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On behalf of the FSU Department of Religion and the Society for Women's Advancement in Philosophy, I would like to announce an extension to the proposal submission deadline for our annual interdisciplinary graduate student symposium. This year's theme is "Sects and Sexuality: Issues of Division and Diversity". If you are interested in submitting a paper to this conference, please send an abstract (300-800 words) with a list of key terms and a CV to Brooke Sherrard fsugradsymposium@gmail.com by Monday, December 7th, 2009.
A copy of the original call for papers is below.
Thank you,
Kristen K. Muldowney
PR Chair, FSU Graduate Student Symposium
M.A. Student, History and Ethnography of Religions:
Religions of Asia: Buddhism and Tibetan Religion
Florida State University, Dodd Hall 107
Kkm08@fsu.edu
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The Florida State University Department of Religion’s 9th Annual Graduate Student Symposium has partnered with the Society for Women’s Advancement in Philosophy’s 6th Annual Conference to present an interdisciplinary graduate student symposium to be held February 19-21, 2010. Graduate students are invited to submit proposals that engage this year’s theme:
Sects and Sexuality: Issues of Division and Diversity
We encourage submissions from graduate students in all levels and fields with interdisciplinary interest in the study of Religion and Philosophy. We also welcome a variety of methods and approaches, particularly in regards to (1) Religion, Ethics, and Philosophy; (2) American Religious History; (3) Religions of Western Antiquity; (4) History and Ethnography of Religions (specializing in Asian, African, Mediterranean, and Western European Religions); and (5) Philosophy dealing with Race, Class, Sexuality, and Gender.
This is an Open Call for papers. Possible topics may include, but are not limited, to: Celibacy and Asceticism, Issues of Inclusion and Exclusion, Notions of the Forbidden, Sectarian Conflicts, and Community Identities.
Presentations should be 15-20 minutes in length and will receive faculty responses at the conclusion of each panel. The Leo F. Sandon Award will be given for the best paper of the symposium.
Proposal submissions are due December 1, 2009 (**Extended to December 7, 2009**), and should consist of an abstract (300 to 800 words) including a list of key terms for review and a CV. Final papers must be submitted by January 15, 2010.
Proposals should be emailed to Brooke Sherrard fsugradsymposium@gmail.com.
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