Author: David Robertson

  • BASR Response to the 2019 Report on TRS published

    The publication of the British Academy’s Report, Theology and Religious Studies Provision in UK Higher Education, in May 2019 was widely reported in the press, where the study of religion was presented as a relic in terminal decline. Yet many Religious Studies colleagues immediately raised concerns, both about the conflation of RS and confessional approaches, and the actual data being presented. The BASR immediately committed to producing a robust, data-driven response to the BA Report. The result is published today.

    We hope that the report will challenge some of the damaging misrepresentations of the vitality of Religious Studies in the UK. We suspect it will be of use to colleagues in departments which face cuts or reorganisation. We know it will be a useful snapshot of the state of the field today—far healthier, diverse and vital than the BA report suggested.

    Read the full report here.

  • Update on BASR 2020

    Update on BASR 2020

    The conference page for the upcoming 2020 conference has been updated. The conferencewill now be a virtual event, free to attend. A link will be made available on the conference page nearer the time.

    https://basr.ac.uk/basr-conference-2020/

  • BASR Bulletin 131 | November 2017

    BASR Bulletin 131 | November 2017

    The latest issue of the BASR Bulletin (131, November 2017) is now published, Check it out here.

  • BASR Annual Conference 2017

    BASR Annual Conference 2017

    Theme: Narratives of religion

    Conference dates: 4-6 September 2017

    Keynote (Tuesday 5th September)
    ‘Narratives of Pagan Religion’
    Professor Ronald Hutton

    Call for Papers 

    ‘Narrative’ has emerged as valuable category of analysis in the study of religions. This conference takes narrative as its theme with a view to testing its efficacy and resilience for elucidating constructions of religion.

    The BASR invites colleagues to the University of Chester to contribute papers or panels on the above theme. Papers will be 20 minutes with 10 minutes for questions/discussion. Panels will be 90 minute sessions, to normally include 3 papers. Abstracts for roundtables, poster presentations, and alternative formats are also encouraged – please contact the below email for details. Ideas for papers and panels may include, but are not limited to:

    • Competing narratives
    • Orality and textualisation
    • Ritual and archetypal narratives
    • Representation and reproduction
    • Story, story-telling and communities of story-telling
    • Life-writing, spiritual biography, self-narratives, auto-ethnography
    • Narrative identity
    • Narratives of race, class, age, gender, sexuality, (dis)ability, culture, subculture
    • Narratives of religion in fiction, film, media
    • Narratives at the intersection of religion and science (CAM, ayurveda, alchemy etc.)
    • Apocalyptic narratives
    • Official versus popular or subversive narratives
    • Narrative methods and methodologies in the study of religions
    • Curating narratives
    • Narratives of religion in education
    • Grand-, hidden- and meta- narratives
    • Constructing narratives of religion in history, archaeology and other fields

    Abstracts (200 words plus paper title, author name and institutional affiliation in Microsoft Word format) should be submitted to basrconference2017@gmail.com before 30th May 2017. Panels should be submitted in the same way, with details for each paper along with the panel title and the name of the convener/chair.

    If you are an PGT/Taught Masters or early PGR student and wish to present your project for 5-10 minutes there will be a ‘Lightning Talks’ seminar. Please send a proposal of 50 words including a label: ‘Lightning talk’ along with your institutional affiliation, programme, mode of study and year.

    Deadline for paper/panel submissions: 30th May 2017

    Notification of acceptance of papers/panels: No later than 15th June 2017

    Online registration for conference open from: 1st June 2017

    Deadline for registration: 31st July 2017

    A limited number of student bursaries will be made available to support PG students and EC academics to attend the conference. Please see the separate Call for Bursary Applications, which will appear here on the BASR website and mailing list.

    Further updates and announcements, including registration details, will appear here and across social media in due course. For any general enquiries, please contact the Conference Organisers Drs Wendy Dossett, Dawn Llewellyn, Alana Vincent & Steve Knowles on basrconference2017@gmail.com.

    #BASR2017 

    @TheBASR

    @TRSChester

    Chester and clock

  • BASR Annual Conference 2016

    BASR Annual Conference 2016

    British Association for the Study of Religions Annual Conference

    Theme: ‘Religion Beyond the Textbook’
    Keynote Speaker: Prof. Martin Stringer (Swansea University)

    University of Wolverhampton, 5-7 September 2016
    #BASR2016

    People enact, perform and live religion in a multitude of specific contexts, which are studied through a wide range of methods and approaches; and yet mainstream discourse on religion – public, media and textbook – too often reverts to generic, out-dated essentialisms concerning the lives of religious actors and the classification of ‘religion’ itself. However, new methodological approaches are emerging which ensure diverse forms of religion – often contradictory and complicated, offering counter-narratives to the textbook accounts – are understood, which allow different voices to be heard, texts to be re-read, phenomena to be re-interpreted and identity boundaries to be challenged.

