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Kalle Westerling started the topic Opportunity: Digital Humanities Research Institute, June 15–24, 2020 in the discussion
Open-source historical mapping on Humanities Commons 5 years, 11 months agoDo you want to become a DHRI Community Leader?
Apply now and join us from June 15-24, 2020.
You are invited to apply for the second Digital Humanities Research Institute (DHRI), which will take place at The Graduate Center, City University of New York. This ten-day institute will introduce participants to core digital humanities skills, and help…[Read more] -
Michael Miller deposited Black Judaism(s) and the Hebrew Israelites in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 12 months agoThis article looks at the field of Black Judaism, with a viewto understanding how scholars articulate the distinctionbetween Black Judaism and the Hebrew Israelite move-ment. The Hebrew Israelites are an autonomous AfricanAmerican movement who identify themselves as descen-dants of the Israelites and some of whom self-identify asJews, probably…[Read more]
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Alexander Chow started the topic CfP: Yale-Edinburgh 2020 in the discussion
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years agoOral, Print, and Digital Cultures in World Christianity and the History of Mission
New College, University of Edinburgh, 25–27 June 2020
Proposals due: March 6, 2020
Registration deadline: March 30, 2020
The next meeting of the Yale-Edinburgh Group on World Christianity and the History of Mission will take place in New College, University of E…[Read more] -
John W. Borchert deposited REL320: Digital Religion in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years agoReligious practice is shaped by technology. Technological practice is shaped by religion. Since the early 1990s, this parallel formation has become visible through the internet and other digitally networked technologies, as the perception of a barrier between the digital and the non-digital dissolves. Fully rendered 3D temples and churches, prayer…[Read more]
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Joanne Bernardi deposited “Re-Envisioning Japan” DH project overview – MLA2020 Collaborative Round Table (DH in Japan & Korea Studies: Approaches and Challenges) in the group
Digital Humanities East Asia on Humanities Commons 6 years agoPowerpoint presentation for the MLA2020 collaborative roundtable “Digital Humanities in Japan and Korea: Approaches and Challenges,” organized by the LLC Korean and LLC Japanese since 1900 Forums. This brief introduction to “Re-Envisioning Japan: Japan as Destination in 20th Century Visual and Material Culture” was one of seven presentations by…[Read more]
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Edmund Hayes started the topic Conference Call for Papers: Historicizing the Shiʿi hadith Corpus in the discussion
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years agoHosted by Leiden University Centre for Islam and Society (LUCIS) and Shiʿi Studies Unit, The Institute of Ismaili Studies, London (IIS)
Date: June 24-26 2020
Location: Leiden University, the Netherlands
Convenors: Hassan Ansari, Edmund Hayes, Gurdofarid Miskinzoda
Abstract deadline: January 31st 2020
This conference will focus on…[Read more]
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Luis Gregorio Abad Espinoza deposited The moral philosophy of nature: Spiritual Amazonian conceptualizations of the environment in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years agoIt is well known the harmful effects that savage capitalism has been causing to the environment since its introduction in a sphere in which a different logic and approach to nature are the essential conditions for the maintenance of the ecosystem and its complex relations between humans and non-human organisms. The amazon rainforest is a portion…[Read more]
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S. Jonathon O'Donnell deposited Islamophobic Conspiracism and Neoliberal Subjectivity: The Inassimilable Society in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years agoThis article analyses the confluence of Islamophobia and anti-government conspiracy theory in the works of the far-right think tank, the Center for Security Policy (CSP). He argues that, rather than only being a contemporary form of the religious and racialized demonologies that code ‘Islam’ as being the constitutive outside of ‘the ‘West…[Read more]
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James A Benn deposited Religious Studies 726 Topics in Chinese Religions: Health, Healing, and Medicine in Chinese Religions McMaster University, Term II 2019–20 in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years agoIn this seminar we will examine representations of health and accounts of disease in a variety of Chinese religions. We will explore the various vectors of disease, including the so-called “winds” and various types of demonic infestation. We will identify modes of
healing that employ therapies such as mineral, animal, and vegetable drugs, exo…[Read more] -
James A Benn deposited Religious Studies 726 Topics in Chinese Religions: Health, Healing, and Medicine in Chinese Religions McMaster University, Term II 2019–20 in the group
Buddhist Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years agoIn this seminar we will examine representations of health and accounts of disease in a variety of Chinese religions. We will explore the various vectors of disease, including the so-called “winds” and various types of demonic infestation. We will identify modes of
healing that employ therapies such as mineral, animal, and vegetable drugs, exo…[Read more] -
