30 November 2020

Jewish Muslim Research Network event

Jewish-Muslim Relations.
CJS hon research fellow and founding member of the JMRN, Adi Bharat, announces the next event to be JMRN Book Launch & Conversation 'The Converso’s Return: Conversion and Sephardi Historyin Contemporary Literature and Culture' with Dalia Kandiyoti (City University of New York) in conversation with Flora Hastings. 2 December 2020 5.30pm. Further information.

Brandon Memorial Prize 2020

Postgraduate prize. This prize of £100 is awarded annually for the best MA dissertation in the area of Comparative Religion. For 2020, it was awarded to Turganbay Abdrasillov for 'An analysis of modernist movement (Jadids) in Central Asia in the late 19th and early 20th century (1870-1917)' (supervisor: Kamran Karimullah).

Postgraduate Thesis Prize for Religious Studies and Social Responsibility 2020

Postgraduate prize. This prize of £60 is awarded annually to for the best PG thesis in R&T that explores a social or ethical challenge at the intersection of religion and social responsibility. For 2020 it was awarded to Joy Nicholson for 'Gateways and Barriers to the Participation of Faith-Based Organisations in the UN's Ordained Humanitarian Field' (supervisor: Peter Scott).

Hasse Memorial Prize 2020

Postgraduate prize. This prize of £250 is awarded annually for the best MA dissertation in the area of the study of Religions and Theology. For 2020, it was awarded to Esther Zarifi for a thesis on 'A woman of substance or a capable wife? An examination of the eset hayil of Proverbs 31:10-31 and her postfeminist appropriation within blogs authored by evangelical Christian women' (supervisor: Holly Morse).

Bernard Jackson Prize 2020

Postgraduate prize. This prize of £100 is awarded annually to the student with 'the highest grade for a master's dissertation in Jewish Studies' at the University of Manchester. It honours the Centre's second co-director Bernard Jackson. For 2020 it was jointly awarded to William Kerrs-Farmer (History) for 'Rewriting the Past: Denazification and Ernst von Salomon' (supervisor: Christian Goeschel) and to Rachel Miller (R&T) for 'Witch, Please: A Feminist and Narratological Reading of 2 Kings 9:22' (supervisor: Todd Klutz).

27 November 2020

Sherman Community Lecture, 2020

Jewish Studies.
Dr Miri Freud-Kandel (University of Oxford) will give the next Sherman Community Lecture entitled "Spades and Shovels: Louis Jacobs, Northern Grit, and the Reshaping of British Jewry". 8pm Thur 3 Dec 2020. Further information.

26 November 2020

Research project, BRIC-19

Worship in the age of COVID.
Dr Katja Stuerzenhofecker is contributing to the research project “Social Distance, Digital Congregation: British Ritual Innovation under Covid-19". This is funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), and examines how British religious communities have adapted to the COVID-19 pandemic and the restrictions it has imposed. The project aims to document, analyse, and understand the new ways that religious communities are coming together, and to use those findings to help make religious communities stronger and more resilient for the future. See the survey which is asking as many people as possible to share their experiences. Further information.

25 November 2020

Library's online resources for Religions and Theology

Boosting the Library's online resources for Religions and Theology in the time of COVID. Many of you will have been made aware of the Library’s efforts to assess and flag up additional electronic resources made freely available by publishers in an effort to shore up scholarly activity during the early months of the pandemic through the April 27th posting. Publishers have now significantly scaled back on such offers of support for teaching and research despite continued pressure on them to do so from HE networks such as JISC. Unsurprisingly, demand for access to electronic resources has of course continued to increase and certainly at a rate greater than that which libraries have been able to facilitate easy access to physical book stock and archives. (The current levels of access to physical holdings offered by our University Library, site libraries and Special Collections are of course detailed on our service availability page).

