“When religious traditions influence one another”
Lecture series investigates the transfer between religions from antiquity until today
In the summer semester 2015, the lecture series of the Cluster of Excellence “Religion and Politics” and Centre for Religious Studies (Centrum für religionsbezogene Studien, CRS) deals with the “Transfer between religions. When religious traditions influence one another”. The interdisciplinary series will start on 14 April and discuss how numerous forms of influence and of the transfer of religious and cultural traditions occurred between religions of diverse cultural regions and historical epochs from late antiquity until the present day. Topics range from multi-religious identities and the Christian kabbalah to the reception of Platonism in Abrahamic religions and the reception of Hindu concepts in the West and vice versa. The lectures will be held on Tuesdays from 6.15 to 7.45 pm in lecture theatre F2 of the Fürstenberghaus at Domplatz 20-22 in Münster. The lecture series is organised by the Cluster’s project group “Transfer between world religions: adoption – transformation – dissociation” and by the CRS.
Prof. Dr. Regina Grundmann, Judaist and coordinator of the project group, explains, “From antiquity until the present, numerous forms of influence and of the transfer of religious and cultural traditions occurred between religions of diverse cultural regions – be it in oral, written, graphical or practical ritual form.” Furthermore, representatives of different religions frequently received the same philosophical and scientific ideas and concepts, which thus brought about common bodies of traditions – but also culturally different interpretations. These processes of exchange and reception developed in various ways and triggered further religious and cultural dynamics. “As the reference to the ‘own’ tradition usually serves as a dissociation from other religious communities, the development of these processes of exchange and reception was not always purely positive or perceived as such.”
The public lecture series traces the diverse forms of the transfer of traditions from late antiquity until the immediate present. Representatives from various disciplines will contribute, i.e. of religious studies, Byzantine studies, Indology, Islamic studies, Judaism, sinology, theology and philosophy. (exc/vvm)
Programme
14.04.2015 | Perry Schmidt-Leukel, Münster | Warum mit nur einer Religion leben? Anmerkungen zum Phänomen multi-religiöser Identität |
21.04.2015 | Joachim Gentz, Edinburgh | Das Große Dao ist ohne Form, ohne Wesen und ohne Namen. Formen des Transfers zwischen Religionen im regulierten Pluralismus Chinas |
28.04.2015 | Angelika Neuwirth, Berlin | Traditionsbildung durch Textstrategie: der Weg der koranischen Gemeinde von Jerusalem nach Mekka |
05.05.2015 | Katrin Kogman-Appel, Beer Sheva | Buchkultur und Bildkultur in der mittelalterlichen jüdischen Gesellschaft: Kulturaustausch zwischen Christen, Juden und Muslimen |
12.05.2015 | Andreas Speer, Köln | Philosophie und Wissenschaft als gemeinsames Erbe der abrahamitischen Religionen im Mittelalter |
19.05.2015 | Annette Wilke, Münster | Rezeption hinduistischer Konzepte im Westen und westlicher Konzepte im Hinduismus |
02.06.2015 | Wilhelm Schmidt-Biggemann, Berlin | Politische Theologie der christlichen Kabbala. Der Fall Guillaume Postel (1510–1581) |
09.06.2015 | Michael Zimmermann, Hamburg | Vom Nicht-Selbst zur Buddha-Natur? Buddhistische Vorstellungen vom Wesen des Menschen in Wechselwirkung mit anderen indischen Religionen |
16.06.2015 | Görge Hasselhoff, Dortmund | Ein neues Bild vom Judentum? Maimonides im Paris des 13. Jahrhunderts |
23.06.2015 | Jens Halfwassen, Heidelberg | Warum ist die negative Theologie für monotheistische Religionen attraktiv? Überlegungen zur Platonismusrezeption in den abrahamitischen Religionen |
30.06.2015 | Michael Grünbart, Münster | Reliquientransfer – Verbindendes zwischen den christlichen Welten des Mittelalters? |
07.07.2015 | George Sabra, Beirut | Christian-Muslim Dialogue in the Middle East: Tradition and the Exigencies of Context |
Summer semester 2015
Tuesdays,6.15 bis 7.45 p.m.
Lecture hall F1 at the Fürstenberghaus
Domplatz 20-22
48143 Münster