Antonaccio, Bucknell University
A1-233 S Business Meeting:
Music and Religion Consultation Glenn Whitehouse, Florida Gulf Coast University, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, M304
Philip Stoltzfus, United Theological Seminary of the Twin Cities,
Presiding
A1-235 S
Theme: Explorations in Music and Religion Religion and Sexuality Consultation
Dirk von der Horst, Claremont Graduate University Marriott Marquis, A706
Exegesis, Eroticism, and Experience in the Era of Electronic Heather White, New College of Florida, Presiding
Reproducibility: Two Performances of Thomas Tomkins’s Then David Theme: New Approaches to the Study of Religion and Sexuality
Mourned
John Anderson, Loyola University, Chicago
David M. Wilmington, Baylor University “Avowal,” Suspicion, and Homosexual Subjectivity in Mainline
Freedom and the Groove: Why Virtue Ethics Needs Jazz Improvisation Protestant Discourse
Christopher D. L. Johnson, University of Alabama Veena Rani Howard, University of Oregon
The Aesthetics of Nonsense: Compositional and Interpretive Creativity Gandhi’s Celibacy as Hermeneutics: Negotiating the Power of Virility
in the Meaningless Syllables of Byzantine Chant and Vulnerability for Women’s Issues
Joseph Ballan, University of Chicago Devin Kuhn, California Polytechnic State University
Vladimir Jankélévitch’s Apophatic Philosophy of Music Holy Jealousy and Divine Play? Ethical and Religious Considerations
Ferdia Stone-Davis, Ely, United Kingdom in Polyamorous Relationships
Music, Beauty, and Ekstasis Brent Hagerman, Wilfrid Laurier University
Business Meeting: Galong, Galong, Galong: Moral Regulation and the Art of Tracing in
the Music of Yellowman
Theodore Trost, University of Alabama, Presiding
MONday, NovEMBER 1
Responding:
Kent Brintnall, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Business Meeting:
Monique Moultrie, Vanderbilt University, Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 139
Program Sessions
A1-236 N D A1-300
Oakland Cemetery Tour Arts, Literature, and Religion Section
Monday, 1:00 pm–4:00 pm Marriott Marquis, A702
Meet in Hyatt Regency Lobby Sylvester Johnson, Indiana University, Presiding
Jill Petersen Adams, Syracuse University, Presiding Theme: Religion, Literature, and Ethnic Identity
Sponsored by the Death, Dying, and Beyond Consultation J. Stephen Pearson, University of Tennessee
Oakland, founded in 1850, exemplifies the nineteenth century “rural Fighting Racism with Spiritual Historiography: Biblical Typology in
garden” cemetery movement. It is the final resting place of many of Fray Angelico Chavez’s Stories
Atlanta’s most noted citizens. It is also a showplace of sculpture and David L. Simmons, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater
architecture, and a botanical preserve with ancient oaks and magnolias. Haiti on Her Mind: Hoodoo, Voodoo, and the Faust Myth in the
Here in this peaceful place, the full scope of the city’s rich and Writings of Zora Neale Hurston
fascinating history unfolds before you.
Cecilia Gonzalez-Andrieu, Loyola Marymount University
Tour fee: $15 Grito Hacia Roma/Cry Toward Rome, the Poet as Prophet
James Thrall, Knox College
A1-237 N D Women, Spirits, and Postcolonial Speculation in Nalo Hopkinson’s The
Salt Roads
SOLD OUT
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Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
140 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Christopher Holmes, University of Otago
Revelation in the Present Tense: On Rethinking Interpretation in A1-305
Light of the Prophetic Office of Jesus Christ
History of Christianity Section
Andrea C. White, Emory University
Womanist Hermeneutic of Revelation Marriott Marquis, M105
Rachel Muers, University of Leeds Nathan Baruch Rein, Ursinus College, Presiding
Truth is My Authority: Thinking Revelation as Testimony Theme: Christians and Torture, from Golgotha to Abu Ghraib: Victims,
Wayne Morris, University of Chester Voyeurs, and Perpetrators
Beyond the Written Text: Revelation in the Deaf Community David Tombs, Trinity College, Dublin
Crucifixion as Spectacular Torture and Gendered Violence
Michael Ostling, Central Michigan University
A1-303 Piety in the Torture Chamber: Hearing Christianity in the Testimony
of Accused Polish Witches
Comparative Studies in Religion Section
Denise Kettering, Brethren Historical Library and Archives
Marriott Marquis, L506 The Bloody Theater: Female Mennonite Martyrs on Display
Kevin Schilbrack, Western Carolina University, Presiding Haruko Nawata Ward, Columbia Theological Seminary
Theme: Interpretation, Explanation, and Clifford Geertz Beyond Torture to Paradise: Women Martyrs’ Claim of Spiritual
Robert Segal, University of Aberdeen Authority at the Closing of Japan’s Christian Century (1624–1650)
Clifford Geertz’s Interpretive Approach to Religion Sarah Sentilles, California State University, Channel Islands
Jung Lee, Northeastern University On Torture and Photography: How the Crucifixion Shapes
The Value of Reality: Geertz, Normativity, and the Comparative Study Understandings of and Responses to Violence Against “Others”
of Religions
Stephen Bush, Longmont, CO
Are Meanings the Name of the Game? Religion as Symbolic Meaning A1-306
and Religion as Power North American Religions Section
Witold Wolny, University of Virginia Marriott Marquis, M102
What, How, and Why: Geertzian Definition of Religion and
Neurotheological Project on Meta and Megatheology David Harrington Watt, Temple University, Presiding
Responding: Theme: Rhetorics of Progress: Science and Technology in the Making of
American Religions
Jason Springs, University of Notre Dame
Brandi Denison, University of North Carolina
Farming, Race, and Religion in the American West
A1-304 Jenna Tiitsman, Auburn Media and University of North Carolina
Kingdom Came: Oneida, the Telegraph, and American Utopia
Ethics Section Laurie Maffly-Kipp, University of North Carolina
Marriott Marquis, M101 African American Missionaries and the Material Display of
Jacob Robinson, Vanderbilt University, Presiding Civilization
Theme: The Ethics of Social Responses to “Natural” Disasters and Risks Randall Styers, University of North Carolina
William Schanbacher, Claremont Graduate University Superstition and Scientific Progress
Haiti: Failed Development Policy, Failed Justice, More of the Same to Responding:
Come, Maybe? Leigh E. Schmidt, Harvard University
Yvonne Zimmerman, Methodist Theological School, Ohio
Will the Pure in Heart See God? Ethics and Religiously Motivated
MONday, NovEMBER 1
“Relief Work” After the Haiti Earthquake
Aaron D. Conley, Iliff Seminary and University of Denver
Whose History Counts amidst a Hurricane of Societal Privilege?
