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Faculty Updates Spring 2025

宗教研究系的教员都在忙些什么? 继续往下读,了解他们最近的工作,以及他们对今年的期待。 

 

Alex Angelov

Alexander Angelov, David L. Holmes Associate Professor of Reformation Studies and American Religious History

In addition to his research in the Humanities, Professor Angelov is currently leading two separate teams. The first project, which is in collaboration with investigators from the University of Washington, applies a multi-factor analysis of the effects of religion on public health, trauma, and psychotherapeutic recovery. The second team studies big econometric data received from the European Union and looks at the impact of political uncertainty on wages and well-being comparatively and cross-sectionally.   

Prof. Angelov continues to enjoy his regular classes on the History of Christianity, the Protestant Reformation, Eastern Christianity, and Christianity and Radical Politics. He is developing a new course entitled God and Money: Religion and the History of Finance. He is also working closely with students on Noetica (an interdisciplinary forum for undergraduate research). 

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Annie Blazer, Associate Professor of Religious Studies

Professor Blazer is finishing her second book, American Culture through Religion and Sport, while on sabbatical for the 2024-2025 academic year. She presented work from this book at the annual meeting for the American Society of Church History. William & 玛丽 generously provided a faculty research grant and funding from the faculty grant fund to assist the final stages of writing the book manuscript. Blazer looks forward to seeing this book come into the world in winter 2026 from Bloomsbury Press.  

Patton Bruchett

Patton Burchett, Associate Professor of Religious Studies

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Joined by Religious Studies colleagues Kevin Vose and Mark McLaughlin, this year Prof. Burchett also continued work on another Provost Interdisciplinary Research Innovation Grant (2023) funded project, “Unraveling Contemplative Practices,” which studies the cultural and social forces affecting meditation and mindfulness practices today and differences between secular and religious motivations of contemplation in order to elucidate the most effective means of obtaining psychological, cognitive, and emotional benefits from these practices. 

This past year Prof. Burchett taught his staple courses: “Introduction to Hinduism” (Fall 24), “Religions of the World” (Fall 24), “Religion and Politics in the U.S.” (Summer 24), “Modern Hinduism” (Spring 25), and “Spiritual But Not Religious” (Spring 25). 

Outside of work, Prof. Burchett spends his time cooking, exercising, and chauffeuring his two daughters (3rd and 5th grade) to swim practices and other various activities. This year he teamed with Religious Studies colleague Andrew Tobolowsky and other W&M faculty and staff on in W&M’s intramural basketball league.  Playing against student intramural teams, their squad, “Grumpy Old Men,” secured a 4-1 regular season record and a playoff win before being eliminated in the tournament semifinals. 

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Michael Daise, Department Chair and Endowed Professor of Judaic Studies in Religious Studies

For part of his remit as Judaic Studies Professor, Prof. Daise sponsored two lectures over the past year. In early April 2024 he reinstated the ‘William and Sue Anne Bangel Annual Lectures on Southern Jewish History’ to its proper purpose by inviting Mark K. Bauman, Emeritus Professor of History, Atlanta Metropolitan College’, to speak on ‘The Debate Over Southern Jewish Distinctiveness’. And later that same month he capped off the year with the ‘Milton and Shirley Salasky Memorial Lectures in Judaica’, inviting Piero Capelli, Professor of Hebrew in the Department of Asian and North African Studies, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, to lecture on '"A Source of Shame and Horror": Discovering, Translating and Burning the Talmud in Medieval Christian Europe', 

In the summer of 2025 Prof. Daise will be delivering three more papers, one slated for publication: the first is ‘Jerusalem Christ-Believers as Returned Immigrants’, at the International Society of Biblical Literature, Uppsala, Sweden; the second (sibling to the above-mentioned article on John and Judaean desert manuscripts) is titled ‘John and Qumran Revisited: The Interpretation of Biblical Quotations’, for the European Association of Biblical Studies, also at Uppsala; the third (also the third of the trilogy on the martyr Stephen) is titled ‘Politics and the First Christian Martyrdom’, for the Oxford Symposium on Religious Studies, Harris Manchester College, Oxford. 

