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@proceedings{1794102, author = {Trtílek, Jan and Nenadalová, Jana and Dvořáčková, Terezie and Vilém, Skopal and Tadeáš, Vala and Esther, Holbrook and Juan Manuel, RubioandArevalo and Victoria, Fomina and Brian, Dougherty and Matouš, Mokrý and František, Válek}, keywords = {doctoral conference; religious studies; religion}, language = {eng}, title = {Wellbeing, Harm, and Religion : The fifth annual doctoral conference in religious studies, Brno, 9.-11. 9. 2021}, url = {https://religionistika.phil.muni.cz/where2021}, year = {2021} }
TY - CONF ID - 1794102 AU - Trtílek, Jan - Nenadalová, Jana - Dvořáčková, Terezie - Vilém, Skopal - Tadeáš, Vala - Esther, Holbrook - Juan Manuel, Rubio-Arevalo - Victoria, Fomina - Brian, Dougherty - Matouš, Mokrý - František, Válek PY - 2021 TI - Wellbeing, Harm, and Religion : The fifth annual doctoral conference in religious studies, Brno, 9.-11. 9. 2021 KW - doctoral conference KW - religious studies KW - religion UR - https://religionistika.phil.muni.cz/where2021 N2 - Throughout the history of the human species, illnesses, injuries, and diseases were often dealt with through religious rituals, as evidenced from the earliest Sumerian incantations from the 26th century BC to the contemporary evangelical faith healing. Some ritualized acts incorporate what can be seen as harm or violence, like genital mutilations or flesh hook insertions. Nevertheless, these same acts can be also perceived as leading towards wellbeing (of community, individual, deity, etc.). Alternatively, consider other practices more directly aimed at the wellbeing of mind and soul, that may even result in a feedback loop affecting the physical body, like shamanic trance induction, baptism, or meditation. But not only rituals – embracing of religious worldview as an interpretative framework may also substantially affect one’s wellbeing. Different conceptions of harm and wellbeing derived from different religious traditions retain their relevance in many locales across the globe even today, as they did in history. They intertwine(d) with “secular” medical practices; religious actors can formulate stances towards modern medical technologies, like vaccination and blood transfusion; and religion sometimes articulates alternative theories about the nature and origin of various diseases and about their treatment. The Wellbeing, Harm, and Religion conference is the fifth year of the annual doctoral conference in religious studies. With this event, we aim to create a platform for the study of the intersections amongst religion, health, and diverse cultural conceptions of harm and wellbeing. ER -
TRTÍLEK, Jan, Jana NENADALOVÁ, Terezie DVOŘÁČKOVÁ, Skopal VILÉM, Vala TADEÁŠ, Holbrook ESTHER, Rubio-Arevalo JUAN MANUEL, Fomina VICTORIA, Dougherty BRIAN, Mokrý MATOUŠ a Válek FRANTIŠEK. \textit{Wellbeing, Harm, and Religion : The fifth annual doctoral conference in religious studies, Brno, 9.-11. 9. 2021}. 2021.
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