Religion CFP

Religion/Religious Studies & Philosophy Call for Papers

Posts tagged ANE

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#CFP: Arc, The Journal of the Faculty of Religious Studies, McGill University (Vol. 41) via @mcgillu

The editors of Arc: The Journal of the Faculty of Religious Studies, McGill University solicit submissions with a contemporary or a historical focus on the themes of freedom, liberty, and liberation in religious thought and practice for the 2013 issue (Vol. 41).

Possible topics for submissions might include:

  • Religious or theological interpretations of freedom, liberty, and/or liberation 
  • Freedom of religion 
  • Freedom or liberation from suffering 
  • Freedom and virtue, e.g. sin, wrongdoing, and the problem of evil 
  • Relations among concepts of freedom, liberty, law, destiny, and providence 
  • Concepts of liberation in religio-political contexts 
  • Concepts of freedom in the ancient world, and their reception (or lack thereof). E.g. The Greek concept of Freedom in the Jewish, Greco-Roman, and Ancient Christian worlds.

The editors also solicit reviews of recently published books related to the study of religion. Arc is an interdisciplinary, refereed journal published annually by the Faculty of Religious Studies, McGill University. The journal combines the talents of professors and graduate students in offering space for scholarly discussions on various aspects of the academic study of religion, including method and theory in the study of religion.

Arc encourages submissions from diverse religious traditions and perspectives. The submission deadline is March 31st, 2013.

For detailed submission guidelines, please consult the Guidelines for Contributors (PDF) on our website. All electronic correspondence, including requests for review copies of books, should be sent to the editors, Richard Cumming and Ryan Jones, at the following email address: arc.relgstud@mcgill.ca

Filed under cfp call for papers religion religious studies McGill University freedom liberty liberation freedom of religion sin evil theodicy political theory political theology feminism feminist theory Jewish Greco-Roman ANE Ancient Christian Ancient Near East

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Geobyte: Call for Papers - Tenth Biennial Conference of Association for the Study of Travel in Egypt and the Near East

geobyte:

Date: Friday 12 - Monday 15 July 2013
Location: Aston University Birmingham

Researches and Reflections - The Tenth Biennial Conference of ASTENE
The Association for the Study of Travel in Egypt and the Near East

We invite papers for our next ASTENE conference which will continue to explore…

Filed under cfp call for papers Religion religious studies philosophy Egypt ANE Ancien near east

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CFP DEADLINE EXTENSION: Mediterranean Studies Grad Student Conference

FP DEADLINE EXTENSION: Mediterranean Studies Grad Student ConferenceLocation:IllinoisUnited StatesCall for Papers Date:2012-11-16 (in 27 days)Date Submitted:2012-10-16Announcement ID:197934

Call for Papers

Real and Imaginary Borders Across the Mediterranean

Keynote Speakers: Prof. Ruth Ben-Ghiat (NYU) and Prof. Abdulkader Sinno (Indiana University Bloomington)

Submission Deadline **EXTENDED: November 16, 2012

On behalf of the School of Literatures, Cultures, and Linguistics at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, we are pleased to announce the organization of the graduate student conference “Real and Imaginary Borders Across the Mediterranean.” This conference will be held at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign over a period of two days: Friday, February 8 and Saturday, February 9, 2013.

This conference will explore the risk of crossing borders and boundaries- whether national, psychological, cultural, or political - of the Mediterranean. We would like to invite graduate students with interests that span antiquity to present day and hope to include participants across multiple disciplines. Proposals may address, but are not restricted to, the following areas of study:

Art History Anthropology Arabic Classics Comparative Literature Gender and Sexuality Film and Media Studies History Linguistics Performance Studies Philosophy Political Science Romance Languages

Presentations should not exceed 20 minutes (approximately 8-10 pages of double-spaced text). Please send an abstract and cover sheet with the title of your paper, your name, affiliation, and contact information (including phone number and e-mail address) to the conference organizers - Ashley DiGregorio and Elysse Longiotti - at mediterraneanconf@mx.uillinois.edu. Abstracts should be 200-300 words in length and should be in Microsoft Word format.