    The deadline for paper/panel submissions for the conference has now passed, and registration has closed.

    **Final version of the Programme and Delegate Information, updated 4/9/2016 with last minute amendments** (PDF)

    For any general enquiries, please contact the Conference Organisers, Dr. Stephen E. Gregg & Dr. Opinderjit Takhar on basrconference@gmail.com.

    Information for publishers

    As ever, BASR welcomes our publishing partners to contribute to our annual conference. This year we will be hosted by the University of Wolverhampton and will be situated in the picturesque nineteenth century part of campus. Please complete and return the BASR 2016 Publishers Booking Form to reserve your place. The form includes options for booking, including full stands, and leaflets in the conference registration pack. Please note that whilst simple tables and chairs can be provided, publishers will need to bring display stands or other specialist presentation equipment. A safe and lockable room will be provided for overnight storage on conference days. If you wish your representative to register for the conference (which includes meals and simple campus accommodation), we will waive the cost of your stand.

  • BASR Teaching and Learning Wiki: Innovative Pedagogy and Legacy Resources

    By Dominic Corrywright, Oxford Brookes University

    This is an invitation to visit and contribute to the new wiki developed for the Teaching and Learning section of the BASR website.

    What’s a wiki? Neither a wookie nor a bear (see Four Lions, Chris Morris, 2010 – a prescient and a splendid resource for teaching courses on terrorism, fanaticism and representations of Islam and the West). That’s to say, it is not a usual web site, especially as are commonly designed for professional associations, where the model is for passive receivers. Wikis are collaborative, and promote active engagement. But they are not a sandbox for all players on the web –there is some editorial oversight, in their initial schemata, objectives and continuing editorial selection and deletion.

    ‘A wiki (wɪki/wik-ee) is a website which allows collaborative modification of its content and structure directly from the web browser’. A Wiki, according to Ward Cunningham, inventor of the first wiki software:

    ‘… promotes meaningful topic associations between different pages by making page link creation almost intuitively easy and showing whether an intended target page exists or not.

    A wiki is not a carefully crafted site for casual visitors. Instead, it seeks to involve the visitor in an ongoing process of creation and collaboration that constantly changes the Web site landscape.’

    The wiki has initially been designed with four distinct areas:

    This invitation is for colleagues to add material, links or ideas for both innovative and legacy approaches and resources for teaching and learning in the study of religions. Indeed it is informative to see in such resources as this Wiki, how the new becomes legacy, becomes new again. An example of this process occurred in the selection of useful legacy resources for the Wiki from the now defunct, though erstwhile innovative, publication Discourse. This journal was established by Higher Education Academy subject centre, Philosophy and Religious Studies Learning and Teaching Support Network in 2001 under the networks’ name and became Discourse from 2003 until its closure (due to the end of government funding) in 2011. In the first edition a report on a workshop for teaching South Asian religions identifies a preliminary question ‘How serious a problem is the ‘world religions’ paradigm?’ (Jackie Suthren Hirst, Mary Searle-Chatterjee, Eleanor Nesbitt ‘Report on a Workshop on Teaching South Asian Religious Traditions, Centre for Applied South Asian Studies’ (PRS-LTSN Journal Vol 1, No. 1, Summer 2001, p. 77). The paradigm of world religions resonates loudly in current discussions about the terminology and curricula of religious studies. Thus the hermeneutics of religious studies has questioned concepts, terms and methods reflexively and repeatedly throughout its brief academic history.

    I have filing cabinets and box files of teaching resources, seminar ingenuities, assessment tools, and curricula that are no longer current, or of much use (though some parts are multi-valent and segue neatly into new modules). Equally, I have a whole undergraduate course for distance learners on Moodle which is soon to be archived as the course has closed. ‘All that is solid melts into air’ and we are left grasping fading legacies while reaching for new forms to coalesce. Just as the intellectual capital of research is stored and accessed in hard and electronic reusable objects (vide: Alison Le Cornu and Angie Pears ‘Reusable Electronic Learning Objects for Theology and Religious Studies’ Vol. 6, No. 2, Spring 2007, pp. 143 – 158) so the resources of pedagogy in specific subject areas need locations for re-use and reconsideration. The Wiki can be a home for such resources, as they are deemed valid and of utility to the wider academic network.

    New currencies of pedagogy equally have a place in the new Wiki. Globally, academic institutions have a growing interest in higher education pedagogy. In the UK context a new Teaching Excellence Framework will promote further research and evidence of academic engagement with pedagogical theory and practice (see consultation). The wiki will be both a resource and an outlet for Religious Studies colleagues.

    Scholars are like magpies, scanning for bright objects with which they populate papers or add interesting/ amusing/ illustrative vignettes to classroom discourse. Wikis welcome such approaches to their content.

