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The Devil You Know: Darkness, Disguise, and Demonism in Twelfth-Century Spain (Prof. Pamela Patton)

Hanes Hall, Room 125 204 E Cameron Ave, Chapel Hill, NC

Prof. Pamela Patton (Princeton University, History of Art and Architecture) will be giving a lecture titled "The Devil You Know: Darkness, Disguise, and Demonism in Twelfth-Century Spain." This event is presented by the UNC Program in Medieval and Early Modern Studies and is co-sponsored by the UNC Department of Religious Studies and the UNC Department […]

Never Can I Write Of Damascus: History, Memory, and Shared Life in Iraq and Syria

FedEx Global Education Center, Room 1005 Chapel Hill, NC, United States

Gabe Huck and Theresa Kubasak will share historical analysis and ethnographic insights from their new book, Never Can I Write of Damascus: When Syria Became Our Home. Beginning in 1999, these educators and peace activists witnessed what severe UN sanctions did to every aspect of Iraqi life. When the US moved from sanctions to invasion […]

Islam and Religious Identity: The Limits of Definition (Conference)

FedEx Global Education Center and Hyde Hall Chapel Hill, NC

Recent decades of research in historical, cultural, and social studies of religion have produced a body of scholarship on the construction and development of religious identities that seriously questions essentialist claims about the unchanging nature of religions. Nonetheless, essentialist notions of religions as unchanging entities are remarkably persistent, and relations between supposedly unchanging religions are […]

2016 AAR/SBL Annual Meeting in San Antonio, TX

San Antonio, TX

This year, the Annual Meetings of the American Academy of Religion and the Society of Biblical Literature will be held in San Antonio, TX, from November 19-22. This is one of the largest events in the field of religious studies, drawing over 10,000 attendees in recent years across more than 1100 academic and related sessions. […]

From Western NC to the World: Adventures in the Study of Religion

Carolina Hall, Room 213 Chapel Hill, NC, United States

Justin Sands grew up in small-town Western North Carolina, and he graduated from UNC-Chapel Hill in 2005 with a major in Religious Studies. After UNC, Sands obtained an M.A. at Villanova University, and then he received a Ph.D. from the University of Leuven in Belgium. He’s now living and working in an academic position in […]

Feminisms Here and Now: Communicating Alongside | Across | Against (Conference)

Chapel Hill, NC

Feminisms Here and Now: Communicating Alongside | Across | Against seeks to spark a critical conversation about what feminist praxis may look like in the first half of the 21st century and what role feminism may continue to play in critiquing and intervening in a broad range of social, cultural, and political issues. The conference […]

How the Pentateuch Was Composed: Two Floods are Better Than One

Manning Hall, Room 209 216 Lenoir Dr, Chapel Hill, NC, United States

Lecture by Prof. Baruch J. Schwartz, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Examined closely, the Biblical story of Noah is rife with inconsistency, repetition, and discontinuity. What brought about the Flood? How did it occur? How long did it last? Why was anyone spared? Why Noah? Why did God resolve never to destroy all life again? […]

(Un)Holy Spies: Religion and the American Espionage in World War II

Carolina Hall, Room 220 220 E Cameron Ave, Chapel Hill, NC

(Un)Holy Spies: Religion and the American Espionage in World War II By Matthew Sutton, Edward R. Meyer Distinguished Professor in the Department of History at Washington State University

Application Deadline for 2017 Huqoq Archaeological Excavation

The deadline for applications to join the UNC in Israel Summer Archaeological Excavation at Huqoq (May 29 to June 30, 2017), led by Prof. Jodi Magness, is February 9, 2017. To go directly to the application, click here. For more information on the program and the excavation, see here.