For more information regarding the conference, please refer to the conference website: http://publish.illinois.edu/mediterraneanconf/

Ashley DiGregorio/Elysse Longiotti 
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign 
4080 Foreign Language Building 
707 S Matthews 
Urbana, IL 61801
Email: mediterraneanconf@mx.uillinois.edu
Visit the website at http://publish.illinois.edu/mediterraneanconf/

Filed under cfp call for papers religion religious studies philosophy Mediterranean ANE Near East

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6th Annual International Conference on Mediterranean Studies, 26-29 March 2013, Athens, Greece

th Annual International Conference on Mediterranean Studies, 26-29 March 2013, Athens, Greece

Location: Greece

Conference Date: 2013-03-26

Date Submitted: 2012-10-06

Announcement ID: 197664

Second Call for Papers and Participation

The Athens Institute for Education and Research (ATINER) organizes its 6th Annual International Conference on Mediterranean Studies, 26-29 March 2013, Athens, Greece. The conference website is: www.atiner.gr/mediterranean.htm.

The aim of the conference is to bring together scholars, researchers and students from all areas of Mediterranean Studies, such as history, arts, archaeology, philosophy, culture, sociology, politics, international relations, economics, business, sports, environment and ecology, etc.

The registration fee is €300 (euro), covering access to all sessions, two lunches, the official dinner of the conference (Greek Night), coffee breaks and conference material. Special arrangements will be made with a local luxury hotel for a limited number of rooms at a special conference rate. In addition, a number of social events will be organized: A Greek night of entertainment with dinner (the official dinner of the conference), an archaeological tour (urban walk) of Athens, a special one-day cruise in the Greek islands, and a one-day visit to Delphi. Details of the social program are available at http://www.atiner.gr/2013/SOC-MDT.htm

Please submit an abstract (email only) to: atiner@atiner.gr, using the abstract submission form available at http://www.atiner.gr/2013/FORM-MDT.doc by the 24 December 2012 to: Dr. Gregory A. Katsas, Academic Member of ATINER and Associate Professor, The American College of Greece-Deree College, Greece. Abstracts should include the following: Title of Paper, Full Name (s), Affiliation, Current Position, an email address, and at least 3 keywords that best describe the subject of your submission. Decisions are reached within 4 weeks.

If you want to participate without presenting a paper, i.e. organize a panel (session, mini conference), chair a session, review papers to be included in the conference proceedings or books, contribute to the editing of a book, or any other contribution, please send an email to Dr. Gregory T. Papanikos, President, ATINER (gtp@atiner.gr).

The Athens Institute for Education and Research (ATINER) was established in 1995 as an independent academic association with the mission to become a forum, where academics and researchers - from all over the world - could meet in Athens to exchange ideas on their research and to discuss future developments in their disciplines. Since 1995, ATINER has organized more than 200 international conferences, symposiums and events. It has also published approximately 150 books. Academically, the Institute consists of five Research Divisions and twenty-three Research Units. Each Research Unit organizes an annual conference and undertakes various small and large research projects. Academics and researchers are more than welcome to become members and contribute to ATINER’s objectives. The members of the Institute can undertake a number of academic activities. If you want to become a member, please download the form (membership form). For more information or suggestions, please send an email to: info@atiner.gr.

ATINER, 8 Valaoritou Street, Kolonaki, 10671 Athens, Greece 

Tel.: + 30 210 36.34.210 

Fax: + 30 210 3634209 

Visit the website at http://www.atiner.gr/mediterranean.htm

Filed under cfp call for papers religion religious studies ANE Ancient Near East Ancient Mediterranean Studies

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#CFP: Society of Biblical Literature, Annual Meeting in Chicago. Due March 1, 2012 #aarsbl, #sbl, #aar

2012 ANNUAL MEETING

Chicago, IL

Meeting Begins: 11/17/2012

Meeting Ends: 11/20/2012 

Call For Papers Opens: 2/8/2012

Call For Papers Closes: 3/1/2012

Requirements for Participation

Program Units

Section 

Sections offer the broadest access to the meeting program. Volunteer paper proposals are welcome.

