Published: Jan. 17, 2023

On Reparative Decoloniality

Spring 2023 Seminar

As we gather, we honor and acknowledge that the University of Colorado鈥檚 four campuses are on the traditional territories and ancestral homelands of the Cheyenne, Arapaho, Ute, Apache, Comanche, Kiowa, Lakota, Pueblo and Shoshone Nations. Further, we acknowledge the 48 contemporary tribal nations historically tied to the lands that comprise what is now called Colorado.

Spring Seminar Focus

Last spring, we started with an invocation to turn our Center鈥檚 seminar into a sanctuary of collective study, a fugitive haven of sorts, to ask other questions, to weave new gatherings, to listen to unusual voices, and to hold one another in thinking, listening, and writing. A frightening global pandemic forced us to see injuries before they turned into scars. The ugliness of our world appeared both unforgiving and lyrical. Our myths of justice, of empathy, of security, of mobility, of democracy turned urgently suspect in a time of brutal transparency. Even our words sounded futile, hollow sounds in a relentless chorus of platitudes and slogans. But then came the lyrical moment as a sense of loss, anger, fear, failure, but also inevitable hope overwhelmed us all. An opening burst in front of us, inviting those who were ready and willing to abandon things, to scramble things, to abolish things, to repair things, and to believe again in the undimmable energy of small action. That opening, though fleeting, was (is) the unexpected rhapsody in our common tragedy. We needed a jolt away from the grand narratives of progress, the deceit of technology, the hubris of information, and the cults of speed, visibility, and efficiency. Despite its ambers of death, the pandemic reminded us of an inner spirituality of being together, of listening for the unsaid, of seeing ourselves as 鈥減art and as crowd,鈥 and reaching for that errant bond in us eclipsed by the rule of individualism and rootedness and the comfort of centers and boundaries.

The CMRC aspires to be an expression of that opening and our seminar seeks to preserve its generous sensibility: relation, repair, abolition, and fierce hope. In that spirit, we propose a reparative decolonial approach to the study of media and religion with a particular emphasis on nationalism since this is the topic of our upcoming conference in January 2024. A decolonial lens is an extension of the deep discussions we had last year around urgency, crisis, repair, abolition, and hope. By interrogating the intellectual, cultural, epistemic, pedagogic, and geographic assumptions we work with in our respective fields, we ask critical questions about the fragility of canons, the instability of knowledge, the inhospitality of mono language, the distressed enmity of empire, the aphasias of colonial innocence, and the enclosures of our spaces of study.

But reparative decoloniality is not only about exposure, response, and denunciation. It is primarily a gentle act of resurgence and movement, a transgressive invitation to a possible future where building new worlds is a pressing priority. The decolonial is not mere intellectual defiance or an insurrection in the conference room. It is a project of radical practice that hastens the end of dominant systems by insisting on other epistemes, other forms, other imaginaries, other archives, other tonalities, and other sovereignties. That is why we propose another orientation this semester not to find something we have lost, but to build something we do not have yet.听

The Seminar

This weekly Seminar is a major component of the research and teaching mission of the Center for Media, Religion and Culture. It brings together faculty, graduate students, and visiting fellows from a variety of academic fields with an interest in media and religion. Center fellows explore leading literature in a variety of academic fields, including media studies, religious studies, sociology, anthropology, social theory, and philosophy. Students also receive concrete training in research development, methodology, and analysis, and are mentored through the development of conference presentations and publications.

Center Projects

Conference

鈥淔ire on the Mountain Media, Religion, and Nationalism. 鈥 January 10-13 2024. This will be the tenth in a series of successful international conferences held by the Center for Media, Religion, and Culture in Boulder. The previous meetings have brought together an interdisciplinary community of scholars for focused conversations on emerging issues in media and religion. Each has proven to be an important landmark in the development of theory and method in its respective area and has resulted in important collaborations, publications, and resources for further research and dialogue.

