Making new Faith In/Visible: Religious Movements and Urban Space

Making new Faith In/Visible: Religious Movements and Urban Space

Organizer
Prof. Dr. Susanne Rau, Universität Erfurt; Prof. Dr. Martina Stercken, UZH (KFG "Religion und Urbanität" (DFG, FOR 2779))
Host
KFG "Religion und Urbanität" (DFG, FOR 2779)
Venue
Max Weber Kolleg für kultur- und sozialwissenschaftliche Studien, Campus der Universität Erfurt, C 19 – Forschungsbau, Nordhäuser Straße 63
Funded by
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinsschaft DFG
ZIP
99089
Location
Erfurt
Country
Germany
Takes place
In Attendance
From - Until
06.06.2024 - 07.06.2024
By
Klara-Maeve O'Reilly, Max-Weber-Kolleg, Universität Erfurt

Der Workshop rückt die Un-/Sichtbarkeit religiöser Bewegungen als einen wichtigen, wenn auch unterbeleuchteten, Aspekt in der Forschung über die wechselseitige Entstehung von Religion und Urbanität in den Fokus. Es soll untersucht werden wie neue religiöse Gruppen in Städten und Gemeinden sich selbst un-/sichtbar machen oder un-/sichtbar gemacht werden. Dabei geht der Workshop auch der Frage nach, welche Auswirkungen dies auf den urbanen Raum und seine vielfältigen Konzeptionen hat. Sichtbarkeit wird als Prämisse sozialer Interaktion und der Wahrnehmung von Differenz betrachtet; ebenso werden mediale Strategien untersucht, mit denen religiöses Gedankengut gezeigt oder versteckt wird.

Making new Faith In/Visible: Religious Movements and Urban Space

Der Workshop rückt die Un-/Sichtbarkeit religiöser Bewegungen als einen wichtigen, wenn auch unterbeleuchteten, Aspekt in der Forschung über die wechselseitige Entstehung von Religion und Urbanität in den Fokus. Es soll untersucht werden wie neue religiöse Gruppen in Städten und Gemeinden sich selbst un-/sichtbar machen oder un-/sichtbar gemacht werden. Dabei geht der Workshop auch der Frage nach, welche Auswirkungen dies auf den urbanen Raum und seine vielfältigen Konzeptionen hat.

Arbeitssprache: Englisch

Making new Faith In/Visible: Religious Movements and Urban Space

The workshop considers the visibility – and invisibility – of religious movements as an important if underexposed aspect in research on the reciprocal formation of religion and urbanity. It explores how new religious groups in towns and cities make themselves in/visible or are made in/visible. By doing so, the workshop also considers the impact this had on the urban space and its multifarious conceptions. The workshop brings together approaches from sociology, historical and cultural studies: The modes of appropriating and creating space will be discussed; visibility will be considered as premise of social interaction and the perception of difference; and medial strategies employed to display or hide religious beliefs are investigated.

The workshop brings together approaches from sociology, historical and cultural studies: The modes of appropriating and creating space will be discussed; visibility will be considered as premise of social interaction and the perception of difference; and medial strategies employed to display or hide religious mindset are investigated.

The workshop focuses on moments when the in/visibility of religious movements becomes an issue or is perceived as problematic. These instances will be observed from three different, yet overlapping, angles: One, urban topography and architecture as carriers of meaning and the question in how far it changes its character with the arrival of new religious ideas. Two, the city as a stage on which hierarchies, rules and the self-image of the civic community are negotiated and how the actions performed by new religious groups temporarily or permanently transform urban space. Finally, moments of ‘self-fashioning’ and ‘city branding’ and when and how the arrival of a new faith was fixed and historicised be it by images, historiography, or other kinds of artifacts. Thus, practices, discourses, images, texts and other artifacts launched by representatives of new beliefs become repositories of the change urbanity undergoes.

The workshop focuses on phenomena within the wide-ranging and cross-epochal framework of the “Religion and Urbanity” research group in Erfurt. The timeframe is large and reaches from the first century up to the present. The examples mainly from Europe and South (East) Asia allow to compare differing strategies that make faith visible or invisible in the urban space and to discuss the individual mechanisms to control them.

One focus lies on situations of major religious change in Europe particularly to be seen in the 16th century with the Reformation but also with Islam moving from East to West: the visibility of prosecuted Huguenots in Paris, the ways in which the Reformation changed the urban space in Catholic Vienna, and the topographical changes to Hungarian cathedral cities after the Ottoman conquest. Furthermore, the workshop zooms in on constellations in the Mediterranean area with early Christian concepts of visibility, and Jewish spaces in colonial Tunis. The papers concerning Asia will focus on the afterwar period and discuss Ambedkarite Buddhism, Pentecostal Megachurches in contemporary Singapore, as well as processes of group formation when European traders settled in early modern Vietnam.

In general, we will discuss:
- Strategies of visualisation or invisibilisation: Which ways and means are employed to claim space? Are they specific to a particular culture?
- Perspectives of observation: Is “new faith” an emic or etic attribution? Who decides whether a religious group can become visible? Or conversely, how were decisions for invisibility argued?
- Temporal dimensions: Do the methods of making faith visible or invisible change within the course of time? What happens when the novelty of a faith or a group is questioned?

Programm

Thursday, 6 June 2024

13:00-13:15 / Welcome & Introduction by Martina Stercken and Susanne Rau

13:15-13:45 / Supriya Chaudhuri: The Buddha in the City: Conversion, Faith and Representation in 19th and 20th Century India

13:45-14:15 / Katja Rakow: Religious Place-making in Commercial Infrastructures: Pentecostal Megachurches in Singapore

14:15-14:45 / Discussion

14:45-15:15 / Coffee Break

15:15-15:45 / Martin Scheutz: Transformed Urban Space. Tentative Approaches to the Reformation in 16th Century Vienna

15:45-16:15 / Tom Hamilton: Making Huguenots Visible: The Spatial Distribution of Militia Arrests of Protestants in 16th century Paris

16:15-16:45 / Discussion

16:45-17:15 / Coffee Break

17:15-17:45 / Katalin Szende: Cathedral Cities Conquered: Topographical Changes of Bishops’ Seats in the Kingdom of Hungary in the Ottoman period

17:45 - 18:00 / Discussion

19:30 / Workshop Dinner (in town centre)

Friday, 7 June 2024

9:15-09:45 / Nora Lafi: Re-interpreting Jewish Spaces in Colonial Tunis

9:45-10:15 / Martin Christ: Group Formation and Foreign Traders in Early Modern Hội An (Vietnam)

10:15-10:45 / Discussion

10:45-11:00 / Coffee Break

11:00-11:30 / Emiliano Rubens Urciuoli: Seeing with the Heart: Visibility Regimes in Early Christ Religion

11:30-12:00 / Verena Fugger: Becoming Visible: Christian Appro-priation of Urban Space in Late Antique Ephesus

12:00-12:30 / Discussion

12:30-13:00 / Closing Discussion

13:30 / Lunch & Departure

Contact (announcement)

Prof. Dr. Susanne Rau (susanne.rau@uni-erfurt.de), Prof. Dr. Martina Stercken (stercken@hist.uzh.ch), Dr. Klara-Maeve O'Reilly (klara-maeve.oreilly@uni-erfurt.de)

https://urbrel.hypotheses.org/9752
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