Recent Episodes
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Harm, AI, and Religion | Discourse! June 2023
Jul 4, 2023 – 50:12 -
Mediatizing “Evangelicalism”: Authenticity, Identity, and Power
Jun 12, 2023 – 40:13 -
What’s Sincerity Got to Do With American Secularism?
Jun 5, 2023 – 42:30 -
What’s Happening Down Under? | Discourse! May 2023
May 29, 2023 – 44:55 -
Charting the Playful & Proper Study of Religion
May 15, 2023 – 52:42 -
Supreme Court to Coulter: Negotiating Religion in the Public Sphere | Discourse! April 2023
May 1, 2023 – 48:20 -
Keep Hope Alive: Preparing for White Christian Nationalism
Apr 17, 2023 – 36:24 -
Religion under Attack? | Discourse! March 2023
Mar 27, 2023 – 53:00 -
The Church of Saint Thomas Paine: Religion without God
Mar 13, 2023 – 46:49 -
Spitting on the Sacred: Politics and Redefining Profanation
Mar 6, 2023 – 50:29 -
Religious Literacy and Its Discontents | Discourse! February 2023
Feb 27, 2023 – 41:52 -
Navigating the Discursive Study of Religion
Feb 20, 2023 – 40:29 -
Where was God?: Jewish Theological Responses to the Holocaust
Feb 13, 2023 – 43:52 -
Critical Approaches to Studying Religion in Film
Feb 6, 2023 – 29:08 -
Oversimplified Binaries | Discourse! January 2023
Jan 30, 2023 – 31:23 -
Interrogating the Interrogators: Managing Muslims in Germany
Jan 23, 2023 – 39:31 -
Realities (Altered & Virtual) | Discourse! November 2022
Dec 19, 2022 – 1:01:18 -
Queens of the World | Discourse! October 2022
Oct 31, 2022 – 36:43 -
Secular Spaces? | Discourse! September 2022
Oct 13, 2022 – 39:54 -
Shifting the Focus of Graduate Education in the Study of Religion
Sep 16, 2022 – 31:41 -
Reflections on REF 2021
Sep 5, 2022 – 39:12 -
Presentism and Politics | Discourse! August 2022 (with video)
Aug 30, 2022 – 1:02:04 -
Unruly Women: Neocolonialism, Race, and Discrimination
Aug 29, 2022 – 42:00 -
Authorities and the Past | Discourse! June 2022 (with video)
Jun 27, 2022 – 43:52 -
Abortion, Climate Change Protests, & Ukraine Invasion | Discourse! May 2022 (with video)
May 30, 2022 – 2:00:43 -
Cults and NRMs: An RSP Remix, Part I
May 20, 2022 – 10:50 -
Curanderismo Roundtable
May 2, 2022 – 51:02 -
Semana Santa, Diversifying the Seder, Prayer in High School Football, and… Derry Girls? | Discourse! April 2022
Apr 25, 2022 – 46:02 -
Sunday in the Park with Theory
Apr 18, 2022 – 56:12 -
Obeah and Experiments with Power
Apr 11, 2022 – 44:18 -
How “Woke” Is Your Textbook?: Introducing Religious Studies in the 2020s
Apr 4, 2022 – 37:27 -
Ukraine Invasion, Philippine Elections, and Misinformation | Discourse! March 2022 (with video)
Mar 28, 2022 – 36:34 -
Religious Legal Activism: Abortion Rhetoric Among British Evangelicals
Mar 14, 2022 – 54:54 -
The Wilderness of Mirrors: Nationalism, Religion, and Secret Intelligence
Mar 7, 2022 – 34:04 -
The Devil is in the Details! | Discourse! February 2022 (with video)
Feb 28, 2022 – 40:58 -
The Insider/Outsider Problem: An RSP Remix
Feb 21, 2022 – 15:16 -
Spiritual Abuse Roundtable
Feb 14, 2022 – 59:45 -
The Critical Humanist Study of Islam
Feb 7, 2022 – 43:40 -
When Religion Doesn’t Behave | Discourse! January 2022 (with video)
Jan 31, 2022 – 46:25 -
Questioning the Silver Bullet: Critical Approaches for the Study of Ayahuasca
Jan 24, 2022 – 1:02:22 -
The Strange Charm of Gnosticism
Dec 13, 2021 – 38:22 -
Genealogy of the Jewish Notion
Dec 6, 2021 – 32:51 -
Religious Freedom, Exemption, and Festivals in Australia | Discourse! November 2021 (with video)
Nov 29, 2021 – 31:24 -
The World Religions Paradigm: An RSP Remix
Nov 22, 2021 – 21:00 -
Religious Symbols, Secularism, and Culture Wars
Nov 15, 2021 – 1:01:04 -
When Christians Meet Each Other: The Saint Thomas Christians of Southwest India in the Early Modern Period
Nov 8, 2021 – 56:22 -
Discourse Analysis & Ideology Critique in the Study of Religion
Nov 1, 2021 – 45:52 -
Religion, Bodies, and the State | Discourse! October 2021
Oct 25, 2021 – 48:44 -
Focus on Fieldwork: An RSP Remix
Oct 18, 2021 – 45:36 -
Mapping the Digital Study of Religion
Oct 11, 2021 – 38:49
Recent Reviews
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Captain Chris ThomasIntellectual poseursLost and blinded by academic “correctness.”
