UPDATE: Religion, Secularism and Cultural Studies (7/15/05; journal issue)
<apologies for cross mailings>
**Please note that the deadline for submissions on this issue has been
extended to July 15, 2005.**
The Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies, a referred academic journal dedicated
to publishing cultural studies scholarship from both established and
emerging scholars, is currently soliciting submissions for an upcoming
special issue on:
RELIGION, SECULARISM, AND CULTURAL STUDIES
Guest Editors: Lori Branch and Everett Hamner
Culture may be, as Raymond Williams informs us, "everyday," but as it is
reified in cultural studies practice, it is rarely religious. The Blackwell
Companion to Cultural Studies (2001), for instance, uncovers not a hint in
579 pages or a detailed index that religion operates in culture at all: no
prayer, no yoga, no Religious Right, abstinence campaigns, televangelism,
no daily practice of Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, or Islam.
And this, despite the daily news, world politics, and a cadre of critics
hailing the "return of the religious" to critical discourse. In her
Presidential Address to the Modern Language Association in December 2003,
Mary Louise Pratt proclaimed the urgency of the interdisciplinary study of
religion in our literature departments. "Who can doubt today," she asked,
"the need to study secularism and religiosity from every viewpoint we can
muster?" As Stanley Fish has recently pointed out in The Chronicle of
Higher Education, the distinctions between reason and faith, truth and
belief, have been increasingly called into question in culture and
academia, and religion promises, in his words, to "succeed high theory and
the triumvirate of race, gender, and class as the center of intellectual
energy in the academy."
This special issue of The Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies seeks to speak
in and to cultural studies' silence on religion and secularism, and to gain
a critical perspective on that silence and the reasons it has existed. This
issue will explore the conversations that can take place between cultural
studies and highlight the new outpouring of work from a variety of critical
perspectives that points toward vibrant engagement in the coming years with
the historical study of the mutual transformation of religion and
secularism in modernity.
We solicit submissions on any aspect of religion, secularism, and cultural
studies, from any time period, literature, or media, and particularly those
that implicitly or explicitly address the following questions: What would a
cultural studies approach to religious texts, behaviors and artifacts look
like? How would this affect or challenge "secular" cultural studies? What
is at stake in the secular portrayal of everyday life created by the
silence surrounding religion in cultural studies? How can recent critical
studies of the emergence of secularism in modernity?
Please submit papers no later than 7/15/05 to:
Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies 308 English-Philosophy Building University
of Iowa Iowa City, IA 52242-1492
Two hard copies of the manuscript and a disk, preferably in Microsoft Word,
should be provided. Manuscripts cannot be returned unless a self-addressed
envelope with US postage is provided. Submissions should be no longer than
30 pages and should be prepared following the MLA Style Manual.
For more information about contributing or subscribing to this journal,
please contact the managing editor at <ijcs_at_uiowa.edu>. The journal's
web site, which includes excerpts from previous issues, editorial board and
other information, is at: <www.uiowa.edu/~ijcs>.
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Received on Mon Jun 06 2005 - 16:31:21 EDT