Interreligious Studies
Dispatches from an Emerging Field
This item is available to order.
Please allow 2-3 weeks for delivery.
Hardback
£44.00
QTY
Publisher: Baylor University Press
ISBN: 9781481312547
Number of Pages: 295
Published: 30/10/2020
Width: 16 cm
Height: 23.1 cm
In an increasingly connected world, the question of how different religious traditions relate to one another is more urgent than ever. The study of interreligious encounters and relations, by no means a new endeavor, has recently emerged as a formal multi- and interdisciplinary academic field that seeks not only to understand how worldviews and ways of life interact and intersect, but also to suggest avenues of constructive dialogue.
Interreligious Studies represents a milestone achievement, bringing together thirty-six scholars from four continents to produce ""dispatches"" on the current state of this burgeoning field. This volume probes the context, parameters, and contours of interreligious studies (IRS), including its relation to other disciplines, its promise as a field of research in secular and nonsecular contexts, its particular terminology and methodology, its civic agenda, and the various scholarly profiles of those who pursue it. Other topics taken up include historical examples of interfaith dialogue, theological and philosophical considerations of truth-seeking in interreligious encounter, and contemporary agendas such as the decolonization of the study of religion and the obligation to respond to anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, and xenoglossophobia.
Whatever possibilities IRS might hold, there first must be a working definition of the field and its praxis. Interreligious Studies points in this direction as it highlights the practical knowledge generated by IRS: how to cultivate empathy, make peace and build nations, promote scholarly activism, and foster meaningful interreligious relations. Scholars and students who are serious about engaging the many dynamic conversations blossoming within this nascent field will be well served by the contributions of this volume.
Interreligious Studies represents a milestone achievement, bringing together thirty-six scholars from four continents to produce ""dispatches"" on the current state of this burgeoning field. This volume probes the context, parameters, and contours of interreligious studies (IRS), including its relation to other disciplines, its promise as a field of research in secular and nonsecular contexts, its particular terminology and methodology, its civic agenda, and the various scholarly profiles of those who pursue it. Other topics taken up include historical examples of interfaith dialogue, theological and philosophical considerations of truth-seeking in interreligious encounter, and contemporary agendas such as the decolonization of the study of religion and the obligation to respond to anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, and xenoglossophobia.
Whatever possibilities IRS might hold, there first must be a working definition of the field and its praxis. Interreligious Studies points in this direction as it highlights the practical knowledge generated by IRS: how to cultivate empathy, make peace and build nations, promote scholarly activism, and foster meaningful interreligious relations. Scholars and students who are serious about engaging the many dynamic conversations blossoming within this nascent field will be well served by the contributions of this volume.
- Foreword by Anna Halafoff
- Preface—Hans Gustafson
- 1 Introduction—Hans Gustafson
- Part 1. Sketching the Field
- 2 Area, Field, Discipline—Oddbjørn Leirvik
- 3 Identifying the Field of Research—Geir Skeie
- 4 A Civic Approach to Interfaith Studies—Eboo Patel
- 5 The Scholar, the Theologian, and the Activist—Marianne Moyaert
- 6 Lessons from a Liminal Saint—Mark E. Hanshaw
- 7 Interreligion and Interdisciplinarity—Jeanine Diller
- 8 Interreligious or Transreligious?—Anne Hege Grung
- Part 2. History and Method
- 9 Historical Precedents—Thomas Albert Howard
- 10 From Comparison to Conversation—Frans Wijsen
- 11 Ethnographic Approaches and Limitations—Nelly van Doorn-Harder
- 12 Vitality of Lived Religion Approaches—Hans Gustafson
- 13 Empirical Approaches to Interreligious Relations—Ånund Brottveit
- 14 Ecumenical and Interreligious—Aaron Hollander
- 15 Places and Spaces of Encounter—Timothy Parker
- Part 3. Theological and Philosophical Considerations
- 16 Grist for Theological Mills—J. R. Hustwit
- 17 Dialogical Theology and Praxis—Wolfram Weisse
- 18 Interreligious Theology and Truth Seeking—Perry Schmidt-Leukel
- 19 Vivekananda's Vision—Jeffery D. Long
- Part 4. Contemporary Challenges
- 20 Decolonizing the Study of Religion—Kevin Minister
- 21 Decolonizing Interreligious Studies—Paul Hedges
- 22 Secular Imperatives—Kate McCarthy
- 23 (Neo)Liberal Challenges—Brian K. Pennington
- 24 Complicating Religious Identity—Russell C. D. Arnold
- 25 In Reactionary Times—Rachel S. Mikva
- 26 Confronting Xenoglossophobia—Caryn D. Riswold and Guenevere Black Ford
- 27 Kairos Palestine and Autoimmune Rejection—Peter A. Pettit
- V Praxis and Possibility
- 28 Cross-Cultural Leadership as Interfaith Leadership—Barbara A. McGraw
- 29 Interreligious Empathy—Catherine Cornille
- 30 Howard Thurman's Mentorship of Zalman Schachter-Shalomi—Or N. Rose
- 31 Peacebuilding—Navras J. Aafreedi
- 32 Nation Building—Asfa Widiyanto
- 33 Scholarship as Activism—Jeannine Hill Fletcher
- 34 Dialogue and Christian–Muslim Relations—Douglas Pratt
- 35 Gender and Christian–Muslim Relations—Deanna Ferree Womack
- 36 Conclusion—Hans Gustafson