Conference: The Power of Sacrifice: Contexts and Representations
Wednesday 18 and Thursday 19 January 2012
Room 2.01: Humanities Building, Cardiff University
This interdisciplinary conference brings together classicists, historians, anthropologists, religious studies scholars, historians of philosophy and religion, and archaeologists to examine the ways in which sacrifice is received, theorised, reported and understood in a number of religious, social and cultural contexts, ancient and modern. Whether or not sacrifice is actually practised in a given culture, the theme of sacrifice, and in particular blood sacrifice, is often linked with powerful images and contentious debates. For example, the use of tales of sacrifice to de-fame other religious traditions is neither new nor confined to western or Christian contexts. However, sacrifice is not simply troubling to the onlooker from another culture. Debates and divergences of practice arise within religious traditions, including stories about the divine origins of the substitution of coconuts for human heads, explorations of complex systems of obligation and alimentary communion between people and gods in Greek and South Asian epics, and links between sacrifice and sex, both orthodox and transgressive. Many of the speakers draw from the insights of social and anthropological theory, philosophy and psychology to explore the potency of sacrifice as a category that evokes debates about sex, gender, and the ethics of ritual killing and the ways in which these debates can be linked to power dynamics and disturbances in society.
Registration for the conference is free (but attendees will need to provide their own lunch). The Conference will commence at 2.00pm on Wednesday 18 January 2012 and close at 5.00pm on Thursday 19 January.
Speakers include:
Crystal Addey (University of Wales Trinity St. David and Cardiff University)
Miranda Aldhouse-Green (Cardiff University)
Nic Baker-Brian (Cardiff University)
Simon Brodbeck (Cardiff University)
Louise Child (Cardiff University)
Fabrizio Ferrari (University of Chester)
Douglas Hedley (University of Cambridge)
Sarah Hitch (University of Oxford)
Bettina Schmidt (University of Wales Trinity St. David)
Juliette Wood (Cardiff University)
Dr Dave Green
Senior Lecturer in Sociology, University of the West of England, Bristol, UK
Society for the Academic Study of Magic (SASM): https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?A0=ACADEMIC-STUDY-MAGIC
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