Annual
Conference 2019
9-11 July
2019, Cardiff University
Communicating
Religion
As scholars
of religion, we are all tasked with communicating religion in one way or
another – to students, to the public, and to our research community. Moreover,
what we study is itself a message: participants in our studies and creators of
the documents we analyse are communicating religion, and what we receive as
data is what Giddens referred to as the ‘double hermeneutic,’ or ideas and
experiences that have already been mediated. What is the religion communicated
to us? How do we communicate religion, and what is it that we communicate when
we’re doing it?
Our focus
is on "communicating" as a verb-like gerund rather than
"communication" as a static, abstract noun. Scholars from different
strands of the sociology of religion can imagine their work in it, and our
topic engages the interests of colleagues in journalism, media and cultural
studies; geography; music; English, communications and philosophy; social
psychology; and law and politics.
The
substance of communication can include evangelistic and apologistic discourse,
education, media, and public policy interventions. We welcome diverse
methodological approaches, including multi-modal and multi-sensory approaches
to communicating religion. We understand communicating in multiple contexts,
including academia, politics, education, social media and mass media. We
imagine multiple frameworks that contour how we imagine communicating religion,
encompassing the secular and the digital, the individual and the collective,
the implicit and the explicit, the theoretical and the empirical.
To deliver
a paper, please send an abstract of no more than 250 words, alongside a
biographical note of no more than 50 words. We will also be accepting a limited
number of panel proposals. To deliver a panel, please send an abstract of no
more than 500 words alongside a biographical note of no more than 50 words for
each contributor.
Please
submit your abstracts online, before midnight Friday 1 February 2019.
A limited
number of bursaries are available to support postgraduate, early career, low
income or unwaged SocRel members to present at the conference. Instructions and application form. Submit your bursary
application along with your abstract by 1 February 2019.
Socrel is
mindful of the various sensitivities people carry concerning content. If you
feel that the presentation you give may include material that may be upsetting,
please consider including a note about this content in your abstract. We will
not restrict or censor presentations that include sensitive or alarming
content, but by flagging it in the abstract, those who attend the conference
can make informed decisions on which panel they might choose to attend.
Abstract
submission closes: 1 February 2019
Decision
notification: 15 February 2019
Presenter
registration closes: 29 March 2019
Early bird
registration closes: 7 June 2019
Registration
closes: 28 June 2019
Please note
that after 7 June 2019, a £50 late registration fee will apply to all bookings.
Should you
have other questions about the conference please also contact the conference
organisers, Dr Michael Munnik (Cardiff University) or Dr Peter Hemming (Cardiff University) socrel19@cardiff.ac.uk
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