To alleviate this unprecedented call on resources the Library has been actively seeking to complement our existing and extensive electronic holdings and where possible increase access to specialist materials in disciplines that have been particularly hard-hit. The latest news in this regard is the ready online availability for the remainder of the academic year, ie until the end of July 2021, of an additional suite of primary source materials in the Humanities from ProQuest and its Alexander St. Press ‘imprint.’ Of particular interest to the department is the Twentieth Century Religious Thought Library which grants immediate access to virtual collections addressing Christianity; Islam; Judaism and Eastern Religions, incorporating some 400,000 pages, 900 monographs, and 10,000 archival items, which will hopefully benefit those undertaking independent study and dissertation work in particular. A cross-searchable Religious Magazine Archive (1845-2015) is also now available and the more populist leanings of this repository offers a useful and eclectic source for those looking at comparative religion across this period. You can explore the complete portfolio of these new supplementary resources here.

Blog entry, CBS and Society of Biblical Literature

Biblical Studies. Members of the Centre for Biblical Studies (CBS), including David Bell, Siobhán Jolley, and Holly Morse are presenting at the virtual meeting between the American Academy of Religion (AAR) and the Society of Biblical Literature (SBL). Online, 29 Nov - 10 Dec 2020. Further information.

24 November 2020

Student work, Manchester Museum

South Asian Studies. South Asian Heritage Month means that there are vacancies for paid (online) roles at the Manchester Museum suitable for current students (14-25 years old). Further information.

Academic advising, Reformation Monuments Network

Christian Studies. Peter Nockles has accepted an inviation to join an Oxford-based academic network (led by Profs Paulina Kewes and Susan Doran) exploring the historical, cultural and material legacies of the Reformation (mainly in the nineteenth century and beyond) and religious conflict more broadly. Central questions to be addressed include why monuments were erected to commemorate people and events, and why they are contested.

Panel discussion: Oxford Three Faiths

Jewish Studies. CJS Hon. Research Fellow Michael Hilton will be contributing to an online panel on the topic of 'Light in the Dark: A Three Faiths Celebration'. Oxford Three Faiths, 8.00-9.30pm, 10 December 2020. For registration, see further information.

Archive committee, Jewish Continuing Education

Jewish Studies.
Dr Lindsey Taylor-Guthartz has joined the Limmud Archive Committee, which is currently designing and setting up an archive of Limmud's history and operations worldwide since 1980. The archive will include photographs, documentation, and recorded interviews with organizers and participants, as well as digitalized copies of conference and other event programmes. As part of the project, Limmud has set up a link for all current and former participants to send in information about their holdings and to volunteer for interviews. Further information.

Keynote speech, Hebrew University

Jewish Studies. On Sunday 22 November, Dr Lindsey Taylor-Guthartz gave a short address on 'Limmud: The Shared Journey' as the keynote speaker at the Hebrew University's online presentation of the Flegg Prize 2020 to Limmud, in honour of its promotion of understanding, acceptance, and co-operation between different parts of the Jewish world.

New publication

Digital Theology. Scott Midson, 'Robots and Religion' in Dialogue: A Journal of Religion and Philosophy 55 (Nov 2020), 50-55. Further information.

20 November 2020

Paper, UK Rabbinic Workshop

Jewish Studies.
Philip Alexander will lead a workshop session entitled '"If they are not prophets, they are sons of prophets": Tosefta Pesahim 4:13-14 and its "reception" in the Yerushalmi and the Bavli' at the second UK Rabbinics Network Workshop. 2pm on Thu 26 Nov 2020. Contact Laliv Clenman or Tali Artman for further information.

19 November 2020

Paper, Erlangen-Nürnberg

Jewish Studies. Daniel Langton will contribute a paper on 'Origins and Evolution in Judaism' for a conference on 'The concept of protology in Judaism, Christianity and Islam'. Bavarian Research Center for Interreligious Discourses, Friedrich Alexander University, Erlangen-Nürnberg. Workshop paper and book chapter in Key Concepts in Interreligious Discourses (de Gruyter). 16 Feb 2022. Further information.

Virtual panel member, AAR

Japanese Religious Studies.
Erica Baffelli (Japanese Studies) will be presiding over the panel 'The Aesthetics and Emotions of Religious Belonging: Case Studies from Buddhist Communities' at a viritual meeting of the American Academy of Religion. 4pm (local) on Wed 9 Dec 2020. Further information.