Cassie Trentaz, Chicago Theological Seminary
Complicating “Risk”: “Risk Environments,” Religion, and HIV/AIDS
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 141
Program Sessions
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
142 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A1-312 S A1-314 C
Study of Judaism Section Theology and Religious Reflection Section and Liberation
Marriott Marquis, L505 Theologies Consultation
Shaul Magid, Indiana University, Bloomington, Presiding Marriott Marquis, A707
Theme: Jews, Judaism, and Race Mayra Rivera, Harvard University, Presiding
Heather Miller Rubens, University of Chicago Theme: Review of Néstor Míguez, Joerg Rieger, and Jung Mo Sung’s
Irish-Jews versus Anglo-Jews: Religion, Race, and Imitations of Beyond the Spirit of Empire: Theology and Politics in a New Key,
Empire Reclaiming Liberation Theology Series (London: SCM Press, 2009)
Jodi Eichler-Levine, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh Panelists:
“Weren’t Never Friends”: The Ruptures of Race, Religion, and Gender Victor Anderson, Vanderbilt University
in Tony Kushner’s Caroline, or Change Nancy Bedford, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary
Mari Rethelyi, University of Iowa Gary Dorrien, Union Theological Seminary and Columbia
Imagined Histories, Invented Identities: The Racial Option in Jewish University
Thought
Edward Phillip Antonio, Iliff School of Theology
Allison Schottenstein, University of Texas Responding:
Between Two Borders: “Rabbi” Sam Perl, Jewish Acculturation, and
Charro Days Joerg Rieger, Southern Methodist University
Business Meeting: Jung Mo Sung, Universidade Metodista, São Paulo
Aryeh Cohen, American Jewish University, and Shaul Magid,
Indiana University, Presiding
A1-315
Women and Religion Section
A1-313 H Marriott Marquis, A705
Teaching Religion Section Marcia C. Robinson, Syracuse University, Presiding
Marriott Marquis, L405-406 Theme: Women’s Voices: Rereading and Reconsidering Women’s Religious
Melanie L. Harris, Texas Christian University, Presiding Writings and Testimonies
Theme: Prevailing Structure, Countervailing Voice: The Dangerous Diane Segroves, Vanderbilt University
Religious Studies Classroom Appropriating Etty: Reading Religious Identity in the Writing of Etty
Hillesum
Miguel P. Conchas, University of the Incarnate Word, and Martha
Ann Kirk, University of the Incarnate Word Christina Busman, Princeton Theological Seminary
Christian–Muslim Encounters Through Using Online International Rereading God’s Fierce Whimsy: Embracing the Enduring
Exchanges in Undergraduate Religious Studies Classes Relevance of Dialogic Theology
Amy Weigand, Temple University Ji Li, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Problems as Solutions: Training the Critical Citizen through the World “Voici des Lettres de vos Filles”: Gender, Writing, and Religious
Religions Course Literacy in Nineteenth Century Rural China
Titus Hjelm, University College London Jessica Wilbanks, University of Houston
Contemporary Critique of Ideology in the Religion Classroom Old Wine in New Vessels: Situating the Testimony of Grace Ihere
within Nigeria’s Literary Tradition
Erin Michele Brigham, Graduate Theological Union
Creating a Public Space Through Community-based Learning Business Meeting:
Bret Lewis, Arizona State University Rosetta E. Ross, Spelman College, Presiding
Keeping Score on Religion: Quantifying the Impact of Religious Studies
MONday, NovEMBER 1
Courses on Undergraduate Attitudes
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 143
Program Sessions
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AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
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Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
144 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A1-320 S C A1-322
Law, Religion, and Culture Group Mysticism Group
Marriott Marquis, A706 Hyatt Regency, Hanover D
Jenna Gray-Hildenbrand, University of California, Santa Barbara, Rkia Elaroui Cornell, Emory University, Presiding
Presiding Theme: Mystical Paths in Islam
Theme: Author Meets Critics: Winnifred Fallers Sullivan’s Prison Mushegh Asatryan, Yale University
Religion: Faith-Based Reform and the Constitution (Princeton Mystical Shi’ism between the Two Occultations: “Kitab al-Sirat” and
University Press, 2009) its Milieu
Panelists: Rafal Stepien, Columbia University
Sarah Barringer Gordon, University of Pennsylvania The Mystic Poetry of ‘Aṭṭār Neishabūrī
Courtney Bender, Columbia University Sarwar Alam, Emory University
Kathleen Moore, University of California, Santa Barbara Encountering the Unholy: the Establishment of Political Parties by Sufi
David Sehat, Georgia State University Masters in Modern Bangladesh
Joshua Dubler, Columbia University F. Betul Yavuz, Rice University
The Hidden Belief in the Manifest God: Exploring Unconventional
W. Clark Gilpin, University of Chicago Currents of the Ottoman Sufi Thinking
Responding:
Winnifred Fallers Sullivan, State University of New York, Buffalo
Business Meeting: A1-323 M
Greg Johnson, University of Colorado, Presiding Religion and Ecology Group
Hyatt Regency, Hanover C
A1-321 S Lucas Johnston, Wake Forest University, Presiding
Theme: Engaging New Concepts in Religion and Ecology
Men, Masculinities, and Religions Group
Todd LeVasseur, University of Florida
Marriott Marquis, A704 Resiliency is the New “S” Word: Creativity at the Edge of Systems
Garth Kasimu Baker-Fletcher, Texas College, Presiding Daniel McFee, Mercyhurst College
Theme: Men and Masculinities in Christianity and Judaism: A Critical Jeffrey Stout, Epistemic Negligence, and Satisficing as Applied to Species
Response Depletion
Panelists: Norman Wirzba, Duke University
Amanullah De Sondy, Ithaca College A World of Priests: Learning to Receive and Give Again the Gift of
Creation
Rebecca Alpert, Temple University
Kwok Pui Lan, Episcopal Divinity School Julia Watts Belser, Missouri State University
Unmaking the Demonization of Paganism: An Ecofeminist Critique of
Ronald E. Long, Hunter College Idolatry Discourse in Jewish Environmental Thought
Responding: P. Joshua Griffin, Episcopal Diocese of California
Björn Krondorfer, Saint Mary’s College of Maryland The Ecological Death of God: Caputo’s “Event” in the Context of
Stephen B. Boyd, Wake Forest University Catastrophic Climate Change after Copenhagen
Business Meeting:
Robert A. Atkins Jr., Grace United Methodist Church, Naperville,
IL, Presiding
MONday, NovEMBER 1
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 145
Program Sessions
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
146 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
A1-328 A1-331 S
Theology and Continental Philosophy Group Mormon Studies Consultation
Marriott Marquis, A703 Hyatt Regency, Hanover AB
Claire Katz, Texas A&M University, Presiding James M. McLachlan, Western Carolina University, Presiding
Theme: Practice and Pedagogy Theme: The Mormon Jesus: Ruminations and Reflections
Theodore Dickinson, Syracuse University Sheila Taylor, Graduate Theological Union
Teaching with Fear and Trembling: The Classroom as a Space of “And the Word Was Made Flesh”: The Meaning of the Incarnation in
Dramatic and Bewildering Trial LDS Christology
Natalie Wigg, Vanderbilt University Richard Mouw, Fuller Theological Seminary
Beyond Candles and Casseroles: A Theory of Teaching as Practice The Mormon Jesus and the Nicene Christ
Luke Moorhead, Yale University Sharon Adams, University of Colorado
Pedagogy and/as Practice: Bourdieu and the Ambiguities of Religious Coming Face to Face with the “Mormon Jesus” through Paintings by Del
Study Parson, Greg Olsen, and Paul Grass
Kathleen Douglass, Iliff School of Theology and University of Douglas Davies, Durham University
Denver Mormonism and the Christological Spectrum
Foucault’s “Care of the Self ”: The Practice of Words in Becoming Undone Business Meeting:
Grant Underwood, Brigham Young University, Presiding
A1-329 S
Western Esotericism Group A1-332 S
Hyatt Regency, Hanover E North American Hinduism Consultation
Cathy N. Gutierrez, Sweet Briar College, Presiding Marriott Marquis, L507
Theme: The Commodification of the Esoteric Shreena Gandhi, Kalamazoo College, Presiding
Brian Bennett, Niagara University Theme: Constructions of Hinduism in North America
Alphabet Mysticism in Post-Soviet Russia
Caleb Simmons, University of Florida
Christa Shusko, York College of Pennsylvania Translating Culture Reimagining Religion: Virgin Comic’s Ramayan
The Commodification of Alchemy, or Paying to Smell like the Sacred 3392 AD, Misappropriation, and Native Intuition
Whore of Babylon
Michael J. Altman, Emory University
Andrew Ventimiglia, University of California, Davis “The Manners and Customs of Nations”: India in American Schoolbooks,
Failure to Circulate: Global Religious Media and the Obstacles of 1830–1860
International Copyright
Norris Palmer, Saint Mary’s College of California
Kenny Smith, Emory University Of Cows, Castes, Cartoons, and Classrooms: The Misconception of
The Healing Power of Giving…Money Hinduism in the American Popular Imagination
Shubha Pathak, American University
Re-embraced Gods, Temple Dances, and Stolen Gold: Looking at Hindu-
A1-330 Americans Through and Beside the Lens of Last Year’s Washington Post
Buddhism in the West Consultation Responding:
Marriott Marquis, M304 Joanne Punzo Waghorne, Syracuse University
Kimberly Beek, McMaster University, Presiding Business Meeting:
Theme: Current Research on North American Buddhism Shreena Gandhi, Kalamazoo College, and Jeffery D. Long,
MONday, NovEMBER 1
Laurie Cozad, University of Mississippi Elizabethtown College, Presiding
Hurricane Katrina: The Promise of Chaos
David Barnhill, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh
Kenneth Rexroth: Engaged Buddhism, Social Ecology, and Utopianism
Eric Ekstrand, University of Houston
A Unity in Complexity: The Influence of Chan on the Sensed, the
Imagined, and the Quizzical in Wallace Stevens
Gregory Grieve, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Sitting on a Virtual Cushion: Online Buddhist Meditation Methods in a
Second Life Cyber-Sangha
Business Meeting:
Jeff Wilson, University of Waterloo, Presiding
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 147
Program Sessions
A1-334 S A1-403
Pentecostal–Charismatic Movements Consultation
Special Topics Forums
Marriott Marquis, M106-107
Monday, 6:00 pm–8:00 pm
Valerie Cooper, University of Virginia, Presiding
Almeda Wright, Pfeiffer University, Presiding
Theme: Pentecostalism and the Political in Africa and Black America
Theme: Beyond the Boundaries Public Lecture Series III
Jonathan Burrow-Branine, Wichita State University
Possession and the Politics of Religious Experience in Pentecostal Communities Dong-Sik Park , Claremont Graduate University
The Pursuit of Harmony in Differences between Religion and Science
Stephen William Martin, King’s University College
African Christianity and the Coming of the City of God: An Dong-Sik Park applies Sri Aurobindo’s marvelous insight, “For all
Investigation of the Public Significance of African-initiated Churches problems of existence are essentially problems of harmony.” to the
in Contemporary South Africa debate of religion and science. Park argues that the debate of religion
and science seems to be that of dualisms: creation and evolution, of
Wilberforce O. Mundia, Shaw University, and Imali Abala, Ohio sacred and secular, of theism and atheism, or of believers and non-
Dominican University believers. For theists science is unholy.