Thomas Mazanec deposited How Poetry Became Meditation in Late-Ninth-Century China in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoIn late-ninth-century China, poetry and meditation became equated — not just metaphorically, but as two equally valid means of achieving stillness and insight. This article discusses how several strands in literary and Buddhist discourses fed into an assertion about such a unity by the poet-monk Qiji 齊己 (864–937?). One strand was the aesthet…[Read more]
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Steve McCarty deposited Kūkai and Zentsūji in the group
Buddhist Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoThe author did in situ research for an MA in Asian Religions on Japan’s greatest saint, Kūkai, in his birthplace of Zentsūji, along the Pilgrimage of Shikoku that symbolically recapitulates his career, and at Kōya-san, the mountaintop monastery south of Kyōto that Kūkai founded in the early 9th Century. Kūkai was a key figure igniting the golde…[Read more]
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Rivka Neriya-Ben Shahar deposited THE AMEN MEAL: JEWISH WOMEN EXPERIENCE LIVED RELIGION THROUGH A NEW RITUAL in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoThis article focuses on Jewish women’s experiences of the amen meal ritual. The central intention of this meal is to achieve many recitations of the word “amen” in response to benedictions recited for different sorts of food. The women’s voices and experiences, reflected in in-depth interviews with participants and participant observa…[Read more]
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Ian Wilson deposited The Emperor and His Clothing: David Robed and Unrobed before the Ark and Michal in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoThis essay examines the issue of David’s (lack of) clothing in 2 Samuel 6 and 1 Chronicles 15. It asks: what potential meanings would be at play for ancient readers of these texts? Drawing on research into social memory and “forgetting,” it argues that Judean readers would partially warrant Michal’s distaste for David’s dressing-down, while still…[Read more]
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Albert Roland Haig deposited Dying and living with Christ: A sketch of a participatory theory of the atonement founded in Platonic realism and an Irenaean “soul-making” theodicy in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 1 month agoA theory of the atonement is outlined which is grounded in an appropriation of the Platonic doctrine of participation, and an Irenaean theodicy. The purpose of Christ’s life and death was to enable humans to destroy the sinful aspects of their character, and to manifest Christ’s righteousness, by means of participation in the same Form. The the…[Read more]
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Johann-Mattis List deposited Towards a sustainable handling of inter-linear-glossed text in language documentation in the group
Digital Humanities East Asia on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoEfforts on language documentation have been increasing in the past. While the amount of digital data of the world’s languages is increasing, only a small amount of the data is sustainable, since data reuse is often exacerbated by idiosyncratic formats and a negligence of standards that could help to increase the comparability of linguistic data.…[Read more]
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Johann-Mattis List deposited Annual contributions to the Genealogical World of Phylogenetic Networks III in the group
Digital Humanities East Asia on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoThis is a summary of 12 contributions made by me for the blog “The Genealogical World of Phylogenetic Networks” in 2018. The contributions are shared in form of a PDF document with a table of contents that allows for a quick search of the contributions and offers also the direct links to the blog.
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Boban Dedovic deposited “Inanna’s Descent to the Netherworld”: A centennial survey of scholarship, artifacts, and translations in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoAn ancient Sumerian proverb may be read as “good fortune [is embedded in] organisation and wisdom.” The present centennial survey is solely about organizing the last one hundred years of scholarship for a Sumerian afterlife myth named “Inanna’s Descent to the Netherworld.” The initial discovery of artifacts with snippets of the myth can be dated…[Read more]
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Amod Lele deposited Disengaged Buddhism in the group
Religious Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoContemporary engaged Buddhist scholars typically claim either that Buddhism always endorsed social activism, or that its non-endorsement of such activism represented an unwitting lack of progress. This article examines several classical South Asian Buddhist texts that explicitly reject social and political activism. These texts argue for this…[Read more]
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Amod Lele deposited Disengaged Buddhism in the group
Buddhist Studies on Humanities Commons 6 years, 2 months agoContemporary engaged Buddhist scholars typically claim either that Buddhism always endorsed social activism, or that its non-endorsement of such activism represented an unwitting lack of progress. This article examines several classical South Asian Buddhist texts that explicitly reject social and political activism. These texts argue for this…[Read more]
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