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Rahel Fischbach, Assistant Professor of Religious Studies

Professor Fischbach is teaching a new course this semester called Women and Gender in the Qur'an and recently presented part of her forthcoming book in a talk titled "Trapped in History: Sex, Gender, and creation in the Qur'an." Her article, Ästhetik der Gewalt im Qur'an, has recently been published in English by Springer.  Learn more about Professor Fischbach's research and interests here.  


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Joanna Homrighausen, Adjunct Lecturer for Judaic Studies and Religious Studies

In her fourth year at William & 玛丽, Joanna Homrighausen continues to teach the Biblical Hebrew sequence, as well as the pilgrimage course for first-year writing students she designed with the William & 玛丽 Institute for Pilgrimage Studies. Since last fall, she has had two articles on religion and art accepted for publication, including one in the open-access journal Bible in the Arts. In February, she gave a paper on lettering arts and pilgrimage for a symposium put on by the Association of Scholars of Christianity in the History of Art, which will be published in a volume of papers on art and pilgrimage. Most proximately, she is looking forward to writing about British artist Martin Wenham this summer for a book under contract, as well as teaching New Testament Greek for Union Presbyterian Seminary in Richmond. 

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Maggie Kirsh, Visiting Assistant Professor of Religious Studies

This past summer, Professor Kirsh’s article, “Witnessing the Recovery: Storytelling and Family Building, from Belsen to Ireland” appeared in International Migration Review. In addition to serving as a judge for the Holocaust Commission’s Elie Wiesel Writing Competition, she was the featured speaker in the Yom HaShoah Remembrance Program hosted by the UJC, where she presented “Of Castles and Kibbutzim: Storytelling and Healing After the Holocaust.”  

Professor Kirsh continues teaching a variety of courses for the Program in Judaic Studies and the Religious Studies Department, including The Holocaust, Gender and Judaism, and Modern European Jewish History. She recently revamped her syllabus for Writing the Self: An Exploration of Jewish History Through Memoirs. In particular, students enjoyed the new additions of Michael Twitty’s Koshersoul and Ayelet Tsabari’s The Art of Leaving. 

When she’s not grading papers, writing, or conducting research, Professor Kirsh can be found mucking out horse stalls in a barn in Toano, trying new recipes with her favorite sous chefs (her kids!), and drinking as much tea as possible. 

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Mark McLaughlin, Teaching Professor of South Asian Religions

No update available at this time, but reach out via email or learn more about Professor McLaughlin's research and interests here

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Randi Rashkover, Director of Judaic Studies and Sophia & Nathan Gumenick Associate Professor of Judaic Studies

No update available at this time, but reach out via email or learn more about Professor Rashkover's research and interests here. 

Faraz Sheikh

Faraz Sheikh, Hans Tiefel Associate Professor of Ethics

Professor Sheikh will be reading a paper at the 4th annual Critical Muslim Studies conference in Istanbul, Turkiye at the end of May 2025. He will also give a talk on Muslim ethics in the study of religion at the Lahore University of Management & Sciences (LUMS) Lahore, Pakistan at the beginning of June. His class, Illness and Religion, was granted COLL 200 status this Spring. He served on the search committee (jointly with American Studies) for a new, tenure-track hire in the field of African Diaspora Religions and reviewed applications and conducted job interviews and remained actively involved during campus visits by two short-listed candidates. He continues expanding his research in the field of religious ethics collaboratively and plans for a co-authored volume about the ways in which particular forms of religiously-informed thinking and reasoning has the potential to illuminate contemporary moral problems, such as war between nations and environmental degradation, in novel and productive ways. 


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Andrew Tobolowsky, Robert & Sarah Boyd Associate Professor of Religious Studies

Professor Tobolowsky published his third book, Ancient Israel, Judah, and Greece: Laying the Foundation of a Comparative Approach in November of 2024, with Sheffield Phoenix Press. His fourth,  "Israel and Its Heirs in Late Antiquity" is due out in June of this year with Cambridge University Press. Professor Tobolowsky was appointed the Walter G. Mason Associate Professor for a term beginning in the fall of 2025, and was nominated for a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Stipend fellowship. He was also elected to Faculty Assembly. At home, he continues to run around after his nearly-four-year-old Judah, and shooting hoops at a nearby park, with greater and lesser success. 

 

Kevin Vose

Kevin VoseWalter G. Mason Associate Professor of Religious Studies

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