“亲爱的世界宗教101教授:关于非本质化的一些要点”

IF 0.4 0 RELIGION
P. Kuhlken
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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要30位教授聚集在2017年国家基金会人文暑期研究所“世界宗教教学的挑战”,面对复杂和细微差别、霸权和政治阴谋、虚伪和悖论——正如这些和其他挑战在当前宗教研究中所表现的那样。这是一个参与者试图在101课堂上实际应用抽象或深奥专业知识的故事。现代宗教比较研究是以生物学为模型的,生物学假定了一个不变的本质。然而,世界宗教教授必须接受宗教的变化和变化,因此,在存在的意义上,除了创始文本和原则之外,生活的传统中没有稳定的本质。因此,“宗教”永远不可能被本质化为一个无可争议的整体,所以“宗教”最好保持为复数。作为世界宗教教育学的一个例子,NEH参与者仔细观察了随着更多地接触到每个宗教传统中的多样性(政治、历史、经验、仪式、信条)而变得明显的盲点,尤其是当不同的信徒实际实践这些盲点时,以及使用一系列《世界宗教》教科书,模仿21世纪的世界宗教教学法,而不存在单一的“答案正确”综合症。研讨会参与者不仅将宗教视为一条智慧之路,而且将其视为一种权力的行使,他们审视了霸权的无形假设,并对选定的世界宗教的经验现实进行了富有想象力的跳跃——与此同时,他们在认识论上保持着谦逊。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“Dear World Religions 101 Professor: Some Essentials About Non-Essentializing”
Abstract Thirty professors gathered for a 2017 National Endowment in the Humanities summer institute, “The Challenges of Teaching World Religions,” to confront complexities and nuances, hegemonies and political intrigue, hypocrisies and paradoxes–as these and other challenges play out in the present state of Religious Studies. This is the story of one participant’s attempt to practically apply often abstract or esoteric expertise in the 101 classroom. Modern comparative religious study is modeled on biology, which presumes an unchanging essence. However, World Religions professors must accept that religions change and vary, so beyond the inception of founding texts and principles, in an existential sense, there is no stable essence in lived traditions. Therefore “religion” can never be essentialized into an undisputed whole, so “religions” should best be kept as a plural. As an example for World Religions pedagogy, NEH participants scrutinized blindspots that became visible with greater exposure to the diversity (political, historical, experiential, ritualistic, creedal) within each religious tradition, especially as they are actually practiced by various adherents, so hearing from a range of guest speakers, visiting sites, and using a range of World Religions textbooks modeled a twenty-first century pedagogy for teaching World Religions without the monocular “having the right answer” syndrome. Seeing religion not only as a path of wisdom, but also as an exercise of power, seminar participants examined the invisible assumptions of hegemonies, and made imaginative leaps to the experiential reality of selected world religions–all the while, having epistemological humility.
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CiteScore
1.30
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