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Religious Humor and Laughter Symposium

Humor and laughter in religion symposium framed by laughing emojis and religious symbols
February 9, 2024
9:30AM - 12:00PM
18th Avenue Library 3rd Floor (Colloquial Space)

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2024-02-09 09:30:00 2024-02-09 12:00:00 Religious Humor and Laughter Symposium The Center for the Study of Religion and Melton Center for Jewish Studies will present a symposium on religious humor and laughter.  The day will consist of two panel discussions with two presenters exploring the following questions: Why is it important for scholars to attend to humor and laughter, and, if it's often been neglected or overlooked, why is that the case? What are the methodological or conceptual challenges that attend the study of religious humor? Are there broader issues or questions in the study of religion on which humor or laughter helps shine a particularly useful light? What does humor reveal about how communities and individuals negotiate boundaries of religious and ethnic identity? What, if anything, do we gain by engaging religious humor comparatively and cross-culturally? The presenters will include: Jennifer Caplan: "What’s Jewish about Jewish Humor?" Caplan is an associate professor and The Jewish Foundation of Cincinnati Chair in Judaic Studies at the University of Cincinnati. She is an expert on American religion and popular culture and her first book, Funny, You Don’t Look Funny: Judaism and Humor from the Silent Generation to Millennials was published in 2023 by Wayne State University Press. Samah Choudhury: "Thinking About Religion and Race by Taking Humor Seriously." Choudhury is an assistant professor in the department of Philosophy and Religion at Ithaca College where she teaches courses on religion, race, pop culture, and Islam. She is at work on her first book, American Muslim Humor and the Politics of Secularity, which examines how Muslims have articulated themselves through the medium of standup comedy in the U.S., and the ways that Islam gains recognition or becomes obscured under the specter and demands of U.S. multicultural secularism. She is a research fellow this year with the University of Chicago’s Department of Race, Diaspora, and Indigeneity. Melissa Anne-Marie Curley: "Rain-Making and Piss-Taking: Bawdy Humor in a Few Buddhist Stories." Curley is an associate professor in the Department of Comparative Studies at The Ohio State University. Her first book, Pure Land, Real World: Modern Buddhism, Japanese Leftists, and the Utopian Imagination was published in 2017 by the University of Hawai'i Press. Her current projects revolve around modern Buddhist constructions of the body and self.  Hannibal Hamlin: "The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost walk into a bar...: Does Christianity Have a Sense of Humor?" Hamlin is a Professor of English at The Ohio State University, an expert on early modern English literature.  This event is free and open to the public.  Schedule9am         Tea/coffee and pastries available 9:30-9:40     Welcome/Introductions 9:40-10:30    Panel 1Jennifer Caplan (Univ. of Cincinnati), "What's Jewish about Jewish Humor?"Samah Choudhury (Ithaca College), "Thinking about Religion and Race by Taking Humor Seriously" 10:30-10:40   Break 10:40-11:30   Panel 2   Melissa Anne-Marie Curley (OSU), "Rain-Making and Piss-Taking: Bawdy Humor in a Few Buddhist Stories"Hannibal Hamlin (OSU), "The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost walk into a bar...: Does Christianity Have a Sense of Humor?" 11:30-11:35   Break 11:35-11:55   Conversation w/ all presenters 11:55-12pm  Wrap up PARKINGThe nearest public parking is in the Tuttle Garage, just east of Ohio Stadium. Other public parking can be found adjacent to the Ohio Union on N. High Street.   The Humanities Institute and its related centers host a wide range of events, from intense discussions of works in progress to cutting-edge presentations from world-known scholars, artists, activists and everything in between.We value in-person engagement at our events as we strive to amplify the energy in the room. But we also recognize the fact that not all our guests will be able to visit our space. Zoom access will be available to this event upon request. If you wish to have such access, please send your request to Megan Moriarty: moriarty.8@osu.edu. 18th Avenue Library 3rd Floor (Colloquial Space) Center for the Study of Religion religion@osu.edu America/New_York public
The Center for the Study of Religion and Melton Center for Jewish Studies will present a symposium on religious humor and laughter.  The day will consist of two panel discussions with two presenters exploring the following questions: Why is it important for scholars to attend to humor and laughter, and, if it's often been neglected or overlooked, why is that the case? What are the methodological or conceptual challenges that attend the study of religious humor? Are there broader issues or questions in the study of religion on which humor or laughter helps shine a particularly useful light? What does humor reveal about how communities and individuals negotiate boundaries of religious and ethnic identity? What, if anything, do we gain by engaging religious humor comparatively and cross-culturally?
 
The presenters will include:
 
Jennifer Caplan: "What’s Jewish about Jewish Humor?" Caplan is an associate professor and The Jewish Foundation of Cincinnati Chair in Judaic Studies at the University of Cincinnati. She is an expert on American religion and popular culture and her first book, Funny, You Don’t Look Funny: Judaism and Humor from the Silent Generation to Millennials was published in 2023 by Wayne State University Press.
 
Samah Choudhury: "Thinking About Religion and Race by Taking Humor Seriously." Choudhury is an assistant professor in the department of Philosophy and Religion at Ithaca College where she teaches courses on religion, race, pop culture, and Islam. She is at work on her first book, American Muslim Humor and the Politics of Secularity, which examines how Muslims have articulated themselves through the medium of standup comedy in the U.S., and the ways that Islam gains recognition or becomes obscured under the specter and demands of U.S. multicultural secularism. She is a research fellow this year with the University of Chicago’s Department of Race, Diaspora, and Indigeneity.
 
Melissa Anne-Marie Curley: "Rain-Making and Piss-Taking: Bawdy Humor in a Few Buddhist Stories." Curley is an associate professor in the Department of Comparative Studies at The Ohio State University. Her first book, Pure Land, Real World: Modern Buddhism, Japanese Leftists, and the Utopian Imagination was published in 2017 by the University of Hawai'i Press. Her current projects revolve around modern Buddhist constructions of the body and self. 
 
Hannibal Hamlin: "The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost walk into a bar...: Does Christianity Have a Sense of Humor?" Hamlin is a Professor of English at The Ohio State University, an expert on early modern English literature. 
 
This event is free and open to the public. 
 

Schedule

9am         Tea/coffee and pastries available
 
9:30-9:40     Welcome/Introductions
 
9:40-10:30    Panel 1
  • Jennifer Caplan (Univ. of Cincinnati), "What's Jewish about Jewish Humor?"
  • Samah Choudhury (Ithaca College), "Thinking about Religion and Race by Taking Humor Seriously"
 
10:30-10:40   Break
 
10:40-11:30  Panel 2  
  • Melissa Anne-Marie Curley (OSU), "Rain-Making and Piss-Taking: Bawdy Humor in a Few Buddhist Stories"
  • Hannibal Hamlin (OSU), "The Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost walk into a bar...: Does Christianity Have a Sense of Humor?"
 
11:30-11:35   Break
 
11:35-11:55   Conversation w/ all presenters
 
11:55-12pm  Wrap up
 

PARKING

The nearest public parking is in the Tuttle Garage, just east of Ohio Stadium. Other public parking can be found adjacent to the Ohio Union on N. High Street. 
map of 18th Ave library and Tuttle garage parking.png
 

The Humanities Institute and its related centers host a wide range of events, from intense discussions of works in progress to cutting-edge presentations from world-known scholars, artists, activists and everything in between.

We value in-person engagement at our events as we strive to amplify the energy in the room. But we also recognize the fact that not all our guests will be able to visit our space. Zoom access will be available to this event upon request. If you wish to have such access, please send your request to Megan Moriarty: moriarty.8@osu.edu.