Center Projects

Public Religion and Public Scholarship in the Digital Age:

A research project (January 2017 through December 2022) funded by a grant from the Henry Luce Foundation (New York) in the amount of $500,000. The purpose of the project is to explore and develop a new role for scholars of religion in shaping public understanding of religion and improving public and political discourses about religion. Due to changes in media, religion today is no longer limited to private experience or what goes on inside the walls of churches, synagogues, mosques, and temples. Religion is being remade by media, and religious, academic, cultural, and political actors need new understandings of its shape and its role. The project brings experts on religion and experts on media together in a common effort to 鈥渏ump start鈥 new research and innovation that takes advantage of the digital age. It will pilot new means of research and collaboration between scholars and broader communities and new means of communication the results of these collaborations.

Major Activities under the Grant:

1. A Working Group of leading scholars and practitioners from the fields of media studies and religious studies. The four investigators from CMRC will also be full members of this Working Group.:
-Sarah Banet-Weiser, Annenberg School of Communication USC and University of Pennsylvania.
-Anthea Butler, University of Pennsylvania
-Nabil Echchaibi, University of Colorado Boulder
-Chris Helland, Dalhousie University
-Stewart Hoover, University of Colorado Boulder
-Marwan Kraidy, Northwestern University, Qatar.
-Mirca Madianou, Goldsmiths, University of London
-Peter Manseau, The Smithsonian
-Jenna Supp-Montgomerie, University of Iowa
-Nathan Schneider, University of Colorado Boulder
-Sarah McFarland Taylor, Northwestern University
-Deborah Whitehead, University of Colorado Boulder

2.听Working Group members are each engaged in a research project relevant to the theme and objectives of the Project. The grant provides a limited amount of graduate funding for CMCI Graduate Students to collaborate on these projects and receive support for their own contributions.

3.听A major conference on the theme of the project was organized by the Center in August 2018 in Boulder, in collaboration with the International Society for Media, Religion, and Culture. Keynote speakers were: Anthea Butler, John Durham Peters, and Merlyna Lim.

4.听The project is supported by purpose-designed web platform through which we experiment and explore the possibilities for digital collaboration, research design, circulation of ideas and findings, and new ways of doing scholarship in a public way. The site, called听, was launched in 2017.

5.听A book volume is in progress with the tentative title of Hypermediations: Essays on Religion, Media, and Crisis , edited by Nabil Echchaibi, Stewart Hoover, Nathan Schneider, and Deborah Whitehead. The book explores how media and religion converge in the making and habitation of overlapping crises that call on us today. Scholars in media studies and religious studies will present new research while reflecting on the impossible demands that today鈥檚 sense of continuing crisis place on the vocation of scholarship.

6.听A Center鈥檚 Publication focused on the same themes of this project in which fellows are invited to write 500-1200-word reflections on how their research is impacted by the call to respond to the urgency of our times.

CMRC Publication

RHYTHMS: The first issue Rhythms was published in December 2022 and focused on the theme of 鈥渨riting in times of urgency.鈥 The next issue is planned for May 2023 on "Concepts Under Repair鈥 The prompt for this issue is: what is a concept you are interested in repairing, maintaining, resuscitating, or abolishing for the sake of repairing something else?"

Expectations

Fellows are encouraged to get involved in center projects over the course of each semester. Our fellows are also invited to do one presentation per year on their research and creative
work. These are great opportunities to share your work and get valuable feedback. This semester, each fellow will write an essay in RHYTHMS. You can also contribute to the center by helping with the design and content maintenance of our website, curating the accounts of our social media, or volunteering to organize our events. Please consult with the faculty of the center on how you can best use your time and expertise in these projects or if you have other ideas for collaboration and outreach. Presentations: fellows are expected to present their work this spring. These presentations could be connected to the publication project: "Concepts in Repair鈥 or they could be about an ongoing research project.

