AASR Zambia Conference: Early Bird Registration Extended

Dear Colleagues,

This is just a quick note to let you know that the ‘early bird’ registration deadline for the upcoming AASR Conference in Lusaka, Zambia has been extended to 15 June 2018. There will be no further extensions granted, so be sure to register by this date to get the ‘early bird’ rate. For further details, see the conference website.

See you in Lusaka!

Sincerely,

Corey L. Williams
AASR General Secretary

Congratulations to Prof Musa Dube on this honour!

HONORARY DOCTORATE DUBE PRESS RELEASE

‘Orienting’ Africana Religious Studies: East African and Indian Ocean Perspectives

Journal of Africana Religions Round Table
Devaka Premawardhana, guest editor

Cover image for Journal of Africana Religions

Scholarship on East Africa has generated valuable insights into topics central to Africana religious studies, topics such as diaspora and migration, slavery and colonialism, orality and textuality, race and ethnicity, contact and encounter, women and gender, resistance and resilience—all as they connect to religion. Yet, given the predominance of the transatlantic in Africana studies generally (the centrality, for example, of the “black Atlantic” framework), empirical support for and theoretical reflection on Africana religious studies have tended to privilege regions surrounding the Atlantic Ocean: West Africa, North and South America, and the Caribbean. It is perhaps unfair to associate this geographic orientation with the Euro-American academy’s deep-seated “western” bias, but there is no question that the eastern shore of the African continent has thus far, with some exceptions, been peripheral to Africana religious studies as a field. Ther

 

 

e is no good reason for this given that the transatlantic slave trade involved also East African populations. Moreover, well before the arrival of Europeans and up to the present, East Africans migrated and interacted within the continent, Arab and Asian influences manifest along what came to be called the Swahili coast, and African diasporas spread across the Indian Ocean.
The aim of this roundtable, to be published as a collection of short (1,500-3,000 word) essays, is to bring East African perspective to bear on Africana religious studies. Presuming that the transnational and translocal priorities of Africana studies pertain to East Africa no less than they do to regions better covered, the roundtable will gather issues, questions, theories, and concepts emerging from East Africa, the Swahili coast, and/or the Indian Ocean that potentially shed new light on the study of Africana religions. It is anticipated that the theme of encounter—between regions and between religions—will run through most essays, finding expression in such topics as: religious identity at the intersection of two or more religious cultures (Islamic, Christian, indigenous, and even Asian); the long history of Arab and Islamic influence on African religions, cultures, and languages; the place of religion(s) in the region’s precolonial, colonial, and postcolonial periods; religiously themed scholarship and literature on and from the region; and diasporic encounters beyond Africa’s eastern shores. This is just a sampling of the kinds of topics welcome; many others could be named. However framed and however focused, contributions should highlight the significance of religion among African-descended people in East Africa or the wider Indian Ocean, and should be grounded in research or reflections pertaining specifically to at least one segment of this dynamic regional complex.

All those interested in contributing should submit a 150-word proposal to journal@africanareligions.org by April 15, 2018. Final drafts of essays are due on August 15, 2018.

 

Dr. Adogame Appointed Professor Extraordinary at Stellenbosch University

Dr. Afeosemime “Afe” Adogame, the Maxwell M. Upson Professor of Christianity and Society at Princeton Theological Seminary, has been appointed Professor Extraordinary at Stellenbosch University for the next three years. This honorary position is awarded to select individuals in recognition of their proven specialized experience and eminence in their profession and field of study.

News-Image-Afe-Adogame

A member of Princeton Theological Seminary’s History & Ecumenics department, Dr. Adogame’s teaching and research focus on the new dynamics of religious experiences and expressions in Africa and the African Diaspora. In particular, he is interested in African Christianities and new indigenous religious movements, and the relationships between religion and migration, globalization, the economy, politics, media, and civil society.

Dr. Adogame has authored and edited numerous published works related to these subject matters, including 2014’s The Public Face of African New Religious Movements in Diaspora: Imagining the Religious ‘Other’. He played an instrumental role in the Seminary’s Currents, Perspectives, and Methodologies in World Christianity conference in January 2018.

Regarding his appointment, Dr. Adogame says, “I am deeply humbled to be recognized and appointed as Professor Extraordinary by Stellenbosch University. Princeton Seminary and Stellenbosch share a commitment to preparing engaged global citizens and responsible leaders for today and tomorrow, leaders poised to use their expertise to serve the ‘world church’ and society. I am delighted to identify with this pathway toward cementing cooperation, collaboration, and reputation as world-class institutions.”

The AASR sends many congratulations to Afe on this well-deserved appointment!

News Link

Harvard Fellowship for Dr Damaris Parsitau

AASR Vice President and Echidna Global Scholar Dr Damaris Parsitau, has recently been awarded a prestigious one-year Research Associate Fellowship in the Women’s Studies in Religion program at Harvard Divinity School. She will take up the position from 15th August 2018-July 2019 and will be working on a research project on “The Kingdom of Holy Women, Pure Girls and Born Again Bodies: Pentecostalism, Sex and Women Bodies in an African Church.”

Dr Parsitau is currently Senior Lecturer in Religious and Gender Studies and Director of the Institute of Women, Gender & Development Studies at Egerton University, Kenya. She holds a PhD in religion, gender and public life from Kenyatta University (2013) and has previously held visiting fellowship positions at the Brooking Institution in Washington DC, The College of William and Mary in Williams, Virginia, USA, the University of South Africa, the University of Cambridge, and the University of Edinburgh.

We warmly congratulate Dr Parsitau with this achievement and wish her a very inspiring and stimulating time at Harvard!

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