Academic Teaching and Biblical Studies

African Biblical Hermeneutics

African-American Biblical Hermeneutics

Ancient Fiction and Early Christian and Jewish Narrative

Ancient Near Eastern Iconography and the Bible

Aramaic Studies

Archaeology of Religion in the Roman World

Art and Religions of Antiquity

Assyriology and the Bible

Bible and Cultural Studies

Bible and Popular Culture

Bible and Visual Art

Bible in Ancient and Modern Media

Bible in Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Traditions

Bible Translation

Bible, Myth, and Myth Theory

Biblical Criticism and Literary Criticism

Biblical Greek Language and Linguistics

Biblical Hebrew Poetry

Biblical Lands and Peoples in Archaeology and Text

Biblical Law

Biblical Lexicography

Blogger and Online Publication

Book of Acts

Book of Psalms

Book of the Twelve Prophets

Children in the Biblical World

Christian Apocrypha

Christian Theology and the Bible

Christianity in Egypt: Scripture, Tradition, and Reception

Chronicles-Ezra-Nehemiah

Cognitive Linguistics in Biblical Interpretation

Construction of Christian Identities

Corpus Hellenisticum Novi Testamenti

Current Historiography and Ancient Israel and Judah

Deuteronomistic History

Development of Early Christian Theology

Disputed Paulines

Early Christianity and the Ancient Economy

Early Jewish Christian Relations

Ecological Hermeneutics

Esotericism and Mysticism in Antiquity

Ethics and Biblical Interpretation

Feminist Hermeneutics of the Bible

Formation of Luke-Acts

Function of Apocryphal and Pseudepigraphal Writings in Early Judaism and Early Christianity

Greco-Roman Religions

Greek Bible

Healthcare and Disability in the Ancient World

Hebrew Bible and Political Theory

Hebrew Bible, History, and Archaeology

Hebrew Scriptures and Cognate Literature

Hellenistic Judaism

Historical Jesus

History and Literature of Early Rabbinic Judaism

History of Interpretation

Homiletics and Biblical Studies

Ideological Criticism

Intertextuality in the New Testament

Israelite Prophetic Literature

Israelite Religion in its West Asian Environment

Jesus Traditions, Gospels, and Negotiating the Roman Imperial World

Jewish Christianity / Christian Judaism

Johannine Literature

John’s Apocalypse and Cultural Contexts Ancient and Modern

Joshua-Judges

Latino/a and Latin American Biblical Interpretation

Latter-day Saints and the Bible

Letters of James, Peter, and Jude

Levites and Priests in History and Tradition

LGBT/Queer Hermeneutics

Linguistics and Biblical Hebrew

Matthew

Midrash

Nag Hammadi and Gnosticism

New Testament Textual Criticism

Orality, Textuality, and the Formation of the Hebrew Bible

Pauline Epistles

Pentateuch

Performance Criticism of Biblical and Other Ancient Texts

Postcolonial Studies and Biblical Studies

Pseudepigrapha

Psychology and Biblical Studies

Q

Qumran

Qur’an and Biblical Literature

Reading, Theory, and the Bible

Recovering Female Interpreters of the Bible

Religious Experience in Early Judaism and Early Christianity

Religious World of Late Antiquity

Rhetoric and the New Testament

Ritual in the Biblical World

Sacrifice, Cult, and Atonement

Scripture and Film

Scripture in Early Judaism and Christianity

Semiotics and Exegesis

Social History of Formative Christianity and Judaism

Social Sciences and the Interpretation of the Hebrew Scriptures

Social Scientific Criticism of the New Testament

Space, Place, and Lived Experience in Antiquity

Synoptic Gospels

Syriac Literature and Interpretations of Sacred Texts

Teaching Biblical Studies in an Undergraduate Liberal Arts Context

Textual Criticism of the Hebrew Bible

Theological Perspectives on the Book of Ezekiel

Theology of the Hebrew Scriptures

Ugaritic Studies and Northwest Semitic Epigraphy

Use, Influence, and Impact of the Bible

Violence and Representations of Violence among Jews and Christians

Warfare in Ancient Israel

Wisdom and Apocalypticism in Early Judaism and Early Christianity

Wisdom in Israelite and Cognate Traditions

Women in the Biblical World

Group 

Groups pursue long-range, collaborative research projects that require active participation. They are focused more broadly than Seminars, more narrowly than Sections.