Symposium keynote paper, Chester

Japanese Religious Studies. Erica Baffelli (Japanese Studies), '"I would do it all again”: former members’ experience in Aum Shinrikyō'. MA Symposium, Theology and Religious Studies, University of Chester. 4pm on Wed 9 Dec 2020. Further information.

New publication

Japanese Religious Studies. Erica Baffelli (Japanese Studies) “Did Aum Shinrikyō Really End?” in The Demise of Religion: How Religions End, Die, or Dissipate  eds: M. Stausberg, C.M. Cusack, S.A. Wright (London: Bloomsbury, 2020), chapter 3.  Further information.

Webinar, Trento

Japanese Religious Studies.  Erica Baffelli (Japanese Studies) will present a paper entitled 'The Android and the Fax: AI and Buddhism in Contemporary Japan' for the Webinar Series 'Artificial Intelligence and Religion – AIR2020/21', sixth episode. The Center for Religious Studies, Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Trento. 25 November 2020, shortly before 4:00 pm CET. Further information.

Social Responsibility

Christian theology. Prof. David Law has been appointed as the representative for the Diocese of Chester (Church of England) on the Standing Advisory Council on Religious Education (SACRE) for Trafford Council. The role of SACRE is to provide local government with advice on matters related to collective worship and religious education in community schools.

New publication

Dead Sea Scrolls. Baesick Choi, Leviticus and Its Reception in the Dead Sea Scrolls from Qumran (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2020). This is the publication of a PhD thesis supervised by George Brooke from 2013 until 2017. Dr Choi now works as a Methodst minister in Virginia, USA. Further information.

17 November 2020

Ehrhardt Seminar

Christian Studies. Dr Samuel Rogers ‘Black Lives Matter and the Bible: Use of the Bible in Discourse Surrounding the BLM Movement’ 14:00 - 16:00 17 December 2020. Further information.

10 November 2020

Religions & Theology Research Seminar

Biblical Studies.
Dr Andrew Boakye (University of Manchester) “Apostles Behaving Badly: Peter, Paul and Black Lives Matter” 16:00 - 17:30 10 December 2020. Further information.

Ehrhardt Seminar

Dead Sea Scrolls. Nicholas Kay (King’s College, London) ‘The Concept of 'ir in 11Q19: Spatiality’ 14:00 - 16:00 10 December 2020. Further information.

06 November 2020

New online publication

Biblical Studies. CBS honorary research fellow, Mary Mills, 'Isaiah 1-39' in The Jerome Biblical Commentary, eds David Senior, John Collins et al (London: T&T Clark, 2021). Further information.

05 November 2020

Public lecture, CIDRAL and CJS

Jewish Studies. Prof Oliver Leaman (University of Kentucky): ‘“It’s Not Just the Same”: How Rituals and Religions Cope with Crises’. 5-7pm, 8 Dec 2020. Joint Zoom event with CJS and CIDRAL. Further information.

New publication

Dead Sea Scrolls.
George Brooke, "Patterns of Priesthood and Patterns of Prayer in the Dead Sea Scrolls," in Petitioners, Penitents, and Poets: On Prayer and Praying in Second Temple Judaism, edited by Ariel Feldman and Timothy J. Sandoval, BZAW 524 (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2020), 115-130. Further information.

03 November 2020

Ehrhardt Seminar

Dead Sea Scrolls. Dr Helen Jacobus (University of Manchester) ‘A Response to the Alleged "Fallacy of Jaubert's Hypothesis" and the Flood Calendar in the Dead Sea Scrolls’ 14:00 - 16:00 03 December 2020. Further information.

Reading group, Jewish-Muslim

Jewish Muslim Research Network. JMRN seminar 'Theories and Contexts of Jewish-Muslim Relations' with Bryan Cheyette, Yulia Egorova and Jonathan Glasser in conversation with Adi Saleem Bharat. 5 November 2020, 3pm (GMT). Further information.

Blog entry, Faith in the 18th Century English Town

Christian Studies.  Hannah Barker (History) and colleagues have written a series of blog entries as part of the AHRC project ‘Faith in the Town: Lay Religion, Urbanisation and Industrialisation in England, 1740-1830’ (2018-21). The latest is on 'Memory and Religious Space in the Eighteenth-century Town'. Further information.