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Call for Papers

"Religious Innovation in East Asia"
International Conference
Australian National University
Canberra (Australia)
28-30 November 2007

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In the last few decades, the religious scene across East
Asia has changed in fundamental ways. Changes in government
administration, communications technologies, the degree of
urbanisation, levels of education, and increasing wealth
have run parallel to a burgeoning of religious life. These
years have seen a growth in new religious movements, new
varieties of existing religions and new forms of
religiosity. They have also seen an increased public
presence and awareness of religious groups through
involvement in mainstream politics, in opposition to the
state, and by violent interventions as well as simply
becoming more visible on the streets, in the media and on
the web.

This conference seeks to explore these changes in China
(including Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau), Japan, South Korea
and Vietnam and amongst their diasporic communities, and the
background to them. Some of the themes on which papers may
be suggested are:

- New religious movements
- New formations of Buddhism, Islam and other established
  religions
- Cultivation and self-cultivation, especially qigong and
  related activities
- Religious innovation in the diasporas
- Theoretical and methodological issues related to religious
  innovation
- Popular religion in contemporary societies

Major speakers will be invited from China, Japan and South
Korea.

Suggestions for papers should be submitted to
<[email protected]> by May 31, 2007. Some travel
funding is likely to be available for participants,
including graduate students, from Australia and New Zealand.

Organizing Group: John Jorgensen (Griffith University),
Benjamin Penny (The Australian National University), Judith
Snodgrass (University of Western Sydney), Philip Taylor (The
Australian National University).


Contact:

Dr Benjamin Penny
Research Fellow, History of China
Division of Pacific and Asian History
Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies
The Australian National University
Canberra, ACT, 0200
Australia
[email protected]

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