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Murph712Interesting topics but too much academic superiorityTaking religious studies as an undergraduate was one of the best decisions I made in life, so when I stumbled upon this podcast, I was excited to continue engaging with such interesting topics. However, the problem I encountered with religious studies in general is the problem I encountered with this podcasts. Many of the topics and interviews seem so distant from the reality of religious people as they are. Occasionally, there will be an episode that avoids the elitist/reductive disposition this podcast often has towards religious belief, however they are few and far between. Religious Studies is not some observational analysis of “goofy” people who believe “silly” things. It is a study of real human beings with richly diverse and intensely complicated cultures, world views, and histories. Sadly, I’ve tried many times to listen for the sake of engaging with the interesting topics presented, but am always confronted with the elitist academic tone found too often within the study of religion.
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drums4life24Just taking turns bashing the subjectLiteral nothingness. Not a discussion. Just people taking turns trying to create sound bites. I’ve learned nothing expect how important quality sound engineering is.
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Goog caddishDullI’m interested in religion and the history of religion, but each episode has been dry, pedantic or both. This is the kind of closed worldview and discussion that give academics a bad name. A positive note: most of the contributors seem like they’d be nice enough people to talk to about topics outside their areas of expertise, and I’d probably trust them to take care of a cat or indoor plants.
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hippiegirl457Great for an undergrad :)this podcast has filled in so many gaps left in my religious studies curriculum & has helped me to better focus my academic interests.
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apmdfm1721AgendaI stopped listening to the first episode I picked when the speaker said that Krishna was fashioned after Jesus. Modern scholarship accepts that the Gita was written 200 years before Christ. The speaker’s failure to mention that fact and to simply say, without qualification, that Krishna is based on Jesus reveals that this podcast has a goal - and it’s not education. Is Christian indoctrination.
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IlkevmofuGreat Religion Podcast!Really great work for scholars, students, and interested folks.
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Acoustic GuruFabulous resource for educators at all levelsGrateful to you for your wonderful programming! Thanks to one of your early guests, Michel Desjardins, I am reframing my middle school religion course to study the intersection of religion and food.
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Florence LFA Solid PodcastA solid Podcast for those interested in the academic study of religion. Quite engaging interviews, especially as my own university never touches upon many of the topics discussed. Highly recommended
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Avery MThe kind of stuff the academy needsThis podcast takes you behind the scenes with well-known religion professors. It's great to hear them talk about their work in an informal setting so that their interests and motivations come out. I also enjoyed the roundtables with rising stars in religious studies such as Kevin Whitesides.
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Chris Duncan05Great stuff!I was introduced to the RSP podcast in a Religious Studies course at university; flat out, I was hooked from episode 1. They approach complicated, rather opaque topics in a modern, almost lay person-esque manner. Though everyone is involved is clearly a scholar in the field, the multitude of views and opinions that they bring in on such a wide variety of topics-in such as way as to be approachable with no "ivory tower" in site- has very much energized my own academic work in the field. A great tool and resource for undergrads and laity alike, great work boys!!
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ADJNelsonGreat resource for the general study of religionThe RSP podcasts aim to "provide a resource for undergraduate students of religion, their teachers, and interested members of the public." I think the podcasts do a very good job of promoting religious studies in a way that mediates between the often superficial nature of what is covered in standard news media and the inaccessibility of some of the more scholarly resources in the field. As a specialist myself, I find that some of these podcasts are helpful in introducing me to areas of the larger field and to specific scholars and projects about which I previously had only a vague idea. I especially enjoyed the recent interview with Linda Woodhead on secularization theory. I highly recommend these podcasts as a resource for anyone who is interested in a jargon-free yet still serious exploration of what it means to study religion in the contemporary world.
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