Modes of Charismatic Testimony: Exploring Some Negative Effects of
For atheist religion is absurd. However, instead of following the
MONday, NovEMBER 1
Symbol Key:
AAR Award Winners Especially for Students Focus on Religion and Science Receptions and Breakfasts
AAR Centennial Sessions Films Business Meeting Sustainability and Religion
New Program Unit
Arts Series Focus on Australia/Oceania Tours
Professional Practices and Institutional
Books Under Discussion Focus on Atlanta, GA Location Sessions Wildcard Sessions
148 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
M1-402 K A1-401 E
Asbury Theological Seminary and Azusa Pacific University Film: Chaplains Under Fire
Reception Monday, 8:00 pm–10:00 pm
Monday, 7:00 pm–8:30 pm Hyatt Regency, Hanover AB
Hyatt Regency, Marietta Lee Adair Lawrence, Brooklyn, NY, Presiding
2010, directed by Lee Adair Lawrence and Terry Nickelson. 94
minutes.
M1-400
Are government rules against proselytizing preventing military
Society for Asian and Comparative Philosophy chaplains from praying in accordance with their faiths? Are care
chaplains violating the Constitution, viewing troops as “low-hanging
Monday, 7:30 pm–8:30 pm
fruit,” ripe for conversion? A new documentary, Chaplains Under Fire,
Hyatt Regency, Techwood goes behind the contradictory headlines to the heart of what chaplains
Steven Heine, Florida International University, Presiding do and the church-state tensions they face.
Theme: Body and Bioethics in Japan and Beyond: Rethinking William
LaFleur’s Approach and Influences
Ed Drott, University of Missouri
A1-402 K
Religion, the Body and Ethical Intuition in Japan: Reflections on the Program Unit Chairs and Steering Committee Reception
Cross-cultural Bioethics of William LaFleur Monday, 8:00 pm–10:00 pm
Vanessa Sasson, McGill University Hyatt Regency, AAR Suite
Imagining the Fetus: William LaFleur’s Influence on the Field
Program Unit Chairs and steering committee members are invited to a
Jeff Wilson, University of Waterloo reception celebrating their contributions to the AAR Annual Meeting.
From Scholarly Monograph to Performed Rite: Tracing the Influence of
William LaFleur’s Liquid Life on Ritual Activity in North America
Responding:
Damien Keown, Goldsmiths, University of London
A1-400 E
Film: Finding God in the City of Angels
Monday, 8:00 pm–10:00 pm
Hyatt Regency, Hanover D
Vincent Wimbush, Claremont Graduate University, and Jennifer
Jessum, Los Angeles, CA, and Simon Joseph, Los Angeles, CA,
Presiding
2010, directed by Jennifer Jessum. 116 minutes.
A documentary film reflecting the multicultural diversity of religious
life in the greater Los Angeles area, Finding God in the City of Angels
is a research project of the Institute for Signifying Scriptures, based
at Claremont Graduate University. The film presents and explores
the meaning of the wide variety of ways — in prayer, song, dance,
performance, visual art, storytelling, or preaching, and so forth — in
MONday, NovEMBER 1
which different communities signify and engage their “scriptures.” The
exploration focuses on diverse settings and types of communities —
from a small Skid Row church in downtown Los Angeles to a massive
Chinese Buddhist Temple in Hacienda Heights; from an Orthodox
Jewish synagogue on Venice Beach to an alternative religious group
that meets in a hair salon in Inglewood; from the first Indigenous
Peoples of Los Angeles to the Goddess Temple of Orange County —
and what their dynamics and performances tell us about a complex
social phenomenon.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 149
Academy Information
Much of the work of the Academy is accomplished through Board Members
its board, committees, and program units. These groups are Rebecca Alpert, Temple University
composed of individuals who contribute their time and talents Chair, Nominations Committee
to the AAR’s mission of fostering excellence in teaching
Donna Bowman, University of Central Arkansas
and scholarship in religion. For the ongoing vitality of the
Southwest Regionally Elected Director
Academy’s work, it is important to continually welcome new
voices into the conversation and to achieve a broad and diverse Miguel A. De La Torre, Iliff School of Theology
range of member participation in these leadership positions. Chair, Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in the
Profession Committee
Christopher Denny, Saint John’s University
NOMINATION FOR SERVICE IN THE AAR Mid-Atlantic Regionally Elected Director
Nominations for Elected Office Fred Glennon, Le Moyne College
Chair, Academic Relations Committee
Each year the Nominations Committee nominates persons
for election by the membership as a whole. Because terms Susan E. Hill, University of Northern Iowa
of office vary, not every position is open every year. The Upper Midwest Regionally Elected Director
Nominations Committee seeks the participation of the Mark Juergensmeyer, University of California, Santa
membership in their processes. Please send your suggestions Barbara
for nominations for elective office (along with a rationale) to Immediate Past President
the Nominations Committee in care of the AAR executive Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan, Shaw University
offices at nominations@aarweb.org. Chair, Publications Committee
Scott T. Kline, University of Waterloo
Nominations for Committee and Task Force Appointments
Eastern International Regionally Elected Director
Appointments to committees and task forces are made by
Elizabeth Lawson, Temple University
the president in consultation with the executive director. If
you want to nominate a colleague or yourself, please send a Student Director
letter explaining interest in serving on a particular committee, Tat-siong Benny Liew, Pacific School of Religion
participation in the AAR, academic and professional interests, Chair, International Connections Committee
and a C.V. to nominations@aarweb.org. Calls for nominations Susan M. Maloney, University of Redlands
to elective office and committee appointments are published Western Regionally Elected Director
regularly in Religious Studies News, on the AAR Website at
Charles Mathewes, University of Virginia
www.aarweb.org, and in the AAR e-Bulletins.
JAAR Editor
Douglas R. McGaughey, Willamette University
BOARD OF DIRECTORS Pacific Northwest Regionally Elected Director
Mary McGee, Alfred University
Officers Delegate, American Council of Learned Societies
Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara Kristy Nabhan-Warren, Augustana College
President Midwest Regionally Elected Director
Kwok Pui Lan, Episcopal Divinity School Rebecca Sachs Norris, Merrimack College
President-Elect New England–Maritimes Regionally Elected Director
Otto A. Maduro, Drew University John J. O’Keefe, Creighton University
Vice President Rocky Mountain–Great Plains Regionally Elected Director
Michel Desjardins, Wilfrid Laurier University Brian K. Pennington, Maryville College
Secretary Southeast Regionally Elected Director
David Thibodeau, Nashville, TN Sarah M. Pike, California State University, Chico
Treasurer Chair, Public Understanding of Religion Committee
John R. Fitzmier, American Academy of Religion Tina Pippin, Agnes Scott College
Executive Director Chair, Teaching and Learning Committee
Judith Plaskow, Manhattan College
Chair, Status of Women in the Profession Committee
150 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Academy Information
Nominations Committee
STANDING COMMITTEES
Rebecca Alpert, Chair, Temple University
Academic Relations Committee Linell E. Cady, Arizona State University
Fred Glennon, Chair, Le Moyne College Mark Juergensmeyer, University of California, Santa
Edwin David Aponte, Lancaster Theological Seminary Barbara
Joseph A. Favazza, Stonehill College Luis D. Leon, University of Denver
L. DeAne Lagerquist, Saint Olaf College Stacy L. Patty, Lubbock Christian University
Rosetta E. Ross, Spelman College Jonathan L. Walton, Harvard University
Steve Young, McHenry County College Program Committee
Executive Committee Michel Desjardins, Wilfrid Laurier University
Ann Taves, Chair, University of California, Santa Barbara Kwok Pui Lan, Episcopal Divinity School
Donna Bowman, University of Central Arkansas Otto A. Maduro, Drew University
Michel Desjardins, Wilfrid Laurier University Ellen Ott Marshall, Emory University
Fred Glennon, Le Moyne College Evelyn Parker, Southern Methodist University
Mark Juergensmeyer, University of California, Santa Michelene Pesantubbee, University of Iowa
Barbara Ann Taves, University of California, Santa Barbara
Kwok Pui Lan, Episcopal Divinity School
