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| Dr. Martin S. Jaffee |
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Is it possible to study and teach about religion
without proclaiming the truth of particular religions, indiscriminately
celebrating religiousness of any kind as a human necessity, or broadly
dismissing all forms of religion as an outmoded cultural fetish?
Dr. Martin S. Jaffee, professor of rabbinic Judaism and comparative
religion at the University of Washington, will be on The University
of Alabama campus to deliver a lecture to discuss these points.
His lecture “Can I Share a Personal Example With You?”
will take place on Nov. 4, 2002, at 7 p.m. in 205 Smith Hall and
is free and open to the public. A reception will follow.
Jaffee is the department of religious studies’ Fall Aronov
Lecturer. He will offer some suggestions about how classroom teachers
might acknowledge and negotiate the historical pitfalls of religious
studies. In particular, he will illustrate a method of introducing
the teacher’s own experiences with religion -- both positive
and negative -- into the theoretical inquiries and historical discussions
that shape the curriculum of religious studies departments in public
universities.
“Having paid careful attention to the relationship between
ones own religious identity and work as a publicly-funded scholar
of religion, Professor Jaffee stands out as an example to anyone
concerned with the difference between being a member of a group
and knowing something about how groups happen to work,” said
Dr. Russell T. McCutcheon, chair and associate professor of the
department of religious studies.
Jaffee served for 10 years as the chair of the comparative religion
program at the University of Washington and in 2000-01 was director
of the Jackson School of International Studies. His primary area
of teaching and research is the history of Judaism, but he has longstanding
interests in developing theoretical and practical approaches to
the academic study of religion.
The Aronov Lecture Series is an annual event organized by the department
of religious studies in the College of Arts and Sciences and is
sponsored by the Aaron Aronov Endowment for Judaic Studies. The
lecture series highlights nationally known scholars of religion
doing innovative work that will be of interest to people from a
variety of backgrounds in the University community.
The department of religious studies is housed in the College
of Arts & Sciences at UA. By focusing on the cross-cultural
and comparative study of religion, members of the department offer
courses in the study of Buddhism, Hinduism, Christianity, Judaism
and Native American religious traditions, as well as courses on
the history of scholarship, on myths and rituals, the relations
between science and religion and courses in such thematic areas
as religion and literature and religion and film.
Members of the department examine the history of religions in a
non-evaluative manner, describing and comparing the many ways in
which systems of belief and behavior are put into practice throughout
the world, both past and present.
For more information call 205/348-5271 or go to www.as.ua.edu/rel/.
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