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Agata Ładykowska
email: 47567603@fsv.cuni.cz agata.ladykowska@fsv.cuni.cz We are witnesses to many rapid changes in societies over the globe. In the course, we will consider the ways religious ideas are being invoked to explain changes in societal organization and test the links between them by studying: • growing fundamentalism coupled with apparent secularization of societies; • elusive and esoteric religious practices of the neoliberal era; • new alignments of religion and power produced by postcolonial encounters; • postsocialist (re-)emergence of religion in the public space and its rapid pluralization and entanglement with secular politics; • the proliferation of conspiracy theories and contesting scientific knowledge; • and others. Poslední úprava: Ładykowska Agata, Dr. phil. (22.02.2022)
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In the course, we will examine these issues through a wide range of examples from various parts of the world in order to understand how these changes emerged and how they can be explained using sociological and anthropological concepts and ethnographic fieldwork. We will be discussing the religious dimension of the phenomenon of rave music; technological futures offering hope to life extension; ideas prompting conservative and fundamentalist attitudes within various branches of Christianity and Islam, as well as their reception, asking ourselves what contributes to critical responses these attitudes spark. We will consider the cases of conspiracy theories from the past and from our present, Covid-19 pandemic world. Lastly, based on the examples emerging from the colonial and postcolonial process in Latin America, Africa and the post-Soviet space, we shall inquire about the scaffolding that gave rise to the scholarship concerned with the structure of continuity and change and questions of resistance. Poslední úprava: Hájek Martin, doc. Mgr., Ph.D. (07.02.2022)
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See the syllabus. Poslední úprava: Hájek Martin, doc. Mgr., Ph.D. (07.02.2022)
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Students will be encouraged to undertake their own fieldwork. This should primarily take place in Prague (or its vicinities). During the first weeks, we will discuss the selection of topics, research questions and field sites. Students may work in small groups (2-3 students), or individually. By class 4 the topics should be selected and approved. Progressively, we will individually craft methods, discuss challenging situations and search for solutions to them, and seek relevant literature. By class 10, the early results are expected to be ready in a form of a draft of a report (ca 10 pages, excluding the references). We will discuss them individually. Students may expect to be asked for a revision. The final reports (min. 10 pages, without references), based on individual fieldwork and on the literature read during the course, should include other sources, as well research questions for potential future research/writing. The evaluation of your report will depend on the quality of your fieldwork and originality of research questions. Alternatively, in case of a failed fieldwork, you may be allowed to write a theoretical paper (10 pages, without references). Assessment methods: 1) Active participation in class: 24 points (12x2) All seminars are intended for a group discussion. Students should come to class prepared to discuss the assigned literature. Participation in seminars is compulsory (one absence is tolerated). For more absences, please contact the seminar leader. 2) Oral presentation (20 minutes long): 16 points This presentation is intended to demonstrate the progress of fieldwork. Independently of the stage of fieldwork, students are expected to present their ideas, research questions, and – towards the end of the semester – the data collected so far. 3) Final report or essay tackling a theoretical problem: 60 points The evaluation of your final report (10 pages, without references) will depend on the quality of your fieldwork and your engagement, as well as originality of research questions you develop. The successful essay will be written based on relevant literature, well-built argument, interesting conclusions. deadline for submission: tba To successfully pass the course all assignments have to be submitted and accepted. Poslední úprava: Ładykowska Agata, Dr. phil. (08.02.2023)
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Class 1-2 16.02., 15.30-18.20, online Religion as an object of anthropological inquiry We begin by an introduction to the course and its thematic. Afterwards, we will take a closer look at the problems of definition of religion, focusing on historicist and universalist approaches. How was religion constructed as an object of anthropological inquiry? Is a single definition possible at all? How useful is the concept when presented with the elusive nature of religious dimension beyond evident settings like church or monastery? Class 3-4. 23.02., 15.30-18.20, room 405
Rothstein M. 2004. Science and Religion in the New Religions In The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements, Ed. by James R. Lewis. Oxford. pp. 99—118. Class 5. 23.03., 15.30-16.50, room 405 Esotericism or invisible religions of the neoliberal era
Class 6. 23.03., 17.00-18.20, room 405
Class 7. 30.03., 15.30-16.50, room 405
Class 8. 30.03, 17.00-18.20, room 405 Class 9-10. 27.04., 15.50-18.20, room 405
Class 11. 04.05, 15.30-16.50, online
McBrien, Julie, and Mathijs Pelkmans. 2008. Turning Marx on his Head: Missionaries, 'Extremists' and Archaic Secularists in Post-Soviet Kyrgyzstan. Critique of Anthropology 28(1): 87–103. Class 12. 04.05., 17.00-18.20, online Poslední úprava: Ładykowska Agata, Dr. phil. (09.02.2023)
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