Deans Forum, 2022-2023

2022-2023

 

Monday, November 14

Richard Miller
Richard Miller

Richard Miller with Christian Wedemeyer responding.

In Why Study Religion?, Richard Miller, the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Professor of Religion, Ethics, and Politics (and a Divinity School PhD alumnus), asks: Can the study of religion be justified? He observes that scholarship in religious studies, especially work in “theory and method,” is preoccupied with matters of research procedure and thus inarticulate about the goals that can motivate scholarship in the field.

Christian Wedemeyer
Christian Wedemeyer

Christian Wedemeyer is Associate Professor of the History of Religions; his research interests focus on Buddhist traditions.

 

 

Wednesday, January 11

 

Carolina Lopez-Ruiz
Carolina Lopez-Ruiz

Carolina Lopez-Ruiz with Jeffrey Stackert responding.

Carolina López-Ruiz, Professor of the History of Religions, Comparative Mythology, and the Ancient Mediterranean World is one of our newest faculty members, having joined the faculty in July of 2022.

In Phoenicians and the Making of the Mediterranean, López-Ruiz writes the first comprehensive history of the cultural impact of the Phoenicians, who knit together the ancient Mediterranean world long before the rise of the Greeks. Following the trail of the Phoenicians from the Levant to the Atlantic coast of Iberia, she offers the first full study of the cultural exchange that transformed the Mediterranean in the eighth and seventh centuries BC. This book was awarded this year's Frank Moore Cross book award, given by the American Schools of Overseas Research (ASOR).

Respondent Jeffrey Stackert is Professor of Hebrew Bible as well as our Director of MA Studies.

 

 

 

 

Friday, March 31

Jeffrey Stackert
Jeffrey Stackert

Jeffrey Stackert with Erin Walsh responding.

In Deuteronomy and the Pentateuch, Jeffrey Stackert navigates readers through the major topics in the interpretation of Deuteronomy and its relationship to the other four Pentateuchal books, introduces ongoing debates surrounding Deuteronomy, and offers a contemporary evaluation of the latest textual and material evidence.

Erin Walsh
Erin Walsh

Stackert, Professor of Hebrew Bible and Director of MA studies, will be in conversation with Erin Galgay Walsh, Assistant Professor of New Testament and Early Christian Literature and Director of Undergraduate Studies.

 

Wednesday, May 17, 2023

 

Sarah Fredericks
Sarah Fredericks

Sarah Fredericks with Yousef Casewit responding.

In Environmental Guilt and Shame: Signals of Individual and Collective Responsibility and the Need for Ritual Responses, Sarah E. Fredericks documents the existence of environmental guilt and shame in the contemporary United States through the analysis of many popular texts, offering the most comprehensive documentation of these phenomena to date. She suggests that existing rituals need significant enhancement to fully address these moral emotions and the environmental degradation that catalyzes them.

Yousef Casewit
Yousef Casewit

Fredericks is Associate Professor of Environmental Ethics; Associate Professor of Qur’anic Studies Yousef Casewit, responding.