This workshop aims to sustain an ongoing conversation about meaning and religious discourse and practice. Since the texts in question are extremely diverse, the ethos of the Workshop is interdisciplinary; historical, aesthetic, sociological, philosophical, and philological perspectives (among others) are all relevant here. In addition, because religious traditions stand in complex relation to ostensibly secular cultures, the Workshop frequently treats this mutual interpenetration, both in order to understand it better and to find unexpected resources for constructive reflection.
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Time: Alternate Fridays, 4:00-5:30 p.m., Swift 200. |
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