SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL
DISSERTATION PROPOSAL DEVELOPMENT FELLOWSHIP
RETHINKING EUROPE: RELIGION, ETHNICITY,
NATION
SPRING 2007 WORKSHOP AGENDA
Research Director: John
Bowen
Research Director:
Rogers Brubaker
Radisson Hotel Denver Stapleton Plaza
Thursday, May 17 – Sunday, May 20, 2007
Throughout Europe – however one defines “Europe” – ethnoreligious, ethnoracial, ethnolinguistic, ethnoregional, and ethnonational heterogeneity are generating new political claims and counterclaims, new policy debates and initiatives, new organizational forms and discursive fields, new cultural practices and lived experiences. Students and scholars have been addressing these phenomena in a variety of disciplines, asking a wide range of questions and employing a wide range of methods and data. Participants in this workshop are drawn from anthropology, history, political science, sociology, and ethnomusicology. Their diverse sites of analysis include tourism, musical and artistic performance, religious identifications, everyday social interaction, language and civics tests, and ethnic and religious organizations on local, national, and transnational levels and over various time scales in France, Germany, Spain, the UK, and Turkey.
This workshop will seek to trace the contours of this emerging cross-disciplinary field and to help prepare fellows for their pre-dissertation summer research. The two goals stand in close relation to each other: through a sustained and structured discussion of student proposals and their component parts, we hope to contribute to the mapping of the research field itself. The second workshop will focus on the mechanics and methods of writing a dissertation proposal. Together, the two workshops are designed to help students prepare cogent and fundable dissertation proposals.
Workshop Readings and Resources:
Research Field
resources have been placed on the secure DPDF web portal.
Workshop Assignments
April 30, 2007: Each of you has
prepared a 5-8 page statement specifying the research question(s) you are
asking, describing the method(s) you will employ, and discussing the sources of
data you will examine.
By the beginning of the workshop: Read carefully the statements
prepared by all the workshop participants. These can be found on the
secure DPDF web portal. Participants will not present their projects at
the workshop; it will be assumed that everyone has read closely all the
proposals.
For our first workshop session [i.e., “Session 2”] : Please
read the following methodological selections:
o Watts, “In Search of the Holy Grail”
o Bowen, “Beyond Migration”
o Briggs, “Leaning How to Ask”
o Brubaker et al, “Conclusion/Note on Data”
At the workshop: Two fellows are assigned to introduce the
discussion of each project; in other words, each fellow will discuss two
projects. Fellows plan to speak initially for 6-7 minutes on the paper,
and to set out in a concise way: what are the research questions (including
general orienting questions and more specific questions)? What are the
methods? What sorts of evidence will be considered and assessed? And how
do questions, method, and evidence fit together? Fellows may
propose one or two suggestions for the author or pose one or two questions for
the group (for example, concerning an additional method, or an alternative way
to formulate the question). These discussions do not aim to evaluate or assess
the project but rather to introduce our discussions by focusing attention on
key issues of research questions, methods, and evidence.
RETHINKING EUROPE: WORKSHOP SCHEDULE
Session 1: Introduction and Purpose of Workshops
(Thursday, 9 AM
– 12:30 PM)
Plenary Session: Presentations by Program Director Peter Sahlins and the
Research Directors
Session 2: Mapping Fields, Asking Questions, Choosing Methods,
Assessing Evidence
(Thursday, 1:30 PM – 5 PM)
The two project directors will discuss three closely-connected issues: the
development of the field, formulating research questions, and developing
appropriate methodology. We will draw on our own work and trajectories, and the
work of others.
The field, for us, is built around new methodological emphases (such as
micro-level analysis), critical analyses of analytical categories (such as
ethnicity and transnationalism), and the appreciation of new social forms (such
as religious movements and Europe-wide organizations). In some ways, our sense
of the field builds on long-standing questions about ethnicity and
state-formation, everyday forms of sociability, and debates about religion and
politics, but asks whether new methods could not give us more valid
understandings of the social processes that subtend key social
categories.
As we discuss formulating research questions, we will distinguish between
broader orienting questions and more specific research questions, alternative
ways to fit your project into a research tradition, and legitimate disciplinary
differences in formulation. How do you formulate questions that are general
enough to allow you to situate your project in a tradition of inquiry or an
ongoing controversy and align yourself with major figures in your field yet
also specific enough to be well tailored to your specific research
project?
Method, for us, stretches from formulating the question, through designing
appropriate kinds of study (interviews, observations, archival work), to
weighing whether (and how) the evidence gathered does indeed speak to the
original question, or perhaps leads you to modify it. Please read the Briggs
piece (under “reading materials” on the main Rethinking Europe page) about
issues with interviews. We are especially concerned that you avoid the traps of
looking only at “positive” (in the statistical sense) cases, where the
phenomenon to be studied will be most evident— “looking under the lamp post” or
“selecting on the dependent variable”—and we will talk through ways to avoid
these pitfalls.
Sessions 3-6: Friday and Saturday
These sessions will focus on student proposals, which have been (roughly) grouped in thematic clusters. We will have about an hour to discuss each proposal. Discussions will begin with two initiators, one drawn from outside the thematic cluster, the other from within. Each initiator will be asked to speak for 6 or 7 minutes, focusing on research questions, methods, and evidence.
Session 3: (Friday, 9 AM – 12:30 PM)
- Sheila Nowinski: “Postwar French Catholic Political Culture,
1944-1958”
- Elayne Oliphant: Laïcité and Discreet Religiosity: Experiences of Catholicism
in Secular France”
- Alexander Street: “The Politics of Language and Civics Tests in Europe”
Session 4: (Friday, 1:30 PM – 5 PM)
- Avi Astor: “Regional Variation and the (Re)Making of Islam in Modern
Spain”
- Rebekah Tromble: “Framing Islam: Hizb ut-Tahrir’s Transnational Call to
Action”
- Gulseren Kozak-Islik: “A Comparative Study of Islamic Legal, Religious and
Political Institutions in Europe and the USA”
Session 5: (Saturday, 9 AM – 12:30 PM)
- Susan Rottmann: “The Predicaments of Belonging to Europe: Ethnicity,
Religion, and Class for German-Turkish Return Migrants”
- Zeynep Ozgen: “Rethinking the Role of Identity in Daily Life: Social
Interaction in Antakya, Turkey”
- M. Nell Balthrop-Flynn: “Security, Embodiment, and Development in
Euromediterranean Marseille’s Franco-Maghrebi Communities”
Session 6: (Saturday, 1:30 PM – 5 PM)
- Abigail Dumes: “Musical Citizenship: Race, Religion and the Politics of
Belonging among African Gospel Performers in France”
- Crystal Fleming: “Cultural Boundaries and Public Performance: The Politics of
Ethnicity in French and American Spoken Word Poetry Venues”
- Michael O’Toole: “Modeling Multiculturalism: Discourses of Multiculturalism
and the Experience of German-Turkish Musicians in Berlin, