Conference: Radical/ized Religion: Religion
as a Resource for Political Theory and Practice
University of Chichester
9-11 June 2017
Keynote Speakers
Torkel Brekke (Deputy Director of Peace
Research Institute Oslo) – ‘Radicalized Christianity and hostility against
Muslims in Scandinavia’
S. Sayyid (Professor of Social Theory and Decolonial Thought, University of Leeds)
– ‘Liberation Theology and the Temptation of Politics’
Yvonne Sherwood (Professor
of Biblical Cultures and Politics, University of Kent) – ‘The Politics of the
“Resident Alien”’
Øvyind Strømmen
(Managing Editor, Hate Speech International)
– ‘The Nordic far right and the use of religious imagery’
Questions of radical
and radicalized religion are at the forefront of conversations in the media as
well as academic discourse. These conversations include concern about religious
extremism, secularism and a reinjection of religion into politics following the
post-secular “turn to religion”. Phenomena such as the Christian far right and
Islamism are widely discussed but often as separate phenomena. In the UK,
schools are required to teach students about citizenship, ethics and religion.
At universities, academics are required to report extremist activities as part
of the Prevent Strategy. Ostensibly about rooting out “radical Islam”, the law
is applicable to a range of political and religious beliefs. These recent
issues highlight the difficulty of understanding the connection between
religion, the public sphere and political dissent. The boundaries between
activism, radical politics and extremism are blurred. Is there sufficient room
for Islam to motivate political activism without risking condemnation as
extremism? With the on-going debates over Europe’s borders and the resurgence
of far right political movements in Europe, why are some expressions of
religious rhetoric deemed acceptable aspects of “our” political identity and
heritage while others are rejected as extremist? How do we more broadly
understand the relationship between religious belief and political activism,
between religion and radicalism, and the place of religion as politicized
practice in the public sphere?
By bringing together different disciplinary perspectives – political science,
biblical studies, philosophy of religion, anthropology and sociology amongst
others – this conference examines the intersections between religion and
politics in contemporary society, focusing on how such intersections foster
concepts of citizenship and ranges of practice from political activism to
extremism. In analysing the logics, narratives and prejudices explicitly and
implicitly used to sort activism from extremism, we will investigate
alternative ways of thinking about the connection between religion and
politics.
Questions conference participants might address include (but are not limited
to):
- How is religion being interpreted,
appropriated and reinvented in order to mobilise political change in
contemporary society?
- How might we differentiate between
religious activism and extremism?
- Are there patterns for political uses of
religion that are shared across different religious affiliations (such as
sacrifice, martyrdom, holy/just war)?
- How do notions of citizenship inform
interpretations of religious identity?
- In what ways do religions become a way of
conceptualizing citizenship?
- In what ways are governments responding to
extremism, particularly regarding the role of religion?
- Are issues of race and gender inextricably
caught up in discourses of religion in relation to political change?
- How do we understand the “post-secular” in
light of religions in the political sphere?
- In what ways does the far right utilize
religion to form conceptions of “self” and “other”?
- How do labels such as “Islamism” delineate
particular spaces for political Islam at the exclusion and obfuscation of
other forms of Muslim practice?
- What are the differences and similarities
between far right and far left attitudes to, and uses of, religion?
We welcome contributions from theology, religious studies, biblical studies,
philosophy, history, law, literature, politics, sociology and anthropology.
Please submit 300 word abstracts
to
radicalizedreligion@PROTECTED
by 14 April 2017. Panel proposals are also welcome and should include 300 word
abstracts for each paper and a 300 word explanation of the rationale.