Public Understanding of Religion Committee
Otto A. Maduro, Drew University
Sarah M. Pike, Chair, California State University, Chico
Brian K. Pennington, Maryville College
Shaun Allen Casey, Wesley Theological Seminary
Sarah Pike, California State University, Chico
Diane Connolly, Coppell, TX
Finance Committee Jonathan Herman, Georgia State University
David Thibodeau, Chair, Nashville, TN Colleen McDannell, University of Utah
Donna Bowman, University of Central Arkansas Lawrence Mamiya, Vassar College
John J. O’Keefe, Creighton University
Publications Committee
Graduate Student Committee Cheryl A. Kirk-Duggan, Chair, Shaw University
Whitney Bauman, Chair, Florida International University Kimberly Rae Connor, Academy Series Editor, University
Steven Barrie-Anthony, University of California, Santa of San Francisco
Barbara Karen Jackson-Weaver, Teaching Religious Studies
Cameron Jorgenson, Campbell University Editor, Princeton University
Elizabeth Lawson, Temple University Jacob Kinnard, Religion, Culture, and History Editor, Iliff
School of Theology
Almeda Wright, Pfeiffer University
Charles Mathewes, JAAR Editor, University of Virginia
International Connections Committee Anne E. Monius, Religion in Translation Editor, Harvard
Tat-siong Benny Liew, Chair, Pacific School of Religion University
Edward Phillip Antonio, Iliff School of Theology Theodore Vial, Reflection and Theory in the Study of
Teresia Mbari Hinga, Santa Clara University Religion Editor, Iliff School of Theology
Tim Jensen, University of Southern Denmark Regions Committee
Xiaofei Kang, George Washington University Brian K. Pennington, Chair, Maryville College
Gilya Schmidt, University of Tennessee Susan E. Hill, University of Northern Iowa
Manuel A. Vasquez, University of Florida Scott T. Kline, Saint Jerome’s University
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 151
Status of Racial and Ethnic Minorities in the Profession Governance Task Force
Committee Jeffrey L. Stout, Cochair, Princeton University
Miguel De La Torre, Chair, Iliff School of Theology Emilie M. Townes, Cochair, Yale University
Akin Akinade, Georgetown University Rebecca Alpert, Temple University
Melanie L. Harris, Texas Christian University David Kyuman Kim, Connecticut College
Grace Ji-Sun Kim, Moravian Theological Seminary Robin W. Lovin, Southern Methodist University
James Logan, Earlham College Jacqueline Pastis, La Salle University
Nargis Virani, The New School Nelly Van Doorn-Harder, Wake Forest University
152 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Academy Information
Religion in the Schools Task Force Book Award Jury
Diane L. Moore, Chair, Harvard University Glen Stassen, Book Award Jury Coordinator, Fuller
Mark A. Chancey, Southern Methodist University Theological Seminary
Betty A. DeBerg, University of Northern Iowa Steven P. Hopkins, Analytical-Descriptive, Swarthmore
College
David Haberman, Indiana University
Ludger Viefhues-Bailey, Analytical-Descriptive, Le
Bruce B. Lawrence, Duke University
Moyne College
Stephanie McAllister, Brookline High School
Hugh B. Urban, Analytical-Descriptive, Ohio State
Status of LGBTIQ Persons in the Profession Task Force University
Melissa M. Wilcox, Chair, Whitman College Thomas A. Carlson, Constructive-Reflective, University
of California, Santa Barbara
Rudy V. Busto, University of California, Santa Barbara
Francis X. Clooney, Constructive-Reflective, Harvard
Horace Griffin, Pacific School of Religion University
Jennifer Harvey, Drake University Jennifer A. Herdt, Constructive-Reflective, Yale
Laurel C. Schneider, Chicago Theological Seminary University
Paul B. Courtright, Historical, Emory University
Sustainability Task Force
William K. Mahony, Historical, Davidson College
Barbara A. B. Patterson, Chair, Emory University
Judith Weisenfeld, Historical, Princeton University
Roger S. Gottlieb, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Barbara A. Holdrege, Textual, University of California,
Laurel D. Kearns, Drew University
Santa Barbara
Isabel Mukonyora, Western Kentucky University
Mignon R. Jacobs, Textual, Claremont Graduate School
John J. O’Keefe, Creighton University
Andrew Rippin, Textual, University of Victoria
Theological Education Steering Committee
History of Religion Jury
John Thatamanil, Chair, Vanderbilt University
Pamela Klassen, Chair, University of Toronto
Daniel A. Aleshire, Association of Theological Schools
Ebrahim E. I. Moosa, Duke University
James A. Donahue, Graduate Theological Union
Louis A. Ruprecht, Georgia State University
David H. Kelsey, Yale University
Emmanuel Lartey, Spotlight Editor, Emory University Religion and the Arts Award Jury
Paul Lim, Vanderbilt University S. Brent Plate, Chair, Hamilton College
Anantand Rambachan, Saint Olaf College Diane Apostolos-Cappadona, Georgetown University
Stephen G. Ray, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Norman J. Girardot, Lehigh University
Seminary Sally M. Promey, Yale University
Claire Wolfteich, Boston University
Research Grants Jury
Technology Task Force Julius Bailey, University of Redlands
Donna Bowman, Cochair, University of Central Arkansas James L. Ford, Wake Forest University
Mark Juergensmeyer, Cochair, University of California, Amir Hussain, Loyola Marymount University
Santa Barbara Kathleen M. Sands, University of Hawai’i, Manoa
Elonda Clay, Lutheran School of Theology
David S. Cunningham, Hope College
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 153
Study of Islam
Program Unit Chairs
Kecia Ali, Boston University
Sections Ahmet T. Karamustafa, Washington University, Saint
Louis
Arts, Literature, and Religion
Diane Apostolos-Cappadona, Georgetown University Study of Judaism
Eric Ziolkowski, Lafayette College Aryeh Cohen, American Jewish University
Shaul Magid, Indiana University
Buddhism
Janet Gyatso, Harvard University Teaching Religion
Charles Hallisey, Harvard University Joseph A. Favazza, Stonehill College
Carolyn Medine, University of Georgia
Christian Systematic Theology
Gerard Loughlin, Durham University Theology and Religious Reflection
Joy McDougall, Emory University Susan Abraham, Harvard University
Mayra Rivera, Harvard University
Comparative Studies in Religion
Kimberley C. Patton, Harvard University Women and Religion
Tracy Pintchman, Loyola University, Chicago Michelene Pesantubbee, University of Iowa
Rosetta E. Ross, Spelman College
Ethics
Miguel A. De La Torre, Iliff School of Theology
Groups
Stacey M. Floyd-Thomas, Vanderbilt University
African Religions
History of Christianity
Laura Grillo, Pacifica Graduate Institute
Martha Finch, Missouri State University
Tapiwa Mucherera, Asbury Theological Seminary
Nathan Rein, Ursinus College
Afro-American Religious History
North American Religions
Anthea Butler, University of Pennsylvania
Rudy V. Busto, University of California, Santa Barbara
Kathryn Lofton, Yale University
Kathleen Flake, Vanderbilt University
Anthropology of Religion
Philosophy of Religion
J. Shawn Landres, Jumpstart/Project on Emergent
Joseph Prabhu, California State University, Los Angeles,
Religious and Social Entrepreneurship
and University of Chicago
Margarita M. W. Suarez, Meredith College
Ludger Viefhues-Bailey, Le Moyne College
Asian North American Religion, Culture, and Society
Religion and Politics
Nami Kim, Spelman College
Andrew Murphy, Rutgers University
Michael Masatsugu, Towson University
Susan B. Thistlethwaite, Chicago Theological Seminary
Augustine and Augustinianisms
Religion and the Social Sciences
Phillip Cary, Eastern University
Kelly Bulkeley, Graduate Theological Union
Kari Kloos, Regis University
Carol B. Duncan, Wilfrid Laurier University
154 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Academy Information
Comparative Theology
Groups (continued)
Reid Locklin, University of Toronto
Kurt Anders Richardson, McMaster University
Bible in Racial, Ethnic, and Indigenous Communities
Valerie Bridgeman, Lancaster Theological Seminary Confucian Traditions
Fernando F. Segovia, Vanderbilt University Keith Knapp, The Citadel
Thomas A. Wilson, Hamilton College
Bible, Theology, and Postmodernity
Jon L. Berquist, Westminster John Knox Press Contemporary Islam
Anne Joh, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Seminary Anna Bigelow, North Carolina State University
Amir Hussain, Loyola Marymount University
Bioethics and Religion
Swasti Bhattacharyya, Buena Vista University Contemporary Pagan Studies
Laura Kicklighter, Lynchburg College Wendy Griffin, California State University, Long Beach
Michael York, Academy for Cultural and Educational
Black Theology
Studies, London, United Kingdom
