|
Dublin Core |
PKP Metadata Items |
Metadata for this Document |
|
1. |
Title |
Title of document |
5. Scholars are People Too: The (Sometimes) Difficult Shift to the Discourse of Crisis - Discourses of Crisis and the Study of Religion |
|
2. |
Creator |
Author's name, affiliation, country |
Russell McCutcheon; University of Alabama; United States |
|
3. |
Subject |
Discipline(s) |
Religious Studies |
|
4. |
Subject |
Keyword(s) |
study of religion; religion and politics; religious terms; religious language; categories in religion; social rhetoric; time of crisis; construction of religion |
|
5. |
Subject |
Subject classification |
academic study of religion |
|
6. |
Description |
Abstract |
In response to the critical tools that Aaron Hughes offered to his listeners to examine how such things as rhetorics of crisis work, we instead learned about various actual crises that seem to preoccupy them: from the crisis of the scientific study of religion to various crises of the contemporary corporatized university and, yes, even the crisis of Donald Trump’s place in current American politics, not to mention some ill-defined things said to be “existential crises.” The moral of the story is that scholars are themselves no different from the people whom we study; for we deploy the usual set of techniques to establish group identity and to nurture what we take to be shared affinities and common alienations. Our critical intelligence, as useful as it is when engaging in the study of distant peoples and places—whether chronologically or geographically—can sometimes be of surprisingly little assistance when those things that we ourselves value feel under threat, even if that threat comes from the critical gaze of a colleague. While I would encourage scholars of religion to be rather more bold and uncompromising in the application of such critical, self-reflexive scholarship—even when it is felt to be applied uncomfortably close to home—we can take away something from this episode to help us understand the push-back that our work often receives either from the people being studied or, as is more likely, from those of our colleagues who hold them dear. |
|
7. |
Publisher |
Organizing agency, location |
Equinox Publishing Ltd |
|
8. |
Contributor |
Sponsor(s) |
|
|
9. |
Date |
(YYYY-MM-DD) |
01-Feb-2025 |
|
10. |
Type |
Status & genre |
Peer-reviewed Article |
|
11. |
Type |
Type |
|
|
12. |
Format |
File format |
PDF |
|
13. |
Identifier |
Uniform Resource Identifier |
https://journals.equinoxpub.com/index.php/books/article/view/43935 |
|
14. |
Identifier |
Digital Object Identifier |
10.1558/equinox.43935 |
|
15. |
Source |
Journal/conference title; vol., no. (year) |
Equinox eBooks Publishing; Discourses of Crisis and the Study of Religion |
|
16. |
Language |
English=en |
en |
|
18. |
Coverage |
Geo-spatial location, chronological period, research sample (gender, age, etc.) |
|
|
19. |
Rights |
Copyright and permissions |
Copyright 2014 Equinox Publishing Ltd |