AAS-SSRC Dissertation Workshop Series — Religion and the State in Asia, Chicago, March 2015

 In Call for Papers, Funding & Opportunities, Uncategorized

AAS-SSRC Dissertation Workshop Series
2015: Religion and the State in Asia

CHICAGO, MARCH 23-26, 2015
OPEN FOR APPLICATIONS, NEXT DEADLINE IS JANUARY 5TH, 2015. APPLY NOW

The Association for Asian Studies and the Social Science Research Council, with support from the Henry Luce Foundation, are pleased to announce the fourth jointly organized AAS/SSRC Dissertation Workshop. The workshop will be held in conjunction with the AAS annual conference in Chicago in March 2015.

2015 Theme: Religion and the State in Asia
Everywhere in Asia (and elsewhere), we see a rapid growth of religious communities and an intensification of religious commitments, often with a strong moralizing or political character. Neoliberal regimes, urbanization, and secularization notwithstanding, both traditional and more fundamentalist Buddhist, Hindu, Muslim, and Christian communities as well as numerous cults are expanding almost everywhere. Some appear to be quietistic, seemingly withdrawing from the state in response to its perceived moral, social, and political inadequacies. Others are in direct conflict with the state, or else are aggressively moralistic, target nonbelievers, and are readily mobilized to support interreligious domestic and international conflicts. In many cases their commitments and institutions are directed toward a return to older moral values, social orders, or communities, a reemphasis on personal spirituality, more immediate links to the transcendent, but also implicitly or explicitly, some form of major social and political change. There is of a long history of significant politically inspired religious intensifications and mobilizations in Asia and many theories and debates about their sources. Yet much can still be learned about contemporary and historical Asian society and politics by comparing the recent expansions of religious or spiritual commitments with their earlier precedents.

This workshop is intended to bring together doctoral students, regardless of citizenship, in the humanities and social sciences who are conducting research on the dynamics of religion, community, and the state in Asia and are either (1) developing dissertation proposals, (2) planning or conducting research, or (3) in the early phases of dissertation writing. Participants must also sense the substantive and theoretical value of locating their project in a comparative geographical and historical context.

The workshop will be limited to 12 students, ideally from a broad array of disciplines and working on a wide variety of materials in a variety of time periods, and in various regions of Asia. It also will include a small multidisciplinary and multi-area faculty with similar concerns.

Eligibility and Application
Applicants need not have advanced to candidacy but must have at least drafted a dissertation research proposal. Applications are also welcome from doctoral students in the early phases of writing their dissertations. A narrative description of the dissertation topic (ten double-spaced typed pages), short application form, and curriculum vitae will be required for submission. Applications must be submitted by January 5, 2015.

Workshop participants will be selected on the basis of the submitted projects, the potential for useful exchanges between them, and a concern to include a wide range of disciplinary perspectives, intellectual traditions, and regions of Asia. Applicants will be informed whether or not they have been selected for the workshop by late January.

For further information about the workshop structure or eligibility, please contact David Szanton szanton@berkeley.edu. Questions concerning administrative matters or the application process should be directed to Nicole Restrick Levit levit@ssrc.org.

You may also visit the workshop page at http://www.ssrc.org/fellowships/aasworkshop/.

Recent Posts