TENTATIVE SCHEDULE & READINGS

Week 1: 1/25 Introductions of Faculty and Fellows
-Discussion of the Theme: Reparative Decoloniality

Week 2: 2/1 Decoloniality as Abolition
-Ryan Cecil Jobson (2019). 鈥淭he Case for Letting Anthropology Burn鈥 American Anthropologist 122(2). 259鈥271.
-Achille Mbembe (2013). 鈥淎frica in Theory鈥 a seminar paper presented at the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research

Week 3: 2/8 Decolonizing the Canon
-Souleymane Bachir Diagne (2013). 鈥淥n the Postcolonial and the Universal鈥, Rue Descartes 2 (n掳 78), p. 7-18.
-Cornel West (1987). 鈥淢inority Discourse and the Pitfalls of Canon Formation,鈥 Yale Journal of Criticism 1, no. 1.
Watch: Raoul Peck鈥檚 鈥淓xterminate All the Brutes鈥

Week 4: 2/15 Decolonizing Religious Studies I
-Talal Asad (1993). 鈥淭he Construction of Religion as an Anthropological Category,鈥 in Genealogies of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam.
-Tomoko Masuzawa (2005). 鈥淚ntroduction鈥 in The Invention of World Religions, or, How European universalism was preserved in the language of pluralism.

Week 5: 2/22 Decolonizing Religious Studies II
-Mallory Nye (2019). 鈥淒ecolonizing the Study of Religion鈥
-Nelson Maldonado-Torres (2020). 鈥淩eligious Studies and/in the Decolonizing Turn鈥

Week 6: 3/1 Decolonizing Religious Studies III
- Natalie Avalos (2022). 鈥淭aking a Critical and Ethnic Studies Approach to Decolonizing RLST鈥

-Abdelkader Tayob (2018). 鈥淒ecolonizing the Study of Religions: Muslim Intellectuals and the Enlightenment Project of Religious Studies,鈥 Journal for the Study of Religion 31, 2 (2018) 7-35.

Week 7: 3/8 Decolonizing Media Studies I
-Stuart Hall 鈥淭he West and the Rest: Discourse and Power,鈥 in Race and Racialization: Essential Readings (Toronto: Canadian Scholars鈥 Press, 2007)

Week 8: 3/15 Decolonizing Media Studies II
-Mohan Dutta and Mahuya Pal (2020). 鈥淭heorizing From the Global South: Dismantling, Resisting, and Transforming Communication Theory,鈥 Communication Theory 30: 349鈥369
-Usha Iyer (2022). 鈥淪muggling, Infiltrating, Usurping: Why Globalizing the Film and Media Studies Curriculum is Essential to Decolonizing It,鈥 The Journal of Cinema and Media Studies 61, no.5.

Week 9: 3/22 Decolonizing Media Studies III
-Fatimata Wunpini Mohammed (2022). Bilchiinsi philosophy: Decolonizing methodologies in media studies. Review of Communication, 22(1), 7鈥24.
-Raka Shome (2019). 鈥淭hinking Culture and Cultural Studies鈥攆rom/of the Global South,鈥 Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies 16, no. 3: 196鈥218

Week 10: 4/5听Workshop: RHYTHMS- Concepts Under Repair听

Week 11: 4/12 Decolonial Methodologies
-Linda Tuhiwai Smith (2012). 鈥淩esearch Adventures on Indigenous Lands鈥 in Smith, Decolonizing Methodologies : Research and Indigenous Peoples
-Vivetha Thambinathan and Elizabeth Anne Kinsella (2021). 鈥淒ecolonizing Methodologies in Qualitative Research: Creating Spaces for Transformative Praxis,鈥 International Journal of Qualitative Methods Volume 20: 1鈥9

Week 12: 4/19 Nationalism, Religion, and Media in a Global Context I
-Sahana Udupa (2019). 鈥淣ationalism in the Digital Age: Fun as a Metapractice of Extreme Speech,鈥 International Journal of Communication 13: 3143鈥3163
-Mark Juergensmeyer (2019). 鈥淩eligious Nationalism in a Global World,鈥 Religions 10

Week 13: 4/26 Nationalism, Religion, and Media in a Global Context II
-Stuart Davis and Joe Straubhaar, (2020). 鈥淧roducing Antipetismo: Media activism and the rise of the radical, nationalist right in contemporary Brazil,鈥 The International Communication Gazette, Vol. 82(1) 82鈥100
Wrap up: Ngugi Wa Thiong鈥檕 (1972). 鈥淥n the Abolition of the English Department,鈥 in Homecoming: Essays on African and Caribbean Literature, Culture and Politics 15.

Week 14: 5/3 CMRC End of Semester Lunch