Monica A. Coleman, Claremont School of Theology
Stephen G. Ray, Garrett-Evangelical Theological Critical Theory and Discourses on Religion
Seminary Jorunn Jacobsen Buckley, Bowdoin College
Jens Kreinath, Wichita State University
Bonhoeffer: Theology and Social Analysis
Joel Lawrence, Bethel Seminary Cultural History of the Study of Religion
Jennifer McBride, Emory University Tomoko Masuzawa, University of Michigan
Randall Styers, University of North Carolina
Buddhist Critical–Constructive Reflection
Roger Jackson, Carleton College Daoist Studies
John J. Makransky, Boston College Xun Liu, Rutgers University
Gil Raz, Dartmouth College
Buddhist Philosophy
Daniel A. Arnold, University of Chicago Eastern Orthodox Studies
Parimal G. Patil, Harvard University Paul Gavrilyuk, University of Saint Thomas
Eve Tibbs, Fuller Theological Seminary
Chinese Religions
James A. Benn, McMaster University Ecclesiological Investigations
Mark Halperin, University of California, Davis Michael A. Fahey, Boston College
Gerard Mannion, Katholieke Universiteit, Leuven
Christian Spirituality
Tim Hessel-Robinson, Brite Divinity School Evangelical Theology
Elizabeth Liebert, San Francisco Theological Seminary Candy Gunther Brown, Indiana University
Michael J. McClymond, Saint Louis University
Comparative Religious Ethics
Jonathan Schofer, Harvard University Feminist Theory and Religious Reflection
Aaron Stalnaker, Indiana University Rita M. Gross, University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire
Christine E. Gudorf, Florida International University
Comparative Studies in Hinduisms and Judaisms
Yudit K. Greenberg, Rollins College Gay Men and Religion
Karen Pechilis, Drew University Paul J. Gorrell, Stockton, NJ
Peter Savastano, Seton Hall University
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 155
Hinduism New Religious Movements
Timothy Lubin, Washington and Lee University Douglas E. Cowan, University of Waterloo
Vijaya Nagarajan, University of San Francisco
Nineteenth Century Theology
Indigenous Religious Traditions Lori K. Pearson, Carleton College
Suzanne Owen, Leeds Trinity
Platonism and Neoplatonism
Jace Weaver, University of Georgia
Douglas Hedley, University of Cambridge
Islamic Mysticism John Peter Kenney, Saint Michael’s College
Omid Safi, University of North Carolina
Practical Theology
Laury Silvers, University of Toronto
Thomas Beaudoin, Fordham University
Japanese Religions Joyce Ann Mercer, Virginia Theological Seminary
Barbara Ambros, University of North Carolina
Pragmatism and Empiricism in American Religious
James L. Ford, Wake Forest University
Thought
Kierkegaard, Religion, and Culture Beth Eddy, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
Andrew J. Burgess, University of New Mexico Eddie S. Glaude, Princeton University
Sylvia Walsh, Stetson University
Psychology, Culture, and Religion
Korean Religions Kirk A. Bingaman, Fordham University
Timothy S. Lee, Brite Divinity School Hetty Zock, University of Groningen
Jin Y. Park, American University
Qur’an
Latina/o Religion, Culture, and Society Anna M. Gade, University of Wisconsin
Néstor Medina, Queen’s Theological College Gordon D. Newby, Emory University
Carmen Marie Nanko-Fernandez, Catholic Theological
Reformed Theology and History
Union
Martha L. Moore-Keish, Columbia Theological Seminary
Law, Religion, and Culture Kang-Yup Na, Westminster College
Greg Johnson, University of Colorado
Religion and Disability Studies
Lesbian-Feminist Issues and Religion Deborah Creamer, Iliff School of Theology
Yvonne Zimmerman, Methodist Theological School,
Ohio Religion and Ecology
Whitney Bauman, Florida International University
Men, Masculinities, and Religions A. Whitney Sanford, University of Florida
Robert A. Atkins, Grace United Methodist Church,
Naperville, IL Religion and Popular Culture
Garth Kasimu Baker-Fletcher, Texas College Lisle Dalton, Hartwick College
Gregory Grieve, University of North Carolina,
Mysticism Greensboro
Thomas Cattoi, Graduate Theological Union
Laura Weed, College of Saint Rose Religion in Latin America and the Caribbean
Jorge A. Aquino, University of San Francisco
Native Traditions in the Americas Jennifer Scheper Hughes, University of California,
Mary C. Churchill, Sonoma State University Riverside
Kenneth Mello, Southwestern University
156 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Academy Information
Tantric Studies
Groups (continued)
Loriliai Biernacki, University of Colorado
Sthaneshwar Timalsina, San Diego State University
Religion, Film, and Visual Culture
John Lyden, Grand View University Theology and Continental Philosophy
Rachel Wagner, Ithaca College Ellen T. Armour, Vanderbilt University
Bruce Ellis Benson, Wheaton College
Religion, Holocaust, and Genocide
Laura S. Levitt, Temple University Tibetan and Himalayan Religions
Katharina von Kellenbach, Saint Mary’s College of Frances Garrett, University of Toronto
Maryland Andrew Quintman, Yale University
Religion, Media, and Culture Tillich: Issues in Theology, Religion, and Culture
Lynn Schofield Clark, University of Denver Sharon Peebles Burch, Interfaith Counseling Center
Jenna Tiitsman, University of North Carolina and Russell Re Manning, University of Cambridge
Auburn Media
Wesleyan Studies
Religions, Medicines, and Healing
Rex D. Matthews, Emory University
Linda L. Barnes, Boston University
Priscilla Pope-Levison, Seattle Pacific University
Suzanne J. Crawford O’Brien, Pacific Lutheran University
Western Esotericism
Religions, Social Conflict, and Peace
Allison P. Coudert, University of California, Davis
Jon Pahl, Lutheran Theological Seminary, Philadelphia
Cathy N. Gutierrez, Sweet Briar College
Marla J. Selvidge, University of Central Missouri
Womanist Approaches to Religion and Society
Ritual Studies
Tracey Hucks, Haverford College
Sarah Haynes, Western Illinois University
Linda E. Thomas, Lutheran School of Theology, Chicago
Ute Huesken, University of Oslo
World Christianity
Roman Catholic Studies
Peter C. Phan, Georgetown University
Jeannine Hill Fletcher, Fordham University
Jane Carol Redmont, Guilford College
Daniel Speed Thompson, Saint Mary’s University
Liberation Theologies
Consultations Thia Cooper, Gustavus Adolphus College
African Diaspora Religions Martin Luther and Global Lutheran Traditions
Maha Marouan, University of Alabama Hans J. Hillerbrand, Duke University
Animals and Religion Deanna A. Thompson, Hamline University
David Aftandilian, Texas Christian University Middle Eastern Christianity
Aaron Gross, University of San Diego Mark Swanson, Lutheran School of Theology, Chicago
Body and Religion Nelly Van Doorn-Harder, Wake Forest University
Richard M. Carp, Appalachian State University Mormon Studies
Rebecca Sachs Norris, Merrimack College James M. McLachlan, Western Carolina University
Buddhism in the West Grant Underwood, Brigham Young University
Jeff Wilson, University of Waterloo Music and Religion
Childhood Studies and Religion Philip Stoltzfus, United Theological Seminary of the
Twin Cities
John Wall, Rutgers University
Theodore Trost, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
Laurie Zoloth, Northwestern University
158 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Academy Information
Religion and Colonialism Scriptural/Contextual
Caleb Elfenbein, Grinnell College Ethics
Mark Elmore, University of California, Davis David P. Gushee, Mercer University
Amy Laura Hall, Duke University
Religion and Humanism
W. David Hall, Centre College Sex, Gender, and Sexuality in Premodern Christianity
Glenn Whitehouse, Florida Gulf Coast University Carly Daniel-Hughes, Concordia University
Ben Dunning, Fordham University
Religion and Migration
Marie Marquardt, Agnes Scott College Sikh Studies
Jennifer B. Saunders, Capital University Michael Hawley, Mount Royal University
Nikky Singh, Colby College
Religion and Sexuality
Monique Moultrie, Vanderbilt University Sociology of Religion
Heather White, New College of Florida Titus Hjelm, University College, London
Religion Education in Public Schools: International Space, Place, and Religious Meaning
Perspectives Jeanne Halgren Kilde, University of Minnesota
Bruce Grelle, California State University, Chico Leonard Norman Primiano, Cabrini College
Tim Jensen, University of Southern Denmark
Theology and the Political
Religion in Europe Hent de Vries, Johns Hopkins University
Robert Alvis, Saint Meinrad School of Theology Corey D. B. Walker, Brown University
Andrii Krawchuk, University of Sudbury
Theology of Martin Luther King Jr.
Religion in Europe and the Mediterranean World, Johnny B. Hill, Louisville Presbyterian Theological
