February 2, 2015
12:00PM - 2:00PM
Mershon Center for International Security Studies
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2015-02-02 13:00:00
2015-02-02 15:00:00
Graduate Student Workshop: "Transitions in Vernacular Religiosity: The Post-Socialist Case"
Lecture Series & Graduate Student Workshop on Vernacular ReligionCo-Sponsored by the Center for Folklore Studies, the Mershon Center for International Security Studies and the English Department Co-leaders: István Povedák and Kinga Povedák This workshop aims to introduce the changes and transformations of vernacular religiosity of Central- and Eastern Europe in the past half-century. The first part of the lecture will focus on the religious circumstances of the Socialist era, the survival strategies of vernacular religiosity, the role of religious music as a countercultural practice. The second thematic part analyzes the transformations after 1989, the influx of transnational religious movements in the region such as the Pentecostal awakening among Romani groups and the “Neopagan-Christian war”. The aspects of religious transformations will be demonstrated through Hungarian case studies. Students should register for the graduate workshop through the English Department. To register for the graduate workshop, please sign up on Buckeye Link for 1 credit hour of English 8193 with Professor Dorry Noyes, course number 27469. Workshop Requirements• Complete assigned readings• Attend January 29, 2015 Lecture• Attend February 2, 2015 Graduate Student Workshop• 3pg Reflection Paper Assigned Readings Leonard Norman Primiano: "Vernacular Religion and the Search for Method in Religious Folklife." Western Folklore, Vol. 54, No. 1, Reflexivity and the Study of Belief (Jan., 1995), pp. 37-56.Paul Froese: Hungary for Religion: A Supply-Side Interpretation of the Hungarian Religious Revival. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. Volume 40, Issue 2, pages 251–268, June 2001Miklós Tomka: Religious Identity and the Gospel of Reconciliation.The Kádár regime. In Encyclopaedia Brittannica.This is one event in a three part lecture/workshop series. For more information about the other events, check the events page.If you require assistance to attend the event, please contact the organizers at karna.5@osu.edu. *Image: The Chapel of the Seven Blessed Women, the sacral center of a neopagan-neonationalist festival in Hungary, courtesy of István Povedák.
Mershon Center for International Security Studies
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Add to Calendar
2015-02-02 12:00:00
2015-02-02 14:00:00
Graduate Student Workshop: "Transitions in Vernacular Religiosity: The Post-Socialist Case"
Lecture Series & Graduate Student Workshop on Vernacular ReligionCo-Sponsored by the Center for Folklore Studies, the Mershon Center for International Security Studies and the English Department Co-leaders: István Povedák and Kinga Povedák This workshop aims to introduce the changes and transformations of vernacular religiosity of Central- and Eastern Europe in the past half-century. The first part of the lecture will focus on the religious circumstances of the Socialist era, the survival strategies of vernacular religiosity, the role of religious music as a countercultural practice. The second thematic part analyzes the transformations after 1989, the influx of transnational religious movements in the region such as the Pentecostal awakening among Romani groups and the “Neopagan-Christian war”. The aspects of religious transformations will be demonstrated through Hungarian case studies. Students should register for the graduate workshop through the English Department. To register for the graduate workshop, please sign up on Buckeye Link for 1 credit hour of English 8193 with Professor Dorry Noyes, course number 27469. Workshop Requirements• Complete assigned readings• Attend January 29, 2015 Lecture• Attend February 2, 2015 Graduate Student Workshop• 3pg Reflection Paper Assigned Readings Leonard Norman Primiano: "Vernacular Religion and the Search for Method in Religious Folklife." Western Folklore, Vol. 54, No. 1, Reflexivity and the Study of Belief (Jan., 1995), pp. 37-56.Paul Froese: Hungary for Religion: A Supply-Side Interpretation of the Hungarian Religious Revival. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. Volume 40, Issue 2, pages 251–268, June 2001Miklós Tomka: Religious Identity and the Gospel of Reconciliation.The Kádár regime. In Encyclopaedia Brittannica.This is one event in a three part lecture/workshop series. For more information about the other events, check the events page.If you require assistance to attend the event, please contact the organizers at karna.5@osu.edu. *Image: The Chapel of the Seven Blessed Women, the sacral center of a neopagan-neonationalist festival in Hungary, courtesy of István Povedák.
Mershon Center for International Security Studies
Center for the Study of Religion
religion@osu.edu
America/New_York
public
Lecture Series & Graduate Student Workshop on Vernacular Religion
Co-Sponsored by the Center for Folklore Studies, the Mershon Center for International Security Studies and the English Department
This workshop aims to introduce the changes and transformations of vernacular religiosity of Central- and Eastern Europe in the past half-century. The first part of the lecture will focus on the religious circumstances of the Socialist era, the survival strategies of vernacular religiosity, the role of religious music as a countercultural practice. The second thematic part analyzes the transformations after 1989, the influx of transnational religious movements in the region such as the Pentecostal awakening among Romani groups and the “Neopagan-Christian war”. The aspects of religious transformations will be demonstrated through Hungarian case studies.
Students should register for the graduate workshop through the English Department.
To register for the graduate workshop, please sign up on Buckeye Link for 1 credit hour of English 8193 with Professor Dorry Noyes, course number 27469.
Workshop Requirements
• Complete assigned readings
• Attend January 29, 2015 Lecture
• Attend February 2, 2015 Graduate Student Workshop
• 3pg Reflection Paper
Assigned Readings
- Leonard Norman Primiano: "Vernacular Religion and the Search for Method in Religious Folklife." Western Folklore, Vol. 54, No. 1, Reflexivity and the Study of Belief (Jan., 1995), pp. 37-56.
- Paul Froese: Hungary for Religion: A Supply-Side Interpretation of the Hungarian Religious Revival. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. Volume 40, Issue 2, pages 251–268, June 2001
- Miklós Tomka: Religious Identity and the Gospel of Reconciliation.
- The Kádár regime. In Encyclopaedia Brittannica.
This is one event in a three part lecture/workshop series. For more information about the other events, check the events page.
If you require assistance to attend the event, please contact the organizers at karna.5@osu.edu.
*Image: The Chapel of the Seven Blessed Women, the sacral center of a neopagan-neonationalist festival in Hungary, courtesy of István Povedák.