2000-2001 Franklin Seminar
Request for Proposals
RACE, RELIGION AND GLOBALIZATION
2000-2001 Seminars for Interdisciplinary
Studies in the Humanities
Faculty Co-Conveners:
Gregson Davis (Classical Studies),
Bruce Lawrence (Religion), &
Walter Mignolo (Literature, Romance Studies, &
Cultural Anthropology)
We are committed to the notion that none of our
three key terms is innocent. All are in need of exploration, contextualization
and, above all, expansion. Consider “globalization”
- Can we invoke the term “globalization” and still escape
the reflex to filter our perceptions, memories, judgments and histories
through our own cultural lens? Can we come to see as provincial
not only Western Europe but also North America (that is, the North
Atlantic of the modern/colonial world)? Or do we subscribe to the
view that capitalist designs will always direct the outcome in all
confrontations between peoples and cultures, regardless of the racial,
religious or ethical profile of the player in question?
None of these questions admits of positivist or
teleological answers, but together they would help us, in the seminar,
to revisit the key terms: race, religion and globalization. We invite
you to join us in year-long self-scrutiny. Last but not least, we
will take this opportunity to reflect on the critical role of the
humanities and social sciences in understanding and acting upon
the logic and consequences of globalization, taking race, religion
and globalization as "the case in point."
Regarding the specific project for the year, there
are a number of issues and problems that we would like to explore.
On the one hand, globalization is creating the conditions for a
revival of religion and religious movements. On the other, religion-at
least in the modern/colonial world that developed with the emergence
of the Atlantic in the 1500's-has been strongly linked to race.
These prompt us to raise the following questions:
a) What are the links between capitalism, belief
systems and racial formation(s)? And,
b) How do religious and ethnic movements respond to and search for
alternatives to capitalist globalization?
“Nationalism and race” is the topic
of the first John Hope Franklin Seminar (1999-2000). A major issue
of our time, it will be unavoidable in our discussions. Our perspective,
however, includes nationalism as a specific historico-political
configuration in the larger picture of the modern/colonial world
system. Consequently, we propose to explore the links between race
and religion in colonial/imperial expansion. After the American
Revolution, Latin American independence and the French Revolution,
nationalism and nation building re-converted the meaning of race
and the role of religion. The social upheavals of the Napoleonic
era led to a radically secularized world that promoted the building
of the British and French colonial empires. The industrial revolution
and the consolidation of capitalism are crucial historical developments
that must be reexamined if we are to understand the connections
between race, religion and ideology, from an Afro-Asian as well
as a Euro-American perspective. Not only the consolidation of nationalism
in Europe in the nineteenth century, but also the emergent post-colonial
nationalism in the Americas (the U.S., Haiti, Latin American countries)
and the new colonial expansion to Africa and Asia-all brought different
religions of the world into contact and spawned conflicts unknown
until then.
Furthermore, there emerged a strenuous new articulation
of capitalism and the dominant Christian religion, which proved
to be a cornerstone in the colonial reconfiguration of the Western
world. Paralleling this major re-articulation “from above”
were new forms of creolized religions “from below,”
among them Haitian Vodun and Jamaican Rastafarianism. Both Vodun
and Rasta challenged Christianity, even while assimilating some
of its features into their linguistic repertoires. But how effective
are creolizing strategies today, especially when global technocracy
enthrones and perpetuates the dominance of English, nowhere more
powerfully than in cyberspace? All these questions remain unanswered,
but the problematic they engage will be central to our Seminar.
2000-2002 Seminar Fellows
Faculty Co-Conveners
Gregson Davis, Classical Studies
Walter Mignolo, Literature
Bruce Lawrence, Religion
Faculty Fellows
Teresa Berger, Divinity
Leo Ching, Asian & African Languages & Literatures
Rom Coles, Political Science
Katherine Ewing, Cultural Anthropology
Jean Jonassaint, Romance Studies
Bill Hart, Religion
Graduate Fellows
Michael Ennis, Literature
L. Kaifa Roland, Cultural Anthropology
Nicole Waligora, English
Post-Doctoral Fellow
Tomeiko Ashford, Franklin Institute
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