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Anthropological Approaches to Religion & Secularism (ReSET)

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  • Anthropological Approaches to Religion & Secularism (ReSET)

    DEPT. OF ETHNOLOGY
    Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University
    1 Ilia Chavchavadze Ave.
    Tbilisi 0128
    Georgia
    +995 (32) 23 26 93
    http://www.tsu.ge


    We ask your help in passing on this information to young scholars who
    could be interested -- particularly young university faculty who focus
    on religions and/or secularism in the post-Communist/post-Soviet realm.

    We are inviting applications for participant in a project on
    anthropological approaches to religion and secularism, based in
    Tbilisi, Georgia. Participants should be teaching at the
    undergraduate university level, and in most cases they will be from
    the former Soviet Union and Mongolia. Please see details below.

    If you know of someone who might be interested in participating, we
    would be grateful if you would pass this information on to them.

    Sincerely,

    Ketevan Khutsishvili
    Maria Louw
    John Schoeberlein

    Co-Directors of the ReSET project on "Anthropological Approaches to
    Religion and Secularism"


    Call for Applications

    Program on " Anthropological Approaches to Religion and Secularism" - ReSET

    - Three-year program
    - First year summer session in Tbilisi, Georgia
    Aug. 2-15, 2010
    - Supported by: Open Society Institute, Higher Education Support Program
    under the Regional Seminar for Excellence in Teaching (ReSET) program


    "Anthropological Approaches to Religion and Secularism"

    Discipline: Anthropology
    Project Period: July 2010 - June 2013
    Target Region: Former Soviet Countries and Mongolia (Armenia,
    Azerbaijan, Belarus, Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan,
    Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Mongolia,
    Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan);
    those from outside the named countries may be able to
    participate on certain terms (see below)
    Host: Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, Dept. of
    Ethnology, in cooperation with the Program on Central
    Asia and the Caucasus at Harvard Univ., Cambridge, USA)
    Working Lang.: English (required)
    Co-Directors: Ketevan Khutsushvili (Tbilisi State University),
    Maria Louw (Aarhus University),
    John Schoeberlein (Harvard University)
    Contact: Ketevan Khutsishvili (Co-Director) <[email protected]>
    Appl. Deadline: March 26, 2010
    Application at: http://centasia.fas.harvard.edu/ReSET_Religion_Sec ularism.html


    Religion is emerging with new importance everywhere and quite
    evidently throughout the former-Communist countries. Secularism's
    changing role is less apparent, because it is the norm inherited from
    the Soviet era, but it too presents new challenges for study. Both
    religion and secularism were topics that were marginally developed in
    scholarship under Communism -- religion, because of official
    antagonism to it, and secularism, because it was treated as a
    naturalized, unquestionable norm. Today, official attitudes in the
    region towards religion have become more diverse, though examination
    of religion in the social sciences and humanities has developed
    slowly. In education and scholarship, secularism remains for many --
    especially those who set agendas for public educational institutions
    -- an unquestionable norm and not an object of analysis.

    We are starting a new project on religion and secularism, and we are
    looking for people who have a deep interest the study of questions of
    religion and/or secularism to join the project. The aim is to help
    develop scholarship -- research, debate, teaching -- with new tools
    for understanding these topics. Our main focus will be on
    anthropological approaches, but we are keen to involve those coming
    from a variety of disciplines, who would like to draw on what
    anthropology has to offer in this study.

    In this project, we will explore approaches to religion and secularism
    together with some of the most prominent anthropologists currently
    contributing to this field internationally (see the resource faculty
    below). We will consider in particular how approaches that have been
    developed in anthropology worldwide can be applied in the context of
    teaching and research in the former-Soviet space. Anthropology is
    typified by its integrated approach, treating religion (and other
    aspects of the socio-cultural realm) in its local contexts,
    sympathetically, as part of human experience, and analytically, as
    part of larger social processes. Religion and secularism have not
    been well-analyzed in the post-Soviet context in particular, and
    anthropological approaches can also contribute to broader societal
    discussions which are needed to analyze critically important processes
    which are taking place.

    Georgia, where the main summer sessions of the project will take
    place, itself offers not only a picturesque and culturally-rich venue
    for our activities, but is a place where the social and political
    importance of the issues that we'll be exploring are everywhere
    apparent.

