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Faculty
MIGUEL ASTOR AGUILERA (Ph.D., University of Albany-SUNY, 2004 / Department of Anthropology) is an Assistant Professor whose research involves ethnography, iconography, and archaeology. He specializes in Mesoamerican cosmologies and their historical traditions, that is, pre-Columbian, colonial, and contemporary. His work is focused on Maya religious specialists in the Yucatán
peninsula. More > STEPHEN R. BOKENKAMP (Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley, 1986 / LINELL E. CADY (Th.D., Harvard, 1981/Department of Theology) is a Professor of modern western religious thought with special interests in religion and American culture; religion and the public/private boundary; gender and religion; and method and theory in the study of religion. She is also Director of the Center for the Study of Religion and Conflict (http://www.asu.edu/csrc/) at ASU.
More > HUAIYU CHEN (Ph.D., Princeton University, 2005/ Department of Religion) is an Assistant Professor of Chinese religions, with a joint appointment in the School of International Letters and Cultures. His research interestes span Buddhism, Nestorian Christianity, and medieval Chinese social history. More >
ANNE FELDHAUS (Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1976/ Department of Religious Studies) is Professor of religion in India, specializing in folk Hinduism, medieval Hinduism and religious geography. More > ABDULLAHI GALLAB (Ph.D., Brigham Young University, 1997/Department of Sociology) is an Assistant Professor in AAAS and Religious Studies specializing in Islam and the media and politics in Africa. More > JOEL D. GEREBOFF (Ph.D., Brown, 1977/Department of Religious Studies) is Associate Professor of Judaism with special interests in Rabbinic Judaism and religion and ethics. He is Department ALEXANDER HENN (Ph.D., University of Mainz / Germany, 1988) is an Associate Professor, joint apppointment in the School for Global Studies, with special interests in processes of cultural and religious encounter and the history and ethnography of colonial conquest in India. More > AGNES KEFELI-CLAY (Ph.D., ASU, 2001/Department of History) is a Lecturer specializing in Central Asia, Religion in Russia and in the Ottoman Empire. More > MOSES N. MOORE (Ph.D., Union Theological Seminary, 1987/Department of Church History) is an Associate Professor of American and African-American religions, specializing in the interaction of race, religion and culture. More > KENNETH M. MORRISON (Ph.D., University of Maine, 1975/Department of History) is Professor of Native American Religions with particular interest in ethnohistory of missions and the interpretation of the symbolic, mythic, and ritual principles of religions. In 2001 he was named an ASU Parents' Association Professor. More > PORI PARK (Ph.D., UCLA, 1998/ Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures) is an Assistant Professor of Religion in Korea. Her research interests include Buddhism, Sŏn Buddhism, Korean Religions, and the interaction between Buddhism, modernity, and DANIEL RAMIREZ (PhD Duke University/Department of Religion) is an Assistant Professor in religions of the Southwest borderlands, with a special interest in the history of religious contact, conflict, and conversion in the Americas, and in the transnational and cultural dimensions of religious practice. More > NORBERT SAMUELSON (Ph.D. Indiana University, 1970/Department of Philosophy) is the Grossman chair of Jewish Studies with special interests in Jewish philosophy, philosophy of religion, and religion and science. More > JULIANE S. SCHOBER (Ph.D., University of Illinois, 1989/Department of Anthropology) is an Associate Professor of religions in Southeast Asia, specializing in Theravada Buddhist
TOD D. SWANSON (Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1988/Divinity School) is an Associate Professor of Christian Studies and religion in Latin American with special interest in native traditions of the Americas. More > SHAHLA TALEBI (Ph.D., Columbia University, 2007/Department of Anthropology) is an Assistant Professor specializing in issues of religion and state, and the performative role of language and metaphor as it relates to discourses of self-sacrifice and martyrdom within Islam and Iran. More > MARK WOODWARD (Ph.D., University of Illinois, 1985/Department of Anthropology) is an Associate Professor of religions of Southeast Asia with special interest in religion, modernity, colonialism, politics, violence, and collective identity. More > EMERITI JAMES H. FOARD (Ph.D., Stanford, 1977/ Department of Religious Studies) is Professor of the history of religions, specializing in the religions of Japan, particularly popular religion and culture from medieval times to the present. More > |
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