    Teaching and Learning section

  • Religious Diversity and Cultural Change in Scotland: Modern Perspectives

    Tue, 19 Apr 2016 at 09:45 – Edinburgh. Free, but needs to be booked: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/religious-diversity-and-cultural-change-in-scotland-modern-perspectives-tickets-21344042606?aff=es2

    A one day conference organised by the Scottish Religious Cultures Network with support by the Royal Society of Edinburgh, School of Divinity (University of Edinburgh), Centre for Theology and Public Issues, Edinburgh.

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    Programme:

    9.45-10.00: Introduction: Dr Leah Robinson and Dr Steven Sutcliffe

    10-10.45 Keynote

    Professor Callum Brown (Glasgow): ‘The Humanist Condition: How the West was Re-moralised for Atheism’

    10.45-11 Coffee

    11-12.30 Panel One: Expressions of Popular and New Religion

    Dr Leah Robinson (Edinburgh): ‘God on our Side? Theological Understandings of Scottish Soldiers at War’

    Dr Steven Sutcliffe (Edinburgh): ‘ “I think he is a Tolstoyan”: Dugald Semple, Food Reform and Conscientious Objection in World War I and after’

    Dr George Chryssides (York St John): ‘A New Religion in an Old Country: How Scotland shaped the Jehovah’s Witnesses’

    12.30-1.30 Lunch (bring your own)

    1.30-3 Panel Two: Cultural Change and Established Traditions

    Dr Marion Bowman (Open University):‘“Walking Back to Happiness?” Renegotiating Protestant Pilgrimage’

    Dr Khadijah Elshayyal (Edinburgh): ‘Muslims in Scotland: new findings from the 2011 Census’

    Dr Hannah Holtschneider (Edinburgh): ‘Interpreting Jewish migration to Scotland’

    3-3.15: Tea

    3.15-4.45: Panel Three: New Discourses

    Christopher Cotter (Lancaster): ‘Discourse, (Non-)Religion, and Locality: Religion-Related Discourses in Edinburgh’s Southside’

    Krittika Bhattacharjee (Edinburgh): ‘The everyday life of a visitor spot: the place of the ‘special’ on the island of Iona’

    Liam Sutherland (Edinburgh): ‘ “One Nation, Many Faiths”: Banal Nationalism, Religious Pluralism and Public Space in Scottish Interfaith Literature’

    4.45/5 closing comments

    Dr Scott Spurlock (Glasgow/SRCN)

  • Statement concerning the Proposed Closure of the Religion Department at Stirling

    The BASR  Committee have just sent a letter/email to the Principal of Stirling University in support of our colleagues there, and the discipline as a whole.

    It can be downloaded as a PDF here, and is pasted below.


    Dear Professor Gerry McCormac

    As the executive committee of the British Association for the Study of Religions, we write to urge you to reconsider the closure of an independent department that is greatly valued nationally and internationally. We recognise the pressures on the university in the current economic climate but consider this to be precisely the wrong time to diminish scholarly debate about religion and religions. The academic study of religion has a key role within higher education institutions in its critical examination of the essential historical role of religions in culture and society. Moreover; the study of contemporary religions in a global perspective is a vital aspect of scholarly studies informing current geo-political debates, issues of religious identity, social justice and what it is to be human.

    Colleagues and students from Stirling have been at the forefront of critical study and debate about religion, offering distinctive curricula and research programmes at each stage of the department’s evolution over nearly 40 years. Strong concern was expressed at the recent congress of the International Association for the History of Religions in Germany when delegates heard news of the proposed closure. The intersection of the growing importance of understanding religion and the quality of Stirling’s religion department – unique in the Scottish context, vital in the UK and of international significance – encourage us to hope that you will find ways to support the continued work of our esteemed colleagues.

    Yours sincerely,

    Prof Graham Harvey, Open University, President of the British Association for Study of Religions

    Dr Steven Sutcliffe, Edinburgh University, President Elect of the British Association for Study of Religions

    Prof Bettina Schmidt, University of Wales Trinity Saint David, Honorary Secretary of the British Association for Study of Religions

    Dr Stephen Gregg, Wolverhampton University, Honorary Treasurer of the British Association for Study of Religions

     

    Copies to

    Professor Malcolm MacLeod, Deputy Principal for Operational Strategy and External Affairs

    Professor Richard Oram, Head of the School of Arts and Humanities

  • Conference Programme Published

    Conference Programme Published

    The final programme is now available for the BASR 2015 Conference at the University of Kent. It can be accessed on the conference website at http://blogs.kent.ac.uk/basr-conference/

    There are approximately 70 accepted papers. Please check out the programme and register using this form.
    Inner
    In addition to the academic programme, the conference will include a celebration of the 50th anniversary of study of religion at the University of Kent. We also have the AGM of the BASR as well as the AGM of TRS UK (former AUDTRS) – many reasons to join us! At the AGM of the BASR we will welcome the incoming President (Steven Sutcliffe) and say farewell to the outgoing president (Graham Harvey) as well as secretary (Bettina Schmidt).