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Failure and Nerve in the Academic Study of Religion
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Preface 1. The Nerve of Donald Wiebe Luther H. Martin, University of Vermont 2. The Failure of Nerve in the Academic Study of Religion Donald Wiebe, Trinity College, University of Toronto General Failures 3. Catching Up with Marx: Truth, Myth, and the Niceties of "Belief" Matthew Day, Florida State University 4. Fixed Geomorphologies and the Shifting Sands of Time Darlene Juschka, University of Regina 5. A Critical History of Religion as a Psychological Phenomenon Janet Klippenstein, University of Alberta 6. Everything Old is New Again Russell T. McCutcheon 7. Revisiting the Confessional: Donald Wiebe's "Small 'c' Confessional," Its Historical Entailments and Linguistic Entanglements Johannes C. Wolfart, Carleton University Special Failures 8. Failures (of Nerve?) in the Study of Islamic Origins Herbert Berg, University of North Carolina at Wilmington 9. The Failure of Islamic Studies Post-9/11: A Contextualization and Analysis Aaron W. Hughes, State University of New York at Buffalo 10. Religious Studies that Really Schmecks: Introducing Food to the Academic Study of Religion Michel Desjardins, Wilfrid Laurier University 11. Cultural Anthropology and Corinthian Food Fights: Structure and History in the Lord's Dinner John W. Parrish, Brown University 12. The Identity of Q in the First Century: Reproducing a Theological Narrative Sarah E. Rollens, University of Toronto 13. The Failure of Nerve to Recognize Violence in Early Christianity: The Case of the Parable of the Assassin Thomas Nicholas Schonhoffer, University of Toronto 14. Redescribing Iconoclasm: Holey Frescoes and Identity Formation Vaia Touna, University of Alberta In Lieu of Conclusion 15. The Irony of Religion William Arnal and Willi Braun

About the Author

William Arnal is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. His books include Whose Historical Jesus? (co-edited with Michel Desjardins, 1997), Jesus and the Village Scribes (2001) and The Symbolic Jesus: Historical Scholarship, Judaism and the Construction of Contemporary Identity (2005). Willi Braun is Professor of Religion in the Department of History and Classics and Director of the Interdisciplinary Programme of Religious Studies at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada. He is the author of Feasting and Social Rhetoric in Luke 14 (1995), editor of Persuasion and Performance: Rhetoric and Reality in Early Christian Discourses (2005) editor (with Russell T. McCutcheon) of the Guide to the Study of Religion (Cassell, 2000) and editor (With Russell T. McCutcheon) of Introducing Religion: Essays in Honor of Jonathan Z. Smith (2008). Russell T. McCutcheon is Professor and Chair of the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Alabama. He is the author of Religion and the Domestication of Dissent (2005), The Discipline of Religion: Structure, Meaning, Rhetoric (2003), Critics Not Caretakers: Redescribing the Public Study of Religion (2001) Manufacturing Religion: The Discourse on Sui Generis Religion and the Politics of Nostalgia (1997) and editor (With Russell T. McCutcheon) of Introducing Religion: Essays in Honor of Jonathan Z. Smith (2008).

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