500–1650 CE Seminary
Constance Furey, Indiana University
Transformative Scholarship and Pedagogy
Martha Newman, University of Texas
Shannon Craigo-Snell, Yale University
Religion in Southeast Asia Gabriella Lettini, Starr King School for the Ministry
Jason Carbine, Whittier College
Transhumanism and Religion
Religion, Memory, History Calvin Mercer, East Carolina University
Anne Murphy, University of British Columbia
Women of Color Scholarship, Teaching, and Activism
David Reinhart, University of Wisconsin, Whitewater
Katie G. Cannon, Union Presbyterian Seminary
Religious Conversions Andrea Smith, University of California, Riverside
Alexander Y. Hwang, Louisville Presbyterian Theological
Yoga in Theory and Practice
Seminary
Andrew J. Nicholson, Stony Brook University
Linda A. Mercadante, Methodist Theological School,
Ohio Stuart R. Sarbacker, Oregon State University
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 159
1980 William Clebsch, Stanford University
AAR PRESIDENTS
1979 Langdon Gilkey, University of Chicago
2010 Ann Taves, University of California, Santa 1978 John Meagher, Saint Michael’s College,
Barbara University of Toronto
2009 Mark Juergensmeyer, University of 1977 Schubert Ogden, Southern Methodist
California, Santa Barbara University
2008 Emilie M. Townes, Yale University 1976 Preston Williams, Harvard University
2007 Jeffrey L. Stout, Princeton University 1975 William May, Indiana University
2006 Diana L. Eck, Harvard University 1974 Christine Downing, Rutgers University
2005 Hans J. Hillerbrand, Duke University 1973 Charles Long, University of Chicago
2004 Jane Dammen McAuliffe, Georgetown 1972 Robert Michaelson, University of
University California, Santa Barbara
2003 Robert A. Orsi, Harvard University 1971 James Burtchaell, University of Notre
2002 Vasudha Narayanan, University of Florida Dame
2001 Rebecca Chopp, Yale University 1970 Claude Welch, University of Pennsylvania
2000 Ninian Smart, University of California, 1969 Jacob Neusner, Brown University
Santa Barbara 1968 J. Wesley Robb, University of Southern
1999 Margaret Miles, Graduate Theological California
Union 1967 John Priest, Hartford Seminary
1998 Judith Plaskow, Manhattan College Foundation
1997 Robert Detweiler, Emory University 1966 William Hordern, Garrett Theological
Seminary
1996 Lawrence Sullivan, Harvard University
1965 James Price, Duke University
1995 Peter Paris, Princeton University
1964 Ira Martin, Berea College
1994 Catherine Albanese, University of
California, Santa Barbara
1993 Edith Wyschogrod, Rice University NABI PRESIDENTS
1992 Robert Neville, Boston University
1963 Clyde A. Holbrook
1991 Judith Berling, Graduate Theological
1962 Fred D. Gealy
Union
1961 Robert V. Smith
1990 Elizabeth Clark, Duke University
1960 Lionel Whiston Jr.
1989 Robert Wilken, University of Virginia
1959 Lauren Brubaker Jr.
1988 Martin Marty, University of Chicago
1958 H. Neil Richardson
1987 John Dillenberger, Graduate Theological
Union 1957 Robert M. Montgomery
1986 Nathan Scott, University of Virginia 1956 A. Roy Eckardt
1985 Wendy Doniger (O’Flaherty), University 1955 Arthur C. Wickenden
of Chicago 1954 W. Gordon Ross
1984 Ray Hart, University of Montana 1953 Carl E. Purinton
1983 Wilfred Cantwell Smith, Harvard 1952 Charles S. Braden
University
1951 Mary Francis Thelen
1982 Gordon Kaufman, Harvard University
1950 Virginia Corwin
1981 Jill Raitt, University of Missouri
160 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Academy Information
1949 Selby V. McCasland
RELATED
1948 Dwight M. Beck
SCHOLARLY ORGANIZATIONS
1947 Rolland E. Wolfe
1946 J. Paul Williams African Association for the Study of Religions
1945 Mary Ely Lyman The African Association for the Study of Religions (AASR)
is an academic association of scholars of religions posted
1944 Floyd V. Filson in universities in Africa, and of scholars of the religions of
1942-1943 Edgar S. Brightman Africa posted in universities outside of Africa. It was founded
1941 Katherine H. Paton at an IAHR (International Association for the History of
Religions) conference in Harare, Zimbabwe, in September
1940 B. Harvie Branscomb 1992 for the purpose of promoting the academic study of
1939 William Scott religions in Africa and the study of the religions of Africa
1938 Mary E. Andrews more generally through the international collaboration of
all scholars whose research has a bearing on the subject.
1937 Frank G. Lankard AASR seeks to stimulate the academic study of religions in
1936 S. Ralph Harlow Africa in a variety of ways: providing a forum for multilateral
1935 Florence M. Fitch communications between scholars of African religions;
facilitating the exchange of resources and information;
1934 Elmer W. K. Mould and encouraging the development of linkages and research
1933 James Muilenberg contacts between scholars and institutions in Africa and
1932 Chester Warren Quimby between scholars in Africa and those overseas. AASR also
endeavors to assist scholars to publish their work and travel
1931 Laura H. Wild to professional meetings. The AASR has been an affiliate of
1930 Irwin R. Beiler the IAHR since 1995. It meets at the IAHR quinquennial
1929 Ralph K. Hickok congresses and organizes conferences in Africa. Its members
participate in panels at conferences outside of Africa. AASR
1928 Walter W. Haviland publishes the biannual AASR Bulletin and maintains a web site
1927 Eliza H. Kendrick at www.a-asr.org.
1926 Irving F. Wood
Association of Practical Theology
1910-1925 Charles Foster Kent
The purpose of the Association of Practical Theology (APT)
is to promote critical reflection on theology and practice.
EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS Reconstituted from its predecessor organizations in 1984,
APT was sparked by the understanding of practical theology
2006– John R. Fitzmier as an integrative hermeneutical endeavor at the heart of
1991–2006 Barbara DeConcini theological education that includes critical examination
of religious traditions and practices and exploration of the
1983–1991 James B. Wiggins contributions of ministerial subdisciplines. APT meets
1979–1982 Charles E. Winquist annually in conjunction with AAR and biennially for a
1976–1979 John F. Priest three-day conference. APT meetings at the AAR Annual
Meeting draw national and international scholars from a
1973–1975 Robert A. Spivey variety of disciplines (members of APT and nonmembers)
1970–1972 Harry M. Buck and the biennial meeting allows for more in-depth study of
specific issues and the conduct of official business. APT posts
proceedings, membership information, and other news on
its website (www.practicaltheology.org) and welcomes new
members from all areas of religious and theological study.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 161
Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies Christian Theological Research Fellowship
The Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies of the United The Christian Theological Research Fellowship is a
States Holocaust Memorial Museum supports scholarship and distinctively Christian research organization in systematic
publications in the field of Holocaust studies, promotes the and moral theology and related disciplines. The society
growth of Holocaust studies at American universities, seeks to exists to promote and sustain fellowship and truth-seeking
foster strong relationships between American and international (fides quaerens intellectum) in theological reflection upon
scholars, and initiates programs to ensure the ongoing the Christian faith, within the mainstream of the Christian
training of future generations of scholars specializing in the tradition. We see ourselves as a spiritual fellowship in service
HolocauSaint The Center accomplishes its mission through to the Church of Messiah Jesus.
sponsorship of fellowship opportunities; seminars for teaching
faculty at the college and university levels; research projects Colloquium on Violence and Religion
and publications; summer research workshops, conferences, The Colloquium on Violence and Religion is an international
lectures, and symposia; and the evaluation, collection, and association of scholars founded in 1990. It is dedicated
making available of Holocaust-related archival materials. to the exploration, criticism, and development of René
The Committee on Church Relations and the Holocaust, an Girard’s mimetic model of the relationship between violence
integral part of the Center, serves as a resource for individuals and religion in the genesis and maintenance of culture. In
and groups grappling with the ethical and philosophical issues promoting research in mimetic theory, COVandR welcomes
raised by the Holocaust and contemporary antisemitism, and scholars and others from diverse fields and theoretical
through its panels, symposia, and workshops investigates the orientations who are interested in the foundational role of
relationship of the Holocaust to the past history and future imitation in individual human lives and cultures. In addition
potential of Jewish/Christian relations. to gathering at the Annual Meeting of the American
Academy of Religion, the Colloquium meets each summer,
Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of Monotheistic alternating between North American and European venues.
Religions COVandR’s publications include a website (www.uibk.
The Center for Interdisciplinary Study of Monotheistic ac.at/theol/cover/); a book series, Studies in Violence, Mimesis,
Religions (CISMOR), established in 2003, conducts and Culture, published by Michigan State University Press;
comprehensive and interdisciplinary research and educational the journal Contagion; and a biannual newsletter, Bulletin
activities related to the monotheistic world. It fosters of the Colloquium on Violence and Religion. The coordinator
specialists who can help to achieve coexistence among of COVandR at the AAR is Martha Reineke, University
different civilizations and at the same time makes the results of Northern Iowa, martha.reineke@uni.edu. COVandR
of its research available to the world at large, with the goal of membership information can be found at www.uibk.ac.at/
becoming a mediator between the Islamic, Judaic, and Christian theol/cover/membership/.
worlds. Although the three Abrahamic religions that originated
in the Middle East — Judaism, Christianity, and Islam — are European Society of Women in Theological Research
closely related as brothers, Western countries have a long Founded in 1986 in Switzerland, ESWTR is a scholarly
history of repeated conflicts and antagonism with the Islamic network of women scholars in theological research and
world. In order to achieve peace, security, and the coexistence of religious studies. Currently, the Society has more than 500
civilizations in today’s world, we must undertake comprehensive members who come from different religious, denominational,
and interdisciplinary educational and research activities from national, and academic backgrounds. ESWTR provides
a civilizational perspective. CISMOR is unlike any other the opportunity for women researchers from the European
research institute in the world because it centralizes in-depth continent to meet and to dialogue with each other at biannual
interdisciplinary research on all three Abrahamic religions and international conferences held in different European countries.
also because of its unique location in Japan, a country that is Conference themes raise important issues in feminist
free of historical or cultural constraints on such studies, thus theological and religious research. During the year in which
allowing the institute to take an entirely objective point of view. no international meeting takes place, members meet nationally
Research on Abrahamic religions is still a comparatively new or regionally. Currently, country or regional groups exist in
field in Japan, and there is a lot to be learned. By increasing Austria, Belgium, Britain, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic,
our understanding of Abrahamic religions, we will at the same Denmark, Finland, France, Republic of Georgia, Greece,
time contribute to a deeper understanding of Japanese religion. Germany, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania,
We try to find the way to contribute to the reform of the The Netherlands, Norway, Northern America, Palestine,
Abrahamic religions from the standpoint of Japanese religiosity. Poland, Rumania, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland.
