Syndicate Symposium on Divine Currency
Syndicate Symposium on Divine Currency, featuring responses by Alberto Toscano, Danube Johnson, Heather Ohaneson, Sean Capener, and Elettra Stimilli. Introduced by Roberto Sirvent.
Syndicate Symposium on Divine Currency, featuring responses by Alberto Toscano, Danube Johnson, Heather Ohaneson, Sean Capener, and Elettra Stimilli. Introduced by Roberto Sirvent.
(DesSoterramento III by Yohana Junker. www.yohanajunker.com )
The Drew University Graduate Division of Religion is pleased to announce its 19th Transdisciplinary Theological Colloquium to be held on March 14th and 15th, and corresponding Graduate Student Symposium on March 13th, 2020. The conversations will be centered around our conference theme: Assembling Futures: Economy, Ecology, Democracy.
What is the relationship of religion to economy, ecology, and democracy? In our fraught moment, what critical questions about democratic processes, ecosystems, and economic structures are in need of (dis)assembly? What possible futures might emerge from transdisciplinary work across these traditionally siloed scholarly areas of interest? By bringing together scholars in religious, theological, and biblical studies, this 19th Transdisciplinary Theological Colloquium seeks to activate perspectives urgently needed in assembling possible futures.
Participants: J. Kameron Carter, Gary Dorrien, Paulina Ochoa Espejo, Marion Grau, Catherine Keller, Hyo-Dong Lee, Kathryn Lofton, Marcia Pally, Jennifer Quigley, Joerg Rieger, Devin Singh, Kathryn Tanner.
As part of a recent initiative by The Immanent Frame on A Universe of Terms, I participated in a contribution around the term “economy.” Here is my reflection.
As part of a symposium around reading lists and “canon” in Political Theology, here is my entry:
“Key texts:
Eusebius of Caesarea, Oration In Praise of Constantine
Augustine of Hippo, City of God Against the Pagans
Delores Williams, Sisters in the Wilderness: The Challenge of Womanist God-Talk
Essential texts:
Marie-José Mondzain, Image, Icon, Economy: The Byzantine Origins of the Contemporary Imaginary
Silvia Federici, Caliban and The Witch: Women, the Body and Primitive Accumulation
Willie Jennings, The Christian Imagination: Theology and the Origins of Race”
Read the full entry and my actual commentary and discussion of these texts HERE.
I recently had the privilege to explore at length the value of conversations—in life, in teaching, in coaching and working with others—with Sehaam Cyrene, host of the Better Conversations podcast. We covered a lot of ground. Have a listen below, or follow this link to the show notes to skip to relevant topics.
In December (2019) I sat down with Joshua Mauldin, Associate Director of the Center of Theological Inquiry in Princeton, NJ. This year I am participating in a workshop on Religion and Economic Inequality. We discussed my book, Divine Currency, as well as me current project on debt, and how they relate to the them of inequality.
Have a listen below:
I recently spoke with Preston Price at GCAS about my work on theological economics and economic theology. It was a good conversation:
In this chapel talk on Apr 9, 2019 at St Paul’s School in Concord, NH, I share with students three keys to being resilient.
In this chapel talk at St Paul's School, Devin Singh discusses three keys to being resilient. Apr 9, 2019.
Call for Papers: Second Annual Political Theology Network Conference Union Theological Seminary and Columbia University, New York, NY October 17-19, 2019
Plenary Speakers: Michelle Alexander, Gil Anidjar, Lap Yan Kung, Najeeba Syeed
We invite proposals of 200-300 words for projects exploring political theology, broadly understood as an interdisciplinary conversation about intersections of religious and political ideas and practices. Under the sign of “political theology” political theorists have reflected on analogies between political and theological sovereignty, theologians have reflected on the role of memory and hope in political engagement, and cultural theorists have performed ideology critique. We are looking for projects that may draw on but also challenge and transform such classic conversations about political theology.
We embrace the vibrant scholarly and activist work being done under the sign of political theology around the world, particularly in contexts of domination. African, Arab, Asian, and Latinx political theological traditions interrogate discourses around “sacred” and “profane” bodies. Indigenous activists organize to dismantle the anthropocentricism and “civilizing mission” of settler states. Scholars of secularism explore the relationship between caste, political culture, and everyday life in India. Black Muslim intellectuals theorize the power of popular protest and the religious nature of #BlackLivesMatter. Anti-colonial theologians from across the globe discuss abolition, anarchy, statelessness, and “higher laws.” Still others invite us to imagine “the end of the world.”
