The Immanent Frame hosts ongoing exchanges among leading thinkers across the social sciences and humanities, featuring invited contributions and original essays that have not previously been published in print or online.
Current forums
Ruinations: Violence in these times
This forum features essays on a range of historical, political, and cultural contexts to query longstanding and emergent conversations about the entanglement of religion, ideology, power, and violence. (2024)
Practices of relation
This series is intended to stage a playful, yet serious, encounter between two writers. (2019 – )
All forums
Over the past decade, The Immanent Frame has curated almost three dozen discussions on topics ranging from religion and American politics to secularism and its critique, religion in political moments and movements to discussions of the academic disciplines connected to “religion.” Browse our past discussions here, dating back to one of our original discussions of “Rethinking secularism” from 2007.
Religion, spirituality, and democratic renewal: Essays from our grantees
This forum features essays from the Postdoctoral Research grantees of the Religion, Spirituality, and Democratic Renewal Fellowship, which aims to explore the place of religion and spirituality as they relate to current scholarly and public conversations about renewing democracy in the United States. (2023)
Law, religion, and state building
This conversation features essays by leading scholars and policy analysts who consider the entanglements of law, religion, and state building across times and places—and the consequences of these entanglements for global politics and social justice. (2023)
National identity, nationalism, and the politics of religion
The forum on “National identity, nationalism, and the politics of religion” draws together scholars with research expertise in the Middle East, North America, South Asia, and Europe to examine different facets of religious nationalism. (2023)
Asian American religions: Everywhere, all at once
In this forum, contributors lead readers through the lived experiences of Asian Americans and what these experiences reveal about the religio-racial fabric of the United States. (2023)
Hindutva and the shared scripts of the global right
This forum examines the rise of far-right movements and actors through a global lens with Hindutva and the Hindu right at the center of this inquiry. (2022)
The religion of the old women of Nishapur
This forum builds and expands on conversations originally convened at McGill University in which the featured contributors consider how “the old women’s modality of inhabiting Islam” compels scholars to rethink limits to our understanding of gender, knowledge, and power. (2022)
Out there: Perspectives on the study of Black metaphysical religion
In this forum, scholars explore religious histories and spiritual practices that have been left out of representative accounts of Black life. (2022)
Religion, spirituality, and democratic renewal: Essays from the 2020 fellows
This essay series features the 2020 cohort of the Religion, Spirituality, and Democratic Renewal Fellowship, which aims to explore the place of religion and spirituality as they relate to current scholarly and public conversations about renewing democracy in the United States. (2022)
Ecologies of the dead and living: Mourning out of place
Contributors explore the meaning and consequences of death, burial practices, mourning, and commemoration across societies and time periods. (2021)
Translation and the afterlives of Anglophone theory
This forum draws together scholars of religion, state, and society to initiate a conversation around translation and its place within the academic enterprise. (2021)
The corporate form
In this forum, scholars discuss the corporate form, including questions around corporate histories, corporate cultural production, and corporate ethics. (2021)
Unveiling the end times: Neoliberalism and apocalypse
Through a series of paired conversations, scholars in this forum query the meaning of apocalypse during this critical moment in history. (2021)
Antiblackness as religion: Black living, Black dying, and Covid-19
Scholars in religious studies and theology contribute to this conversation at the intersection of public health, US politics, and the Movement for Black Lives. (2021)
Experience between the secular and the divine
The strange and often contradictory ways that phenomenology has been woven into and through diverse religious traditions are the subject of this forum. (2020)
Pandemic, religion, and public life
This forum draws together scholars across the social sciences and the humanities to address various questions raised or renewed by Covid-19, and its effects on religious and public life globally. (2020)
Religion and reproductive science
This forum invites scholars to question narratives of progress, perfection, and triumphant secularism that are threaded through contemporary discussion of modern reproductive practices. (2020)
Figurative publics: Crowds, protest, and democratic anxieties
A conversation around the purchase and pitfalls of investing our collective political hopes and anxieties in the manifold figurations of the people as the crowd, the mob, the migrant, or the minority. (2020)
The religious left: Memory, trajectory, relevance
What is the ‘religious left’ and what are its prospects for responding to the current moment of authoritarian populism? (2019)
I swear
Nancy Levene and Mona Oraby cocurated this forum on the oath, “the promise, the pledge, the vow, equally the curse, the malediction, the blasphemy.” (2019)
Gospels of giving
Contributors to this forum consider why, when, and where certain understandings of charity and philanthropy have proven persuasive and powerful. (2019)
Divine motherhood
Following the 2018 forum on divine fatherhood, we invited scholars with expertise in various cultural and religious contexts to reflect on this theme of divine motherhood. (2019)
Rethinking public religion: Word, image, sound
This forum explores a set of interlocking questions concerning how we approach the study of public religion. (2019)
Sex and the Catholic Church: What does law have to do with it?
