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Study days - Ethnology, anthropology
Enfants et rites workshop (II)
L’atelier « Enfants et rites » ambitionne de promouvoir un champ de recherche explorant rites et faits religieux au croisement de l’anthropologie de l’enfance et des enfants et de l’anthropologie générale. La première édition de cet atelier s’est penchée sur les modes de participation des enfants aux rituels en se demandant dans quelle mesure les enfants sont les sujets, les acteurs et les objets des rites auxquels ils prennent part. Conservant son aspiration exploratoire, la deuxième édition de l’atelier poursuit ces mêmes questionnements. Les enfants ne peuvent-ils être considérés comme « acteurs » de rituels et comme dotés d’ « agentivité » qu’à la condition qu’ils soient reconnus comme tels par les adultes ? Cette reconnaissance signe-t-elle la distinction entre deux mondes, où celui des adultes serait la seule manière légitime de « faire société » ? Quelle place et quel statut occupent les rituels d’enfants et les enfants dans leurs propres rituels ?
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Study days - Ethnology, anthropology
Both in Belgium and in Europe, debates about immigration are generally dominated by Islam which tends to overshadow the current religious pluralisation in our societies. However, since several decades multiple forms of religious recomposition have been taking place, in particular within the Christian field, where a new dynamic can be observed as a consequence of migration and missionary movements, such as Pentecostal and Evangelical groups. During this study day, on 14 November 2013, we aim to discuss the religious mutations that have occurred in Belgium during the last decades, through different forms of mobility: migration, intra-European mobility and the transformation of native Churches. In particular, we will examine how the tension between local community and globalisation, mobility and sedentarity, local belonging and transnational networks are brought about by these Churches.
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Call for papers - Ethnology, anthropology
Both in Belgium and in Europe, debates about immigration are generally dominated by Islam which tends to overshadow the current religious pluralisation in our societies. However, since several decades multiple forms of religious recomposition have been taking place, in particular within the Christian field, where a new dynamic can be observed as a consequence of migration and missionary movements, such as Pentecostal and Evangelical groups. During this study day, on 14 November 2013, we aim to discuss the religious mutations that have occurred in Belgium during the last decades, through different forms of mobility: migration, intra-European mobility and the transformation of native Churches. In particular, we will examine how the tension between local community and globalisation, mobility and sedentarity, local belonging and transnational networks are brought about by these Churches.
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