Submitted to Program Units |
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1: Secularism and Secularity Unit |
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
This session seeks to interrogate how the various forms of crisis that mark our contemporary historical moment intersect with conceptions of religion and irreligion—terms that have themselves been profoundly shaped by Western secular epistemologies. The first paper examines how configurations of a “secular West” are invoked in the United States to excuse how the American military complex contributes to the climate crisis, while a second paper offers an ethnographic study of opposition to far-right American street preachers in order to scrutinize how religion and irreligion become salient categories within a secular state undergoing intense socio-political strife. Finally, a third paper probes how secular epistemes interact with rapidly changing technologies to inform understandings and experiences of time, highlighting possible avenues for responding to the new anxieties and uncertainties about futurity that these interactions provoke.
Papers
- Tonalities of Unbelief: From Identity to Tonality in the Study of Irreligion