New Religious Movements Unit
The New Religious Movements Program Unit seeks proposals on topics related to new religions, religious freedom, and political issues broadly conceived. We also seek proposals addressing how new religions are being portrayed in a variety of contemporary media sources such as fictional and documentary TV shows, popular literature, and social media. Additionally, we will consider proposals on NRMS and new religious issues in the New England and the Boston areas, especially proposals focused on healing, spirituality, and religious experience.
We also invite prearranged panel and paper proposals for a possible co-sponsored session with Religion, Media, and Culture that engage questions of digitality in new religious movements, or contrast the origins, practice, and study of digital vs. “traditional” NRMs, or NRMs “online” vs. “offline.” How does digitality shape new religious movements?
This Unit supports and encourages research on all aspects of the study of New Religious Movements. Presenters in our sessions study new, and alternative religions, past and present, from a variety of methodological and disciplinary perspectives. Our sessions and additional meetings are intended to create opportunities for dialogue among academics who share a passion for understanding NRMs, and to make known to a broader audience the importance of such movements for understanding issues of religious difference, community building and maintenance, ritual and doctrinal innovation, and other aspects of religious life. As scholars of minority, alternative, and new religions, we are deeply aware of the challenges facing those on America’s religious margins. We know the immense human toll such intolerance causes. Our scholarship also demonstrates the violence and tragedy than can result when federal and state agencies fail to recognize the humanity of marginalized religious groups. We are resolved to make space for difference both within the academy and beyond.
Steering Member | Dates | ||
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Anne Kreps | akreps@uoregon.edu | - | View |
Erin Prophet, University of Florida | erin@eprophet.info | - | View |
Holly Folk | holly.folk@wwu.edu | - | View |