    ReSET on "Anthropological Approaches to Religion and Secularism"

    This Regional Seminar for Excellence in Teaching (ReSET), like others,
    involves a group of about 25 younger faculty from the region -- in
    this case, the former Soviet Union and Mongolia -- and a group of
    resource faculty who work together over three years: We will meet for
    two weeks each summer, and for several days in another meeting each
    year, probably in the spring, and interact in other ways through the
    rest of the three-year period. The goal is to pursue activities which
    will strengthen university-level teaching of our subject matter.
    Important components of this ReSET include building an understanding
    of how anthropological approaches are pursued in research, and how
    research can be integrated with the undergraduate teaching process.
    For more information on the ReSET program, see
    http://www.soros.org/initiatives/hesp/focus/reset

    The seminar will explore current theoretical approaches employed by
    anthropologists in the study of religion and secularism, research and
    teaching methods, and related matters such as the challenges and
    ethical issues entailed in efforts to approach and to understand
    another religious world.

    This ReSET is organized by Co-Directors Ketevan Khutsushvili (Tbilisi
    State University), Maria Louw (University of Aarhus), and John
    Schoeberlein (Harvard University). The institutional host is Tbilisi
    State University's Dept. of Ethnology, in cooperation with the Program
    on Central Asia and the Caucasus at Harvard University. The Core
    Resource Faculty include Mathijs Pelkmans (London School of Economics)
    in addition to the three Co-Directors.

    Project Activities

    During summer sessions, there will be a variety of activities,
    including seminars and workshops on anthropological theories, field
    methods, ethics, teaching strategies, grant seeking, academic writing
    and publishing, and much more. The program will include organized
    sessions of varied character (seminars, discussions, practicums,
    etc.), as well time for socializing with the group and experiencing
    Georgia and other sites in the region where our spring meetings will
    be held.

    Both during the summer session, and in the remainder of the year
    following the summer session, participants will be expected to carry
    out a number of projects of varying dimensions, including projects in
    research, teaching, and curriculum development. Those involved in the
    ReSET -- both faculty and participants -- will provide intensive
    inputs and feedback on the projects, and the outcomes will be aimed at
    practical implementation. For example, we expect the research
    projects to yield contributions to your field and publications; the
    pedagogical projects will yield plans that can be implemented as new
    courses and curricula.

    More information about the program may be obtained by contacting the
    organizers.

    Resource Faculty

    Nino Abakelia, Dept. of Anthropology, Chavchavadze University (Tbilisi,
    Georgia)
    Tone Bringa, Dept. of Anthropology, University of Bergen (Bergen,
    Norway)
    Marine Chitashvili, Center for Social Studies, Tbilisi State University
    (Tbilisi, Georgia)
    Michael Herzfeld, Dept. of Anthropology, Harvard University
    (Cambridge, USA)
    Ketevan Khutsishvili, Dept. of Ethnology, Tbilisi State University
    (Tbilisi, Georgia)
    Zhanna Kormina, Dept. of Sociology, Higher School of Economics (St.
    Petersburg, Russia)
    Michael Lambek, Dept. of Anthropology, University of Toronto-
    Scarborough (Toronto, Canada)
    Maria Louw, Dept. of Anthropology, University of Aarhus (Aarhus,
    Denmark)
    Saba Mahmood, Dept. of Anthropology, University of California
    (Berkeley, USA)
    David Montgomery, Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh,
    USA)
    Robert Orsi, Dept. of Religious Studies, Northwestern University
    (Chicago, USA)
    Mathijs Pelkmans, Dept. of Anthropology, London School of Economics
    (London, UK)
    Guzel Sabirova, Region Research Center, Ulyanovsk State University
    (Ulyanovsk, Russia)
    John Schoeberlein, Dept. of Anthropology and Program on Central Asia
    and the Caucasus, Harvard University (Cambridge, USA)

    We expect to invite some additional faculty to contribute to
    particular sessions in the course of the three years.

