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  • ISGRJ Race and Religion Lecture Series: Global Circuits of Difference with Dr. Mbaye Lo

ISGRJ Race and Religion Lecture Series: Global Circuits of Difference with Dr. Mbaye Lo

Date & Time

Wednesday, April 17, 2024, 2:30 p.m.-3:50 p.m.

Category

Lectures & Presentations

Information

Dana Library, 4th Floor
185 University Avenue
Newark, NJ 07102

Race and Religion Lecture Series with Dr. Mbaye Lo

The Race and Religion series at ISGRJ-Newark seeks to center conversations about the intersections of race and religion, and the racialization of religion, from historical and contemporary perspectives, in the U.S. and globally. As categories of identity and identification, race and religion have historically overlapped and competed as primary forms of differentiation and markers of difference.

This Winter/Spring the series will focus on Islam in Africa. One of the consequences of the Trans-Atlantic slave trade was that West African Muslims preceded much of the rest of the Muslim world in their confrontation with imperial power, market economies, and the moral questions they engendered. Later European colonization and the subsequent process of decolonization, and the tensions between discriminating hierarchies of race and the moral commitments of religion, conditioned conflicting ways of imagining community and group membership.

The second lecture of the series will be on April 17, 2024, and feature Dr. Mbaye Lo, Associate Professor of the Practice of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies at Duke University.