Applied Linguistics for Biblical Languages

Asian and Asian-American Hermeneutics

Contextual Biblical Interpretation

Exile (Forced Migrations) in Biblical Literature

Extent of Theological Diversity in Earliest Christianity

Formation of Isaiah

Gender, Sexuality, and the Bible

Hebrews

Ideology, Culture, and Translation

John, Jesus, and History

Josephus

Literature and History of the Persian Period

Meals in the Greco-Roman World

Papyrology and Early Christian Backgrounds

Paul and Politics

Pauline Soteriology

Philo of Alexandria

Prophetic Texts and Their Ancient Contexts

Redescribing Early Christianity

Rhetoric of Religious Antiquity

Sabbath in Text and Tradition

Textual Growth: What Variant Editions Tell Us About Scribal Activity

Writing/Reading Jeremiah

Seminar 

Seminars are established around well-defined research topics or projects with specific publication plans. Seminars have limited membership but permit auditors. Papers are discussed, not read.

Mark

Markan Literary Sources

Second Corinthians: Pauline Theology in the Making

Systematic Transformation and Interweaving of Scripture in 1 Corinthians

Theological Interpretation of Scripture

Consultation 

Consultations are exploratory program units focused on new areas of interest. Volunteer proposals are occasionally welcome.

Bible and Pastoral Theology

Book of Daniel

Covenant in the Persian Period

Economics in the Biblical World

Ethics, Love and the Other in Early Christianity

Ethiopic Bible and Literature

Genesis

Islands, Islanders, and Bible

Memory Perspectives on Early Christianity and its Greco-Roman Context

Metaphor Theory and Biblical Texts

Minoritized Criticism and Biblical Interpretation

Polis and Ekklesia: Investigations of Urban Christianity

Poverty in the Biblical World

Religious Competition in the Third Century CE: Interdisciplinary Approaches

Sensory Perception in the Bible and Early Judaism and Christianity

Slavery, Resistance, and Freedom

Unity and Diversity in Early Jewish Monotheisms

Workshop 

Workshops offer participants and attendees hands-on, practical experience. Paper proposals are occasionally welcome.

Manuscripts from Eastern Christian Traditions

Service-Learning and Biblical Studies

Textual Criticism of Samuel – Kings

Affiliate 

Adventist Society for Religious Studies

African Association for the Study of Religion

Anglican Association of Biblical Scholars

Ethnic Chinese Biblical Colloquium

Evangelical Philosophical Society

GOCN Forum on Missional Hermeneutics

Institute for Biblical Research

Institute on Religion and Civic Values

International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies

International Syriac Language Project

Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion

Karl Barth Society of North America

Korean Biblical Colloquium

Masoretic Studies (Affiliated with IOMS)

National Association of Professors of Hebrew

Nida Institute for Biblical Scholarship at the American Bible Society

North American Association for the Study of Religion

Novum Testamentum Graecum: Editio Critica Maior

Society for Ancient Mediterranean Religions

Society for Pentecostal Studies

Society of Christian Ethics

Søren Kierkegaard Society

Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion

Filed under cfp call for papers religion religious studies textual studies biblical studies literature studies feminism feminist theory gender and sexuality studies ANE Ancient Near East sacred texts art Cultural Studies Critical Theory LGBTQ queer theory Judaism Christianity Islam Secular

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#CFP: Israel in the ANE #aarsbl

The Israel in the Ancient Near East research group of the EABS
announces an open call for papers for the 2012 meeting in Amsterdam.
The group is designed to provide a common forum for scholars
investigating issues of religion, language and culture in the ancient
Near East and welcomes participants from across the range of subjects
and time periods.

The 2012 sessions will be running jointly with the Ancient Near East
and the Assyriology & the Bible program units of SBL, with a general
session as well as a session focused on priests and priesthood in the
ancient Near East.

As this is a joint conference with the SBL International Meeting,
abstracts should be submitted via the SBL website (www.sbl-site.org)
to the Israel in the Ancient Near East unit no later than 1 February
2012.

NB: Abstracts longer than 250 words will not be considered.

Filed under Religion CfP Call for Papers cfp ANE ancient near east Israel

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#CFP: Bible & Empire due 2/1/2012

The Bible & Empire program unit at the International SBL is pleased to
announce an open call for papers for the 2012 meeting in Amsterdam.
The unit’s ancient world section is devoted to the influence of
imperial political powers on the development of the Bible in its
historical context.

The 2012 session will focus on the Neo-Babylonian Empire and will run
jointly with the Assyriology and the Bible program unit. Papers may be
submitted for publication, for which the deadline to submit final
manuscripts will probably be around October 1, 2012.

Abstracts should be submitted via the SBL website (www.sbl-site.org)
in the usual way, no later than 1 February. Queries may be addressed
to the chairs (carly.crouch@nottingham.ac.ukj.stokl@ucl.ac.uk).