    Eligibility

    * Applicants must be pursuing a career to teach at the undergraduate
    university level. Most participants will be those who currently teach
    courses for students pursuing "diplom" or "bakalavr" (i.e., post-
    secondary, or BA equivalent) at institutions of higher education in
    the region. Some participants may be those with advanced training in
    their field who anticipate teaching undergraduate courses within two
    years.
    * Target participants are drawn from the former Soviet Union and
    Mongolia. (Those from outside of this region who are interested in
    participating may be able to; see note below under "Provisions for
    Participants".)
    * No prior training in anthropology is required. However, prior
    background in the subject matter -- independent reading, participation
    in seminars, advanced training, etc. -- will be considered a sign that
    the applicant is more committed to the goals of the ReSET and will
    have more to bring to it. Those with advanced degrees in sociocultural
    anthropology are encouraged to apply, as the program will be geared
    toward the needs of those who are deeply involved in the subject-matter
    but who may have both greater and lesser knowledge of anthropological
    approaches.
    * Applicants may be those whose major focus is anthropology itself.
    Equally, they may be those who expect to use anthropological methods,
    theories and approaches in their scholarship and teaching in another
    related field (comparative religious studies, sociology, history,
    cultural studies, political science, etc.).
    * A strong knowledge of both spoken and written English is a very
    important requirement for participants. The ReSET will be conducted
    in English, and will involve participants who have no other common
    language. In order to develop an in-depth understanding of
    anthropological approaches, to read the essential literature, and to
    contribute to international scholarly discourse and publication,
    English is vital.
    * For those who may already be involved in (or considering applying
    to) another ReSET project, please note that the ReSET program does
    not allow ReSET funding to go toward any individual in more than one
    ReSET project in a given year. (Participation in a second ReSET is
    allowed only if funding to cover that individual is obtained from
    another source.)
    * All participants are expected to participate in all three years of
    the project, and all applicants must be able to commit to this.
    * There are no age limitations, but applicants who have some maturity
    as teachers and scholars, as well as showing the flexibility to take
    on new approaches typical of younger scholars, are expected to be
    better able to benefit from and contribute to the project.

    Provisions for Participants

    Costs related to the ReSET project, including travel expenses,
    accommodation, meals and reading materials will be covered by the
    ReSET by means of a grant from the Open Society Institute's Higher
    Education Support Program.

    With the OSI grant, we are able to support full costs of participation
    only in the case of participants from the target region. However,
    participation may be possible for a small number of "non-regional"
    participants with support from other sources (especially if you can
    find your own support for transportation to the contact sessions).
    Those interested should enquire with Dr. Khutsishvili.

    Application Process

    Deadline: March 26, 2010 at 17:00 Tbilisi time (i.e., GMT +4:00).
    Applications received after the deadline cannot be assured
    consideration.

    All applications and accompanying documents must be sent in electronic
    format. The application itself is a MS Word file that we will send
    you upon request (write to: anth.rel.sec(at)gmail.com), or you can
    download it from the following webpage:
    http://centasia.fas.harvard.edu/ReSET_Rel igion_Secularism.html.
    Supplementary materials (listed on the application form) should be in
    MS Word format, or scanned and sent as JPEG (*.jpg) or Acrobat (*.pdf)
    files.

    The electronic application form and supporting documents should be sent
    via email to both addresses: anth.rel.sec(at)gmail.com (Ketevan
    Khutsishvili) and schoeber(at)fas.harvard.edu (John Schoeberlein's
    address is provided as a backup in case of communications failures;
    most correspondence will be with Dr. Khutsishvili
    her assistants during this period).

    Important Note: Once the first-round selection is completed, the
    organizers will contact all of the top candidates by telephone to
    make an assessment of their English ability. In a brief interview,
    candidates will be asked to discuss questions related to their
    scholarly interests. For this purpose, it is essential that
    applicants make sure they can be reached by telephone. We will
    contact you by email to schedule the phone interview, so please
    make sure that, during the period April 2-23, you are checking the
    email address(es) you provide, so that we can communicate about
    scheduling the interview. If we are unable to reach you, this will
    make it impossible to consider your application fully.

    We expect that the selection process will be completed by about May 1,
    and the applicants will be notified of the results shortly thereafter.
    We will immediately begin the process to make travel arrangements
    and inform you of preparations required in advance of the seminar
    (readings, presentations, and teaching and research project
    preparation).

    Contacts:

    With questions about the project, please contact:

    Dr. Ketevan Khutsishvili
    email: anth.rel.sec(at)gmail.com
    tel./fax: +995 (32) 23 26 93
    Backup contact: John Schoeberlein <schoeber(at)fas.harvard.edu>
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