162 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Academy Information
Membership is open to women engaged in the academic study International Society for
of theology, religious studies, and related areas. They may live Chinese Philosophy
and work in Europe, hold a European passport, or may be The International Society for Chinese Philosophy (ISCP) is
admitted after special consideration by the Board. Members a nonprofit organization formed for the purpose of uniting
receive the ESWTR Newsletter and the annually published persons affiliated with the study and research of Chinese
Journal of the ESWTR. philosophy or interested in promoting the study and research
of Chinese philosophy in both academic and nonacademic
Evangelical Philosophical Society circles. By “Chinese philosophy,” it is meant the whole
The mission of the Evangelical Philosophical Society is to philosophical tradition and heritage within the span of
glorify God through a biblically faithful pursuit of philosophy Chinese history and the spectrum of Chinese civilization. The
by fostering the use of the mind to understand God and the term “Chinese philosophy” also connotes the areas of logical,
world He created and encouraging and enabling evangelical metaphysical, ethical, aesthetical, and epistemological thinking
philosophers as they engage philosophical and spiritual issues and reflection in reference to the Chinese philosophical
in the academy, church, and culture. tradition and heritage, Chinese language, Chinese society,
and Chinese civilization. The Society organizes and sponsors
Highlands Institute for American Religious and conferences and conference panels on Chinese philosophy. Its
Philosophical Thought official journal is the Journal of Chinese Philosophy (Blackwell
The Highlands Institute for American Religious and Publishers, Inc.). ISCP also sponsors and cosponsors
Philosophical Thought is a community of productive scholars, philosophical, educational, cultural, or scientific activities
with diverse theological and philosophical perspectives. The in cooperation with educational, cultural, philosophical, or
Institute contributes to the academic study of religion and scientific institutions or organizations associated with the
philosophy through interpretive, critical, and constructive study and research of Chinese philosophy.
reflections whose principal focus is distinctively American
religious and philosophical thought. It fosters broad discussion Karl Barth Society of North America
of relevant options through its sponsorship of conferences, The Society’s membership is open to all interested parties—
seminars, workshops, and publications. The work of the scholars, students, pastors, and laypersons. A newsletter is
Institute emphasizes: 1) Theological and philosophical published twice a year, edited by Paul D. Molnar, Division of
reflections, especially where these efforts have utilized the Humanities, Saint John’s University, 8000 Utopia Parkway,
American philosophical and religious traditions; 2) The history Queens, NY 11439. Annual dues are $15 (students $10). A
and development of liberal religious thought in America; website is posted by the Center for Barth Studies at Princeton
3) Themes pertinent to the “Chicago School” of theology; and Theological Seminary at http://libweb.ptsem.edu/collections/
4) Naturalism in American theology and philosophy. barth/faq/barthsociety.aspx and the contact is Clifford B.
Anderson at barth.studies@ptsem.edu. The website contains
International Bonhoeffer Society — English Language substantial articles as well as information about events. Two
Section sessions are held each year as Additional Meetings at the
AAR Annual Meeting: one on Friday afternoon, the other on
The International Bonhoeffer Society — English Language
Saturday morning. As perhaps is only appropriate, the Society
Section is an interfaith scholarly organization. It was founded
is always more of an event than an institution, whose irregular
in 1971 to promote research in the theology, ethics, and life
activities have earned it the well-known Barthian motto,
of the German theologian, Dietrich Bonhoeffer (1906–1945).
“providentia dei, confusione hominum.”
The English Language Section has members in the United
States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand,
South Africa, and other lands. It is governed by an elected La Comunidad of Hispanic Scholars
board and society officers. Society membership is open to all La Comunidad is an ecumenical association of Hispanic
persons interested in the theology, life, and spiritual influence scholars of religion. La Comunidad proactively advances the
of Dietrich Bonhoeffer and in constructive theological and interests and scholarship of Latinas and Latinos in biblical,
pastoral studies inspired by his legacy. theological, and religious studies. For more information, please
contact Gastón Espinosa, gaston.espinosa@claremontmckenna.
edu, or Efrain Agosto, eagosto@hartsem.edu.
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 163
Niebuhr Society North American Paul Tillich Society
The Niebuhr Society was organized in 2003 as a non- Founded in 1975, the 250-member NAPTS is concerned
profit organization. “The Society is dedicated to historical, with Paul Tillich’s (1886–1965) philosophical-theological
critical, and constructive study of the thought of Reinhold thought; with its analysis, critique, and revision; with the
Niebuhr (1892–1971) and scholarly engagement with the implications and the use of this thought in political, social,
moral, political, and theological questions that were central psychotherapeutic, scientific, artistic, and ethico-religious
to his work. The Niebuhr Society serves these purposes spheres; and with the impact and the creative extension of
through presentations and discussion at its annual meeting, Tillich’s legacy. The Society meets annually in conjunction
dissemination of information about relevant programs and with AAR, organizes international conferences, collaborates
activities, and support for the collection, preservation, and with the German, French, and other Tillich societies, awards
publication of material related to Reinhold Niebuhr’s life and an annual student paper prize, and sponsors publications.
work. The Society encourages participation by persons from The quarterly newsletter carries papers from meetings. Dues
a wide variety of religious backgrounds, academic disciplines, are $35/year. The membership contact is Frederick Parrella,
and political viewpoints and seeks to develop a program Religious Studies, Santa Clara University, Santa Clara, CA,
that reflects the breadth of Niebuhr’s interests and concerns” 95053-0335, or fparrella@scu.edu.
(Statement of Purpose and Organizational Plan). The Society
remains in contact not only thorough its annual meetings but Polanyi Society
also through occasional e-mails updating members on recent The Polanyi Society, formed in 1972, includes in its
developments in Niebuhr studies, and through our Society membership scholars and students who, inspired by the
webpage (http://niebuhrsociety.typepad.com/main/). thought of Michael Polanyi (1891–1976), seek to explore
and expand upon his seminal ideas. A Hungarian by birth,
North American Association for the Study of Religion Polanyi began his distinguished career as a physical chemist in
The North American Association for the Study of Religion Germany and England, but it is his later work in economics,
was initially formed in 1985 to encourage the historical, social thought, and especially philosophy that continues
comparative, structural, theoretical, and cognitive study of to be influential today. Polanyi’s Gifford Lectures, Personal
religion among North American scholars; to represent North Knowledge, was a pioneer work demonstrating the contextual,
American scholars of religion at the international level; and theory-laden, faith-shaped, and passionate character of all
to sustain communication between North American scholars human endeavors, including theology and religious practice
and their international colleagues engaged in the study of as well as science and the arts. The Polanyi Society holds
religion. In order to achieve these goals, NAASR is affiliated its Annual Meeting Friday evening and Saturday morning
with the Council of Societies for the Study of Religion and at the beginning of the AAR Annual Meeting. Papers to
has annual meetings together with the American Academy of be discussed are posted prior to the meeting on the Society
Religion on the one hand, and the Society for the Scientific website, www.missouriwestern.edu/orgs/polanyi/. Archived
Study of Religion on the other. NAASR has affiliated with copies and current issues of the Polanyi Society’s peer-
the International Association for the History of Religions, and reviewed journal, Tradition and Discovery (three issues a
is the only organization from the United States that enjoys year), information about joining the Society, upcoming
such affiliation. NAASR’s official peer-review journal, Method meetings, and links to Polanyi essays will be found on the
and Theory in the Study of Religion, is published quarterly by website. Personal Knowledge is subtitled “Towards a Post-
E. J. Brill of The Netherlands. NAASR also sponsors a book Critical Philosophy,” and the Society invites all those who
series, “Key Thinkers in the Study of Religion,” published by are interested in exploring postfoundational versions of
Equinox Publishers of the United Kingdom. epistemology, philosophy of religion, ethics, and theology
to join with us. Polanyi’s notions of tacit knowing, heuristic
passion, and conviviality are among the many contributions he
makes to this ongoing venture.
164 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Academy Information
Psychology, Culture, and Religion Society for Buddhist–
The Psychology, Culture, and Religion Group is an informal Christian Studies
association of scholars and practitioners in the fields of The Society for Buddhist–Christian Studies was founded in
religion and psychology broadly defined, who share common 1987 to provide an ongoing organization for those committed
interests in the relationship between religion, psychology, to study, reflection, interchange, and practice arising out
and contemporary cultures. Working at the intersections of of Buddhist–Christian encounters. The purposes of the
religion and psychology, the group enables participants to Society are: 1) To serve as a coordinating body supporting
contextualize religious studies in relationship to the theory activities related to the comparative study of, and the practical
and practice of psychotherapy and pastoral counseling. PCR’s interaction between, Buddhism and Christianity, by groups
location on the boundary of academic study and applied and individuals; 2) To encourage those who report on
professions like clinical psychology and pastoral psychotherapy Buddhist–Christian dialogue and comparative study to employ
results in rich, varied, and stimulating interdisciplinary analytical and theoretical tools and to set their discussion
conversations of a kind uncommon in the AAR generally. within the framework of our larger human history; and 3) To
Elements of the dialogue have included modern and be as inclusive as possible in all its activities, seeking a balance
postmodern developments in psychology, counseling, cultural with regard to geography, ethnicity, age, sex, denomination or
and social anthropology, sociology, feminist studies, critical lineage, cultural tradition, and leadership in both academic and
literary theory, and other forms of interpretive theory. religion institutions, and in the public and private sectors. The
Society meets annually in conjunction with the national AAR
Société Internationale d’études sur Alfred Loisy meeting, having board meetings and a program session one
The Société is a nonprofit association formed to foster day prior (Friday) to the start of the AAR schedule (Saturday).
study of the French exegete and scholar of religion, Alfred There is a second program session on Saturday morning.
