
This is the first episode of season 2, which is on the general theme of religion, race, and coloniality. The episodes for this season are recordings from lectures that I presented at the University of Stirling in autumn 2018
Sep 10, 2020
42 min

This podcast is based on a blog article that I first wrote a couple of years ago, and was recorded at the end of 2018 (soon before I fell ill). Although in reflection on issues raised last year and in 2020, I would probably add more discussion to my reflections here. However, I think this is still relevant to some of the contemporary debates about how the discipline of the study of religion needs to address the many challenges of anti-racism, both as a subject area and within the wider academy.
A text version of this episode, together with the links mentioned, can be found below.
https://medium.com/religion-bites/does-religious-studies-have-a-problem-with-race-e7d94efe3765
Aug 28, 2020
22 min

If we are exploring religion in culture, then how and what do we talk about as religion?
This is a question that goes across much of the contemporary study of religion, and impacts on it in various ways — not only in particular religious and culture contexts, but also very noticeably in the idea/approach of ‘material religion’. In short, if we want to explore ‘religion’ within particular cultural locations — such as religion in a book (e.g., Harry Potter) or a film/s (e.g., Star Wars) — then can we say that religion is a thing to find or a ‘manifestation’ of something (such as ‘the sacred’)? My straightforward answer to this is a definite ‘no’: religion is not a thing, it is not an it.
A text version of this episode, together with the links mentioned, can be found at the link below. (The episode was recorded a while ago, when I was still teaching at the University of Glasgow — that explains why I talk about teaching a class, when of course at present such face to face teaching is not possible due to the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020!).
https://medium.com/religion-bites-podcast/023-what-are-we-looking-for-when-we-look-at-religion-and-popularculture-66f5f1d50214
Aug 28, 2020
12 min

There can be no doubt that the academic study of religion emerged out of European colonialism. There are various lines of descent for the discipline, and like much of the humanities and social sciences, they all lead back to colonialism, and in particular the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
And so, during a time when there is a widespread movement for the decolonisation of knowledge, is there a need for a decolonisation of the study of religion? And if so, then what does it involve?
These are some initial thoughts on this major issue.
A written version of this episode can be found at:
https://medium.com/religion-bites/decolonisation-of-religious-studies-993727c6d1bc
Aug 28, 2020
16 min

I am a student of religion who does not study religion. I study what people think and talk about as religion.
I study the spaces, places, things, objects, ideas, practices, and conflicts that can be found in particular discourses that get labelled and thought about as ‘religion’. I study the idea of religion.
A written text version of this episode can be found at:
https://medium.com/religion-bites/i-dont-study-religion-so-what-am-i-doing-in-the-study-of-religion-be2653682feb
Aug 28, 2020
8 min

When we speak of religion are we in fact talking about race? Does the idea of ‘religion’ only make sense if we consider it as a particular instance of a racial formation?
A written text version of this episode can be found at:
https://medium.com/religion-bites/the-analysis-of-race-in-the-study-of-religion-c9288a5da01d
Aug 28, 2020
15 min

To understand the burkini bans in France in summer 2016, our starting point needs to be based on an assumption of intersectionality. The bans are not only about religion or security, they also involve gender, sexuality, race, power, and history.
A written version of this episode can be found at:
https://medium.com/religion-bites/burkini-bans-in-france-its-all-about-intersectionality-e81a9b1714ef
Aug 28, 2020
22 min

The history of the idea of chocolate is somewhat similar to the history of how we think about religions. Chocolate became chocolate through colonial encounter and appropriation. Without colonialism, we would not talk about chocolate – the same with religion.
A written version of this episode can be found at:
https://medium.com/religion-bites/religion-is-like-chocolate-e38536eda9ba
Aug 28, 2020
20 min

So, here is a question that is rarely asked in Religion 101 classes: What type of gloves should you be wearing?
All studies of religion are a study of humans, people and the worlds, cultures, meanings, ideas, and practices they live within. What we choose to wear (perhaps metaphorically) on our hands helps to shape what we do in the study of religion.
A written version of this episode can be found on the Religion Bites blog: https://medium.com/religion-bites/trying-to-understand-religion-its-a-matter-of-finding-the-right-gloves-to-wear-811fbc25ac5b
Aug 28, 2020
24 min

Postcolonialism and religion: in what ways are history and the contemporary world relevant not only to the topic of religion, but also to how we analyse and understand religions and cultures?
Aug 28, 2020
19 min
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