This series of essays aims to open up, with respect to the sex abuse crisis in the Catholic Church, the ridiculously large question, “What does law have to do with it?” (2019)
Social inequality in/and religious studies
This forum asks scholars to imagine new standards of excellence in religious studies pedagogy and research that take deep diversity and concern for justice seriously. (2019)
Hate speech, religious insult, critique
Scholars from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds were invited to consider the ways in which the legal distinction between belief and believer is negotiated socially and jurisprudentially across a range of contemporary political contexts. (2018 – 2019)
Couture and the death of the real: A response to Heavenly Bodies
Contributors to this forum comment on themes of sexuality, aesthetics, power, and many other aspects of the Metropolitan Museum of Art Costume Institute’s Spring 2018 exhibition, Heavenly Bodies. (2018)
Divine fatherhood
We invited scholars from varied disciplinary backgrounds, with varied regional and religious expertise, to reflect on what it means to treat fathers as God-like and what it means to treat God as father-like. (2018)
Sex, secularism, and “femonationalism”
With contributions from historians, anthropologists, literary scholars, sociologists, and scholars of religion, this forum takes two new books as sparks for a broader conversation about sex, gender, religion, nationalism, secularism, neoliberalism, and the public sphere. (2018)
Crossing and conversion
This forum draws on a range of historical and contemporary case studies to show that conversions rarely converge on the question of belief or sincerity alone. (2018)
American religion, humility, and democracy
Authors attend to how religious individuals and groups balance their responsibilities as members of particular faith communities and as citizens of a religiously diverse nation. (2018)
Recovering the immanentist tradition
This forum aims to reconstruct a positive way of imagining irreligion, on its own terms. (2017)
The idea of the Muslim world: History and critique
This forum seeks to explicate the various ways in which the ideas of the Muslim world and the Muslim country have been taken up in scholarship and political discourse more broadly. (2017)
Indigeneity and secularity
This forum creates a space to explore how scholarly discussions of settler colonialism, nationalism, race, and secularity might productively inform each other. (2017)
Theologies of American exceptionalism
A discussion of the deeply ambiguous heritage of US exceptionality. (2017)
The politics of national identity
These essays show how groups in Western Europe and the United States draw on religious and secular symbols when determining belonging. (2016)
Religion and digital culture
Scholars and journalists consider their respective crafts and the media through which they practice. (2015)
Religious freedom in the United States
We have invited scholars and practitioners from various disciplines to take up the wider issues raised by US Supreme Court actions concerning the free exercise of religion in the United States. (2014 – 2015)
Aggressive prayers, curses, and maledictions
How might studying negative prayer influence our understanding of prayer more broadly? (2014)
Religions and their publics
Exploring the regimes of representation and social engagement through which various communities create, maintain, contest, and materialize their visions of the public sphere. (2014)
The future of Egyptian democracy
Scholars try to shed some light on the complex situation unfolding in Egypt and to help illuminate potential paths forward. (2014)
Beyond critique
The starting point for this exchange is the observation that, while “the secular” has been subjected to thorough conceptual critique, the concept of religion has remained remarkably vague. (2014)
The state of religion in China
We have invited scholars to offer readers their visions of the state of religion in China, past, present, and future. (2013)
The new evangelicals
This exchange calls attention to the growing group of evangelicals who have “left the right.” (2013)
Deathless questions and other interviews
This TIF interview series presents conversations with some of the leading scholars, activists, and public intellectuals who are changing how we think about the lines between sacred and secular. (2009 – 2013)
The politics of religious freedom
What is religious freedom, and why are we talking about it now? (2012 – 2013)
Sex abuse in the Catholic Church
This discussion seeks to interpret the sex abuse scandal as a subject for the study of religion. (2012)
Responses to Frequencies
Scholars respond to the SSRC project Frequencies, considering its shape and contents, its limits and potentialities. (2012)
Secularism: Its Content and Context
A discussion based on an SSRC Working Paper, “Secularism: Its Content and Context,” written by Akeel Bilgrami. (2011 – 2012)
Secularity and the liberal arts
An initiative that attempts “to get at the purpose and nature of liberal arts education by asking what it means for a liberal arts campus to unabashedly call its practices “secular.” (2010 – 2011)
Religious freedom
Scholars provide contrasting analyses of a controversial facet of American foreign policy. (2010)
Sociology of religion
Sociologists engage in critical reflection of the evolving state of the sub-discipline of religion. (2010)
Religion and natural disaster in Haiti
A collection of essays focusing on religious life in Haiti, with particular emphasis on how religion and spirituality weave a narrative in the post-earthquake crisis. (2010)
Reconsidering civil religion
In this forum, scholars interrogate Robert Bellah’s 1967 thesis of an “American civil religion.” (2010)
“These things are old”
A critical discussion of Barack Obama’s 2009 Inaugural Address and reflections on American civil religion. (2009)
The politics of spirituality
A critical discussion of studies on America’s growing “no religion” population and the manifestations of spirituality and spiritual movements in political life. (2009 – 2010)
Mumbai 11/26
This is a collection of responses to the terrorist attacks in India in November 2008. (2008)
Evangelicals & evangelicalisms
A discussion from various perspectives on how people understand and apply a contested religious category. (2008)
The future of marriage
Scholars untangle the past and future of the family in this forum. (2008)
A cognitive revolution?
This series brings history, philosophy, and literature to bear on the question of what scientific explanations of religious experience and belief really stand to offer. (2008)
The headscarf controversy
Scholars in this discussion weigh in on the social implications of secularism and political change in Turkey. (2008)
Religion and the 2008 election
During the campaigning leading up to the 2008 election, scholars reflect on the role of religion in American politics. (2008)
The assassination of Benazir Bhutto
Colleagues and scholars reflect on Benazir Bhutto’s life and legacy, and the larger political and religious landscape in which she lived and died. (2007 – 2008)
Religion in the public sphere
Scholars reassess a longstanding debate regarding the expression and interdiction of religion in the public sphere. (2007 – 2008; 2010 – 2011)
Is critique secular?
Scholars in this series examine the histories, contexts, and assumptions of critique. (2007 – 2008)
Rethinking secularism
One of the earliest discussions on The Immanent Frame taking the conversations around secularism to a new level. (2007 – 2013)