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Call for Papers

Theme: Empowerment and the Sacred
Type: Inter-disciplinary Conference
Institution: Institute for Colonial and Postcolonial Studies,
University of Leeds
Location: Leeds (United Kingdom)
Date: 24.–26.6.2011
Deadline: 30.3.2011

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Discussing international responses to the ‘resurgence of religion’ in
our time, Talal Asad has argued: ‘If anything is agreed upon, it is
that a straightforward narrative of progress from the religious to
the secular is no longer acceptable’ (Asad, 2006).  In the
‘straightforward narratives’ of which Asad talks – and in
Enlightenment discourses of ‘reason’, ‘progress’ and ‘modernity’ more
generally -  religion, spirituality and the sacred have customarily
been pitted against empowerment and emancipation, in political,
cultural and intellectual terms.  At this present historical
juncture, then - when the secularist orientation of global futures is
increasingly being called into question - a vital need presents
itself for cross-cultural, cross-disciplinary debate about the role
that the sacred has, does and can play in our understanding of the
possibilities of personal and collective agency, power and change.

​This conference will bring together scholars, professionals and
arts-practitioners to investigate the ways in which sacred traditions
- in diverse cultural and historical contexts - have shaped
discourses, practices and narratives of empowerment, emancipation,
social change, resistance and survival. We ask: How do different
sacred discourses and practices frame and/or extend the possibilities
of agency - socially, spiritually, imaginatively and corporeally?
What variant conceptions of the spheres of activity have they
produced – whether temporal, spatial, cultural, cosmic, public and/or
private? And what role have religious and spiritual traditions played
in political discourses and counter-discourses of class, gender,
race, sexuality, cultural identity, humanism and human rights? Where
sacred traditions have challenged the limits of secular reason, what
alternatives have they suggested for cognition, representation, and
even rationality? And how have they ‘empowered’ different artistic
practices? Does the ‘commitment to social justice’ necessitate the
‘translation’ of sacred realities into ‘disenchanted histories’, in
order to maintain dialogue with modern institutions (Dipesh
Chakrabarty)? Or does a ‘conception of creativity in dialogue with
the sacred’ enable an interrogation of ‘forbidden territories within
ourselves’ as well as ‘the sacrosanct territories of our
institutions’ (Wilson Harris)?  Do sacred traditions themselves
provide the premises for imaginations of cross-cultural and
inter-faith community that differ from secular multiculturalism?

We welcome papers, especially from postgraduates and early career
researchers, that address issues of the sacred and empowerment
inrelation to topics which may include, but are by no means limited
to:

- Concepts of agency: God, gods, spirits and the divine;
  thehuman/extra-human; identity and ‘imagined communities’;
  actors,heroes/anti-heroes, role-models and leaders;
  somatic/spiritual powers.

- Performances of power: artistic, cultural, political, ritual;
  protest and activism; violence/non-violence.

- Histories and historiography: colonialism and the postcolonial;
  globalization; materialism; memory.

- Sacred texts and authority: interpretation, translation,
  intertextuality; secular/religious criticism; freedom of speech,
  blasphemy, and taboo.

- Place, space and environment: sacred sites and land rights; nature,
  geography, topography, archaeology.

- Difference and dialogue: orthodoxy/the unorthodox; syncretism,
  inter-faith and cross-culturalism.

- Justice and judgment: ethics, morality, legality;
  sacred-secular/inter-faith arbitration.

- Secular/sacred powers and the state: private/public spheres;
  policy-making and pedagogy.

- Re/conceptualizations: ‘sacred’, ‘secular’, ‘post-secular’,
  ‘religion’, ‘magic’, ‘spirituality’, ‘myth’ etc.

- Action, motivation and practice: choice, desire, sacrifice and
  faith; freedom/constraint.

- Epistemologies and aesthetics: faith, rationalism and science;
  representation and the unrepresentable.

Keynote speakers:
Professors Kim Knott (University of Leeds)
Bart Moore-Gilbert (Goldsmith’s University)
Neil L. Whitehead (University of Wisconsin)

Please submit 300 word abstracts, accompanied by a 100 word
biography, for 20 minute papers to the conference organisers, Shivani
Rajkomar and Lori Shelbourn: [email protected]

The deadline for submissions has been extended to the 30th of March 2011.

Further details can be found on our website:
http://www.empowermentandthesacred.com
 
 
 
 
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