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Call for Papers

Theme: "Revisiting Mamre"
Subtitle: The Stranger in the Three Abrahamic Faiths
Type: Interdisciplinary Conference
Institution: Queens College, City University of New York (CUNY)
Location: New York, NY (USA)
Date: 4.–5.12.2017
Deadline: 25.8.2017

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In Genesis 18, Abraham goes out of his way to provide for the three
strangers who appeared at Mamre: he attended to them much like he
might have attended to God himself. This gesture of hospitality
betrays the same kindness and humanity that Abraham would later show
in pleading with God on behalf of the people of Sodom and Gomorrah.
It is thus profoundly ironic that, of all the world religions, the
three traditions that trace back to the figure of Abraham—Judaism,
Christianity, and Islam—have struggled the most with the ethical
challenge posed by the stranger. All three faiths have at some point
shown themselves “allergic” to otherness, to use a Levinasian
expression, whether this otherness is embodied in people of other
faiths, or in members within the faith who have refused or failed to
abide by an enclosed system of beliefs and dogmas. One wonders, then,
whether this distrust of the stranger that has played out in these
three major religions does not constitute a departure from the
original impulse of the Abrahamic journey of faith. To miss the
central place given to the stranger within Judaism, Christianity, and
Islam might then arguably amount to missing the essential message of
these three faiths.

The purpose of this conference is to provide a forum for scholars
across the disciplines to discuss and debate the significance of this
original impulse embodied in Abraham, particularly vis-à-vis the
divisive and exclusionary impulses that otherwise get played out in
both the historical and contemporary manifestations of the three
Abrahamic faiths. We are interested in papers that show how the
welcoming of the stranger constitutes the very essence and original
impulse of Judaism, Christianity and/or Islam, and this, on the sole
basis of their respective scriptures, the Hebrew Bible, the New
Testament, and the Quran.

Possible paper topics could include:

- To the extent that we acknowledge the divisive and exclusionary
  impulses within the Abrahamic religions, what new approaches to the
  study and interpretation of the Abrahamic Scriptures might help us
  counteract those impulses?
- How is hospitality towards the stranger essential to and not merely
  a contingent byproduct of the Jewish, Christian or Muslim faiths?
- What hermeneutic or analytic resources can we mine from the
  Abrahamic Scriptures that can help us examine and address racism and
  racial prejudice?
- How can we come to a renewed understanding of the significance/role
  of women in the three Abrahamic scriptures?
- How might the Jewish, Christian, or Muslim scriptures provide new
  approaches to probing or addressing the challenges posed by LGBTQ
  individuals to religious communities?
- How can we read the stance towards the infidel/unbeliever/heretic
  in the Jewish, Christian, or Muslim scriptures in more nuanced ways?
- What might a stranger-friendly hermeneutical approach look like and
  how might it be argued for?
- How can the challenge of welcoming the other qua other inform or
  transform our pedagogies, or the ways in which we engage one another
  as scholars?
- How can acknowledging and inhabiting our own status as strangers
  (e.g., as Biblical scholars in secular institutions) help us better
  understand the ethical challenge posed by the stranger?

Submission Guidelines

Paper abstracts of up to 300 words should be submitted by August
25th, 2017 to revisitingma...@gmail.com. Paper length should not
exceed 10 pages, double-spaced, or 3000 words. Notice of acceptance
will be sent by September 11th, 2017.

Location

Queens College
City University of New York (CUNY)
65-30 Kissena Blvd, Flushing, New York, NY 11367

Keynote Speakers:
- Tamara Cohn Eskenazi (Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institution of
  Religion)
- J. Kameron Carter (Duke Divinity School)
- Mohammad Hassan Khalil (Michigan State University)

Organizers:
- Abi Doukhan, Department of Philosophy, Queens College, City
  University of New York
- James Abordo Ong, Department of Philosophy, University of San Diego
- Ra’ees Gafoor, Department of Philosophy, The New School for Social
  Research

Conference website:
http://revisitingmamre.wordpress.com




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