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Call for Papers

Theme: Religion and Ethics of Violence
Type: Interdisciplinary Seminar
Institution: Network of Violence Studies, Indiana University
Location: Bloomington, IN (USA)
Date: 27.–28.3.2020
Deadline: 31.12.2019

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While most people will agree that physical harm against another human
being is an abhorrent act in most of its forms (but perhaps not in
all of its forms), it remains fundamental that most societies
throughout history have detested particular acts of violence while
glorifying others, although representations of violence, and the
meanings ascribed to those representations, may have changed over
time with different media. Hence, an interdisciplinary model is
needed that can show the representations of violence as a result of
human agency that unfolds throughout history and in different
cultures.

Most religions and philosophical schools in world history have
included strong admonitions against the exorcise of violence, but
violent entrepreneurs – including religious leaders of otherwise
peaceful religions – have had little trouble using ethics or religion
to legitimize or even encourage certain acts of extreme violence –
from jihadism, terrorism, and ethno-nationalisms to the Inquisition,
genocides, slavery, and conquests both in the past and today.
Collective violence always calls for a certain degree of
legitimization and righteous ideology, perhaps most famously seen in
the concept of Just War. Even the most atrocious acts of violence
have thus been committed with at least a nominal claim of being “for
a greater good,” or alternatively, a “lesser evil.”

The purpose of the seminar is to create a dialogue between scholars
from different disciplines and areas about cross-cultural and
culture-specific ideas of “ethical” and “appropriate violence.”
Through the seminar we hope to explore possibilities of future
collaborations across disciplines for the study of the relations
between ethics and violence.

Keynote speakers will be:

William Cavanaugh
Professor of Catholic Studies at DePaul University and author of The
Myth of Religious Violence

Jimmy Yu
Sheng Yen Associate Professor of Chinese Buddhism at Florida State
University and author of Sanctity and Self-Inflicted Violence in
Chinese Religions, 1500-1700

Possible topics to be explored (not exhaustive list):
- Religiously motivated/legitimated warfare
- Aestheticizing violence
- Ethics of everyday structural violence
- Narratives of 'good' and 'bad' violence
- Necessary evils
- Willing executioners
- Violence in gaming: ethics of PC violence
- Mediation of violence

Please send abstracts (not more than 200 words) or inquiries to
organizer Morten Oxenboell: [email protected]

Website of the seminar:
https://ealc.indiana.edu/religion-and-ethics-of-violence/




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