We aim to bring together scholars, activists, and artists working with ethnographic, theoretical, theological, legal, historical, literary, and cultural studies methods motivated by a concern for justice. We are particularly interested in proposals that speak to the following themes:
economies
ecologies
legalities
embodiments
gender and sexualities
racializations
citizenship, migration, place and displacement
colonialisms (including settler colonialism and relations between settlers and Indigenous peoples)
critical disability studies
technologies and artificial intelligence
fictions and poetics
public scholarship and creative pedagogies
religious nationalisms and religious pluralities
Proposals that address these themes from diverse global and religious perspectives are especially welcome. We invite five different presentation formats:
Paper presentation or pre-arranged papers panel (we anticipate allotting 90 minutes for each panel)
Poster
Dialogue or roundtable around a single theme (roundtables that include a combination of academics,
activists, and representatives of the community are strongly encouraged)
Activist workshop (e.g. teach-in, facilitated conversation, skills-building session, etc.)
Performative piece (e.g. poem, spoken word, music, drama, dance, film, digital media, creative fiction
readings, etc.) (Please submit either a general description of the piece or the performative work itself. Please also indicate any preferences for room and A/V setup.).
This conference, hosted by Union Theological Seminary and Columbia University, is also funded by grants from the Henry Luce Foundation and Emory University’s Center for the Study of Law and Religion. It hosts a professional network connecting scholars of political theology across varying fields and traditions, and we are eager for proposals to advance conversations about what political theology could look like both in and outside the academy.
Submit proposals to Winfield Goodwin, PTN Conference Coordinator at ptn19.proposals@gmail.com
Proposals Due June 1, 2019
Here’s a video of the lecture I gave on March 22, 2019 at the University of Pennsylvania, hosted by the Collegium Institute for Catholic Thought and Culture. I spoke on how the generation of interest and the generation of children have been conflated and compared at different points in history in various theological and philosophical systems. Maybe one way to resist the onslaught and power of debt in society today is to tease out and separate these interconnections, and undercut the associations between debt and reproduction.
I recently engaged in dialogue with D. Stephen Long, Cary M. Maguire University Professor of Ethics at Southern Methodist University, about my recent book, Divine Currency. Long offered his review of the book in Marginalia: LA Review of Books, entitled, “Can Christians Be Capitalists?” Given the challenges and critiques he raises, I provided a response, “The Anxiety of Influence.” Check out the exchange!
Very excited about my upcoming lecture at UPenn. Hosted by the Collegium Institute and co-sponsored by the Department of Religious Studies, Penn PPE, the Andrea Mitchell Center for the Study of Democracy, and the Program for Research on Religion and Urban Civil Society. To be held in a lecture hall at Wharton.
I look forward to the conversation!
Abstract:
This lecture explores how understandings of debt and interest are bound up with assumptions about what counts as reproduction, and how both interest and reproduction reflect anxieties about the scarcity of life and resources. Drawing on alternative labor theories, the paper examines what it means to say that money works to produce more of itself, and whether recent anti-work interventions offer productive insights for reining in the proliferation of debt. Ultimately, a reconsideration of the centrality of productive labor to human identity may provide resources for challenging the centrality of productive, debt-based finance to our economic imaginations.
Prefer to listen to my lecture on “Greed and God” in Nijmegen, The Netherlands, rather than watch the video? Check out the audio track here on Soundcloud. This also has the advantage of containing the entire QnA, which was cut off on the video.
This video is an edited down version of my participation on a panel at Harvard Divinity School on Christianity, Race, and Mass Incarceration, showing my contribution to the discussion. October 20th, 2017.
I recently participated in a book event for Adam Kotsko’s Neoliberalism’s Demons: On the Political Theology of Late Capital. Read my entry and the many great reviews, in addition to Kotsko’s response, here.
I recently spoke with Eliana de Castro, editor of the Brazilian online magazine of art and literature, Fausto. She asked my about my book, Divine Currency, as well as the relation of religion and economics to Islamophobia in the West. Read it in Portuguese here, or pop it into your favorite online translator.
I’m often struck by how little I see written about Gen Xers (1965-1980) in the workplace or Gen X leadership. There is, of course, a ton on our younger siblings, the Millennials (1981-1996), and still plenty coming out on our aging Boomer (1946-1964) parents. There’s even a lot of coverage on the tense relationship between those two!
We Xers seem to have been left out of things, which, of course, totally fits our life experience.
But why fail to consider the important challenges faced and contributions made by GenXers in the workplace?
I’m sure there are a few books out there that I’m missing on this topic, but here’s a quick and dirty list of five things that Gen Xers bring to leadership, the workplace, and organizations in general:
Recorded Lecture
May 22, 2018
In this TCM mini-episode, we hear a short talk given by Devin Singh last November as part of the Race, Coloniality and Philosophy of Religion Unit at AAR in Boston. Devin has recently written a book Divine Currency: The Theological Power of Money in the West. We'll hear more about that in an upcoming episode... Stay tuned.