Filed under aar SBL EABS international Biblical Studies Religion Religious Studies ANE ancient near east Ancient Mediterranean Religions

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#CFP: How Do We Want the Past to Be? Due 3/1/2012

Call for papers:
How Do We Want the Past to Be? On Methods and Instruments of
Visualizing the Ancient Reality
(Buffalo, TAG 2012, May 17-20)

Description of the session:
The session is devoted to analyzing and debating any attempt of
imagining and reconstructing ancient architecture in shape and
function. Since new theories and their application more and more
affect archaeological studies and publications, it seems necessary to
pause and reflect on the (over)estimated value of the results. Thus,
we kindly invite papers that, starting from either general
consideration or specific case studies, face the impact of methods and
instruments (traditional and/or informative), criticize both tools and
results, radically stimulate the debate by emphasizing opposite
opinions and experiences, and finally suggest interpretations and new
possibilities in rendering and reading ancient artefacts and
architecture by building new bridges or new ways of crossing the same
bridges to new (ancient) worlds.

Submissions to the session should be entered through the Buffalo TAG
website by March 1st, 2012
(http://www.cas.buffalo.edu/tag2012/program.shtml).

For inquiries and further information, please contact Davide Nadali
(davidenadali@gmail.com) or Maria Gabriella Micale
(mgmlucy@libero.it).

Filed under call for papers cfp religious studies religion ANE sbl aar Past history archaeology Past History Archaeology

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#CFP The Israel in the Ancient Near East research group of the EABS

The Israel in the Ancient Near East research group of the EABS
announces an open call for papers for the 2012 meeting in Amsterdam.
The group is designed to provide a common forum for scholars
investigating issues of religion, language and culture in the ancient
Near East and welcomes participants from across the range of subjects
and time periods.

The 2012 sessions will be running jointly with the Ancient Near East
and the Assyriology & the Bible program units of SBL, with a general
session as well as a session focused on priests and priesthood in the
ancient Near East.

As this is a joint conference with the SBL International Meeting,
abstracts should be submitted via the SBL website (www.sbl-site.org)
to the Israel in the Ancient Near East unit no later than 1 February
2012.

NB: Abstracts longer than 250 words will not be considered.

Filed under religion ANE Ancient Near East religious studies Ancient Mediterrian AAR sbl

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CFP: Society for Ancient Mediterranean Religions

The following CFP may be of interest to some:

RELIGION IN PIECES
An Interdisciplinary Conference Sponsored by the Society for Ancient Mediterranean Religions
Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World
Brown University, April 27-29th, 2012

The quest to determine the contours and contents of ancient religion has always been a largely constructivist endeavor, subject to the exigencies of preservation. How do we, in our respective fields, approach the problem of fragmentary evidence? How do we construct such elusive categories as “belief” or “ritual” or “praxis” from an insufficient, scattered, or occasionally inscrutable base of primary source materials?

The Society for Ancient Mediterranean Religions seeks papers for a conference to be held at Brown University, April 27-29th 2012, on the topic, “Religion in Pieces.” In keeping with the society’s broad interests in religions of the Mediterranean basin over the great chronological expanse from prehistory to late antiquity, we seek contributions from scholars in the fields of Classics, Ancient History, Religious Studies, Archaeology, Near Eastern Studies, Egyptology, and Art History. We are particularly interested in papers that present case studies in reconstructing religious practice from fragmentary evidence, or which problematize or lay out the methodological challenges inherent in constructing religion from a paucity of sources. Relevant subfields include (but are not limited to) epigraphy, papyrology, codicology, archaeology, and textual studies of fragmentary or poorly attested sources; especially welcome are transdisciplinary papers which synthesize a variety of textual, archaeological, and art historical and/or material culture sources to reach new insights into ancient Mediterranean religions.

We invite abstracts from 250-500 words, accompanied by a Curriculum Vitae, to socamr@gmail.com. Deadline for submission is midnight of January 28thth, 2012. Participants will be contacted with an invitation to participate by the beginning of March, 2012.

(Source: currentepigraphy.org)

Filed under cfp call for papers SAMR Ancient Mediterranean Religions Ancient Near East ANE religion philosophy texts textual studies belief ritual praxis classics Ancient History Religious Studies Archaeology Near Eastern STudies Egyptology Art History reception history