Science and Engagement in the Study of Religion
A Global Debate
Equinox Publishing Ltd
Will be published approx. on 1. October 2026
Book
Hardback
240 pages
978-1-80050-931-3 (ISBN)
Description
This volume emerges from the dynamic IAHR Special Conference held in Tokyo, December 2023, where scholars engaged in vigorous debate on the role of scientific objectivity in the study of religions. The debate featured two distinct perspectives: one advocating for the preservation of scientific neutrality, free from religious or political agendas, and the other promoting the integration of social relevance and addressing societal issues. This volume delves into the complexities of these discussions, exploring regional biases, the definition and articulation of "science," and the balance between objectivity and cultural-historical perspectives. It aims to expand on the presentations and discussions from the conference, adding insights into the historical context of this debate, the role of science in the study of religions, and the need for an updated understanding of science within the IAHR.
Readers are invited to contemplate the nuanced relationship between science and the study of religions, especially in a global context. This volume questions whether scholars of religion are merely reiterating past discussions without significant progress since the IAHR's establishment, or if they are now equipped to address these issues with more sophisticated arguments and vocabularies, acknowledging the complexity of these debates. The need for such in-depth discussion among international scholars has increased in recent years, not only because of the ongoing debate on decolonization but also in light of the changing social climate, including wars and other political crises.
Readers are invited to contemplate the nuanced relationship between science and the study of religions, especially in a global context. This volume questions whether scholars of religion are merely reiterating past discussions without significant progress since the IAHR's establishment, or if they are now equipped to address these issues with more sophisticated arguments and vocabularies, acknowledging the complexity of these debates. The need for such in-depth discussion among international scholars has increased in recent years, not only because of the ongoing debate on decolonization but also in light of the changing social climate, including wars and other political crises.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
ISBN-13
978-1-80050-931-3 (9781800509313)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Denzil Chetty is a scholar and faculty member at the University of South Africa (UNISA). His research interests span various areas, including Religious Studies, Sociology of Religion, and Religion and Politics. Chetty has contributed to academic literature through articles and books, covering topics such as religion and education, connectivism in technology-centred pedagogy in religious studies, digital Hinduism, online religious identities, and religion at the intersections of hegemony and power with a focus on Gramscian thought. Over the years, he has been awarded numerous prestigious awards for his academic contributions. Some notable accolades include the 2003 Abe Bailey Fellowship in the United Kingdom, the 2011 UNISA Award for Innovation in Teaching and Learning, the 2014 Shanghai Open University African Visiting Scholar in China, and the 2015 UNISA Excellence Award in Teaching and Learning, recognising his valuable contributions to institutional knowledge. He holds a capacity development grant focusing on the African Digital Humanities, which seeks to advance African epistemology and decolonization within technology-mediated humanities.
Satoko Fujiwara is Professor of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Tokyo. She has been serving as Secretary General of the International Association for the History of Religions since 2020. Her main focus is on theories in the study of religion with latest publications on the global history of the discipline and the IAHR. She has also published articles on how religions have been described in public school education.
Katja Triplett is Associate Fellow at the Humanities Center of Advanced Studies "Multiple Secularities - Beyond the West, Beyond Modernities, " University of Leipzig. She is an affiliated Professor of the Study of Religions at Marburg University, where she curated the Religionskundliche Sammlung from 2007 to 2012. She received her Doctorate in the Study of Religions from Marburg University where she also studied Japanese Linguistics and Cultural Anthropology. Her main fields of interest are Buddhism, religion and medicine, and visual and material culture. She has published widely on Japanese religions. Among her recent publications is Buddhism and Medicine in Japan (De Gruyter, 2019).
Satoko Fujiwara is Professor of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Tokyo. She has been serving as Secretary General of the International Association for the History of Religions since 2020. Her main focus is on theories in the study of religion with latest publications on the global history of the discipline and the IAHR. She has also published articles on how religions have been described in public school education.
Katja Triplett is Associate Fellow at the Humanities Center of Advanced Studies "Multiple Secularities - Beyond the West, Beyond Modernities, " University of Leipzig. She is an affiliated Professor of the Study of Religions at Marburg University, where she curated the Religionskundliche Sammlung from 2007 to 2012. She received her Doctorate in the Study of Religions from Marburg University where she also studied Japanese Linguistics and Cultural Anthropology. Her main fields of interest are Buddhism, religion and medicine, and visual and material culture. She has published widely on Japanese religions. Among her recent publications is Buddhism and Medicine in Japan (De Gruyter, 2019).
Content
IntroductionDenzil Chetty, Satoko Fujiwara & Katja Triplett
Philosophical Responses1 IAHR, Globalization, and the Spaces for Objectivity, Values, and Commitments
Jeppe Sinding Jensen
2 Normative Evaluation in the Global Study of Religions
Kevin Schilbrack
Challenges3 Gender Studies as a Challenge and Chance for a Critical Religionswissenschaft
Edith Franke & Birgit Heller
4 The Game of the Study of Religion and the Decolonial Challenge
Andrea Rota
Framing5 How Not to Turn Diversity into Division
Satoko Fujiwara
6 Critical Decolonial Pluralism
Denzil Chetty
Integrated Approaches7 The Study of Religion and Its Value-Relations
Gritt Klinkhammer
8 Are Scientific Objectivity and Social Engagement Antithetical in Practice?
Ann Taves
AfterwordTim Jensen
Philosophical Responses1 IAHR, Globalization, and the Spaces for Objectivity, Values, and Commitments
Jeppe Sinding Jensen
2 Normative Evaluation in the Global Study of Religions
Kevin Schilbrack
Challenges3 Gender Studies as a Challenge and Chance for a Critical Religionswissenschaft
Edith Franke & Birgit Heller
4 The Game of the Study of Religion and the Decolonial Challenge
Andrea Rota
Framing5 How Not to Turn Diversity into Division
Satoko Fujiwara
6 Critical Decolonial Pluralism
Denzil Chetty
Integrated Approaches7 The Study of Religion and Its Value-Relations
Gritt Klinkhammer
8 Are Scientific Objectivity and Social Engagement Antithetical in Practice?
Ann Taves
AfterwordTim Jensen