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1st Respell Workshop

 

Sensing the Field of Contemporary Religiosity:

Auto-Ethnography, Collaboration, Transformation

Tuesday, 27th of February 2024, 10h00 – 13h30 Lisbon time (GMT)

 

Zoom Details:

https://videoconf-colibri.zoom.us/j/92137977589?pwd=SVpVLy9YY1hpa2pXc1VJL3dlZ3Zrdz09

Meeting ID: 921 3797 7589

Password: 871670

 

In the First Workshop of the research project ReSpell: Religion, Spirituality and Wellbeing. A Comparative Approach of Transreligiosity and Crisis in Southern Europe (FCT grant ref. 2022.01229.PTDC), its team members will present their ethnographic and methodological routes, ideas, challenges and reflections, based on their ongoing field research in the context of the project. Emphasis will be placed on two methodological directions that permeate each ethnographic approach, namely that of ‘auto-ethnography’ (Reed-Danahay 1997, 2001; Ellis 2004; Adams, Holman Jones & Ellis 2015) and ‘collaboration’ (Lassiter 2005; Rappaport 2008; Boyer and Marcus 2021). How does an ethnographer sense the field of religion, spirituality, healing, wellbeing? What kind of narratives are produced when ethnographers of contemporary religiosity study their own culture and/or use a personal/autobiographical approach to the field? How can encounters with ‘supernatural experiences’ change an ethnographer (Goulet and Young 1994)? In what ways can collaborative ethnography promote the methodological elasticity in the study of contemporary religiosity and CAM (Complementary and Alternative Medicine)? Are autoethnographic and/or collaborative approaches necessarily exhausted in sensing, adopting and better accounting for the ‘native’s point of view’ or is that view transformed accordingly? Those are some of the questions to be discussed and debated by the team members of ReSpell, in an attempt to offer a creative dialogue concerning the sociocultural transformations, transreligious affects and ethnographic reflexions in the field and beyond it. 

Detailed Programme:

 

10h00 – 10h15:          Welcome

 

Session I

10h15 – 10h30:           Dancing and Sensing on the Paths of the Ancestors: Autoethnographic Explorations in the Context of Contemporary Paganism in Portugal       

                                    Joana Martins, ReSpell and CRIA - NOVA FCSH / IN2PAST

 

10h30 – 10h45:           The Worship of Dr Sousa Martins in Portugal: Materiality and Transformation.

                                    Emily Pierini, Dipartimento di Storia Antropologia Religioni Arte Spettacolo, Sapienza University of Rome

 

10h45 – 11h00:           Facing the ‘Real Ontological Challenge’. Reflections on Radical Participation in an Autoethnography with a Catholic Spiritual Practice.

                                    Luis Muñoz Villalon, Department of Social Anthropology, University of Seville

 

11h00 – 11h15:           Sensing, Resisting, Transforming ‘Home’: Elasticity, (Auto-) biography, Performativity in Religio-Spiritual Healing.

                                    Eugenia Roussou, CRIA-ISCTE / IN2PAST

 

11h15 – 11h40:           Discussion

  

11h40 – 11h50:           Small Break

 

Session II

11h50 – 12h05:           ‘Dois te Botaram, Três Vão Tirar’: Feeling the ‘Benzimentos’ through Videoart.

Natasha Martins, ReSpell and CRIA-ISCTE / IN2PAST

 

12h05 – 12h20:          Co-creative Ethnography on Hip Hop and Other ‘Vibrationalities’.  

Natalia Koutsougera, Department of Social Anthropology, Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences

 

12h20 – 12h35:           Who is the ‘Native’? The Limits, and their Transgressions, of the Senses, Autoethnography and Collaboration in the Study of Contemporary Religiosities.

                                    Anastasios Panagiotopoulos, Department of Social Anthropology, University of Seville

 

12h35 – 12h50:           Collaborative Research with the Invisible and the Unseen:   Methodological and Sensory Challenges.

Diana Riboli, Department of Social Anthropology, Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences

 

12h50 – 13h15:          Discussion II

 

13h15 – 13h30:          Final Remarks

 

13h15 – 13h30:          Final Remarks

Click here to download the program

Published
22 December 2023
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