Peng Yin

Assistant Professor of Ethics, Boston University

Specializations:

  • Religion and sexuality

  • Sexual ethics

  • Queer theology

Course idea:

Sexual ethics: a feminist-and-queer-centered attempt at thinking through contemporary conversations in sexual desire and pleasure, intimate violence, polyamory, sex work, pornography, as well as sex and technologies.


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Lisa Joffe

Lecturer, Near Eastern and Judaic Studies, Brandeis

Specializations:

  • Women's rights and religious law

  • Gender and multiculturalism

  • Family law

Course idea:

None specified


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Kristin Peterson

Assistant Professor, Communication, Boston College

Specializations:

  • Religion

  • Digital media

  • Feminist activism

  • Religious representation and the media

Course idea:

None specified


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Amey Victoria Adkins Jones

Assistant Professor, Theology; African and African Diaspora Studies, Boston College

Specializations:

  • Mariology

  • Sexual Ethics

  • Race and Gender

  • Black Feminist/Womanist Theology

  • Religious Visual Culture

  • Human Trafficking

  • Prison Industrial Complex

Course idea:

Non specified

Amey Victoria Adkins-Jones ("AVA") is Assistant Professor of Theology and African and African Diaspora Studies at Boston College. 

Her scholarship specializes in Mariology and womanist/black feminist thought. 


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Religion/Spirituality, History Guest User Religion/Spirituality, History Guest User

April Hughes

Associate Professor, Chinese Buddhism, Boston University

Specializations:

  • Chinese Buddhism

Course idea:

Women rulers and how they legitimate themselves in different regions and times

April D. Hughes received her Ph.D. in Religion from Princeton University in 2014. She completed M.A. degrees in East Asian Studies at the University of California, Berkeley and the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research situates medieval Chinese religion within broader cultural and social contexts. She is especially interested in medieval Chinese Buddhist manuscripts and mural paintings discovered at Dunhuang (northwest China). Her current book project is entitled “Personifying the Buddha: Politics, Gender, and Religion in Medieval China.” Over and against the assumption that political authority was argued chiefly in Confucian terms, the book investigates the different symbol systems (Confucian, Buddhist, and Daoist) that emperors employed to validate their reigns. Specifically, the book highlights the centrality of Buddhism to Chinese notions of kingship, since both emperors and rebels sometimes solidified claims to the imperial throne by declaring themselves Buddhas incarnate, descended to earth in order to rule and revive Buddhist Teachings.


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