Loisy (1857–1940) and of the Roman Catholic Modernist International conferences lasting approximately five days
movement in which he figured so prominently. It was formed are held every four years, usually in the summer. The Society
to foster international communication and contact among publishes a scholarly journal, The Journal for Buddhist–Christian
scholars from a variety of disciplines as well as other interested Studies (University of Hawai’i), and a biannual newsletter. The
parties whose work and interests bear upon issues that Society’s website, www.society-buddhist-christian-studies.org,
surfaced in the latter decades of the nineteenth century and includes membership information, upcoming dialogue events,
remain of enduring religious significance. conference summaries, newsletters, and links, including one
to the newly launched Buddhist–Christian Studies Database
Society for Asian and Comparative Philosophy housed at Boston College.
The SACP was established in 1967 as a nonprofit
Society for Hindu–Christian Studies
organization aimed at advancing the development of the
disciplines of Asian and comparative philosophy in the The Society for Hindu–Christian Studies was founded in
international academic arena, and bringing together Asian November 1994 as a logical extension to the dialogue and
and Western philosophers for a mutually beneficial exchange scholarship being carried on in the Hindu–Christian Studies
of ideas. It holds panels in conjunction with the American Bulletin (now the Journal of Hindu Christian Studies), which
Philosophical Association, the Association of Asian Studies, first appeared in 1988 under its founding editor Harold
and the American Academy of Religion. Annual individual Coward. The Society is dedicated to the study of Hinduism
membership dues for the SACP are $35 ($20 for students and Christianity and their interrelationships. It seeks to
and professors emeriti) and include a subscription to the create a forum for the presentation of historical research
SACP Forum. The Society also sponsors a monograph series and studies of contemporary practice for the fostering of
on specialized topics published by the University of Hawai’i dialogue and interreligious conversation carried forward in
Press. For more information about the SACP and about the a spirit of openness, respect, and true inquiry. Committed to
journal, Philosophy East and West, please see our website at scholarly interchange according to accepted traditional and
www.sacpweb.org. contemporary methods, the Society understands its scope
broadly, so as to include issues related to religious practice,
spirituality, and education; it is interested in supporting
activities related to the comparative study of Hinduism and
Christianity. Our membership includes Christians interested
in the study of Hinduism, Hindus interested in the study of
Christianity, and scholars — Hindu, Christian, and other —
interested in the historical and contemporary interactions of
AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org 165
Hinduism and Christianity. Society of Christian Philosophers
The Society of Christian Philosophers was organized in 1978
Society for the Arts in Religious and Theological Studies to promote fellowship among Christian Philosophers and to
The Society for the Arts in Religious and Theological Studies stimulate study and discussion of issues which arise from their
was organized to provide a forum for scholars and artists Christian and philosophical commitments. One of its chief
interested in the intersections among theology, religion, aims is to go beyond the usual philosophy of religion sessions
and the arts. The Society wishes to advance the discipline in at the American Philosophical Association and to stimulate
theological and religious studies curricula. The goal of the thinking about the nature and role of Christian commitment
Society is to attract consistent participation of a core group of in philosophy. Informal discussion among several Christian
artists and scholars of theology and religion in order to have philosophers led them to believe that it was possible to form a
dialogue about the theological and religious meaning of the group designed to promote philosophizing and fellowship among
arts and the artistic/aesthetic dimension of theological and philosophers who shared a commitment to Christianity. Past
religious inquiry. presidents include William Alston, Robert Merrihew Adams,
Alvin Plantinga, Marilyn McCord Adams, George Mavrodes,
Society for the Study of Chinese Religions Nicholas Wolterstorff, Eleonore Stump, C. Stephen Evans, and
The annual membership dues for the Society are $30 ($15 Robert Audi. Linda Zagzebski, University of Oklahoma, is the
for students and retired). In order to become a new member current President and Kelly James Clark is Executive Director
of SSCR, send a check payable in U.S. dollars to the SSCR of SCP. The Society is open to anyone interested in philosophy
treasurer: Jonathan R. Herman, Department of Philosophy, who considers himself or herself a Christian. Membership is
Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30302-4089; TEL: not restricted to any particular “school” of philosophy or to any
404-651-0714; jherman2@gsu.edu. The membership fee pays branch of Christianity, nor to professional philosophers.
for the receipt of the annually produced Journal of Chinese
Religions. Make sure to include your full address and your Søren Kierkegaard Society
e-mail address with the payment. Additional information on Founded by Robert L. Perkins in 1979, the Søren Kierkegaard
published works (books or articles), recently read papers or Society (SKS) exists to encourage study and discussion of
presentations, and work in progress is also useful and welcome. the thought of Søren Kierkegaard in all its dimensions and
ramifications, including its sources and influences. SKS is
Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality affiliated with the American Academy of Religion and the
The Society for the Study of Christian Spirituality promotes American Philosophical Association and alternates its annual
research and dialogue within the growing community of business meeting between the AAR and APA conventions.
people interested in spirituality. Formed in 1991, SSCS At times, dinner meetings with guest speakers are coordinated
is ecumenical and strives to be inclusive of the widest with these conventions. The Society encourages scholarship
possible range of expressions of Christian spirituality. It is on Kierkegaard at, or in connection with, the national and
interdisciplinary and welcomes the application of diverse regional meetings of the AAR and APA through an executive
disciplines to the study of spirituality. While the emphasis committee that includes members of both organizations.
of SSCS is clearly on Christian spirituality, it seeks to foster Membership in SKS is open to all interested in Kierkegaard.
creative dialogue with other traditions of spirituality. Although A newsletter informs members of calls for papers and
the Society is comprised of people from diverse, academically- upcoming programs. The current president of SKS is Lee
oriented communities, SSCS also appeals to nonscholars, such Barrett, Lancaster Seminary, lbarrett@lancasterseminary.edu.
as pastors, practitioners, and those in the helping professions.
For more information, please contact Anita Houck at ahouck@ Theta Alpha Kappa
saintmarys.edu. Founded in 1976 at Manhattan College, Theta Alpha Kappa is
the only national honor society for religious and/or theological
studies to be accredited by the Association of College Honor
Societies. Governed by a national Board of Directors, Theta Alpha
Kappa currently comprises more than 200 chapters in diverse
institutions around the country. Theta Alpha Kappa’s dedication
to the recognition of excellence is manifest in programs including
the publication of a journal, an annual fellowship competition, and
annual award programs for outstanding undergraduates. For more
information, please write to the current president, Vivian-Lee
Nyitray, at ThetaAlphaKappa@ucr.edu.
166 AAR Annual Meeting Program Book See the full Annual Meeting program online at meeting.aarweb.org
Academy Information
Thomas F. Torrance Theological Fellowship AAR members receive
This distinctively Christian research organization is devoted the quarterly Journal of the American Academy of Religion
to the exploration, development, and dissemination of the (JAAR); Religious Studies News, an online news publication;
theology of Thomas F. Torrance and other theologians the Annual Meeting Program Planner; and E-Bulletins. All
contributing to “this” endeavor. The Society exists to promote members receive discounts on Annual Meeting registration
and sustain fellowship and truth-seeking (fides quaerens fees and on subscriptions to various publications. Additionally,
intellectum) in theological reflection upon the Christian faith, members have access to Job Postings, a web-based employment
within the mainstream of the Christian Church and tradition information service.
in light of the theological legacy of Thomas F. Torrance. We Membership in the American Academy of Religion can be
are a Christian Fellowship serving the Christian faith and the established by mailing or faxing the form on page XX, by using
renewal of the Church of Jesus ChriSaint Membership is open our online membership system at www.aarweb.org/Members/
to all scholars, pastors, and laypersons who are interested in Dues, or by calling our offices at 1-404-727-3049.
research in Christian theology and related disciplines, and are
in accord with the above mentioned mission statement. We
support free inquiry and critical examination of the many facets AAR SUBSCRIPTIONS
of theology and religion, especially as these relate to issues that
concerned Torrance himself, such as the relationship between
science and religion and how to interpret specific Christian Journal of the American Academy of Religion
doctrines and their implications for today. We seek to bring Distributed to all AAR members, JAAR includes scholarly
Torrance’s important thinking into conversation with other articles on the full range of world religious traditions together
significant theologians in an academic way so as to advance with studies of methodologies by which they are explored.
a better understanding of the nature of and meaning of Each issue contains major articles of general interest and
contemporary Christian theology. Our website, www.tftorrance. importance and a lengthy book review section.
org, contains information about membership, meetings, the Published quarterly; approximately 192 pages per issue.
Board of Directors and about Thomas F. Torrance himself. At
present we are planning to meet as an Additional Meeting at Editor: Charles A. Mathewes, University of Virginia
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RELIGIOUS STUDIES The Jewish Experience Sun of Righteousness, Arise!
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THE POWER OF SCHOLARSHIP
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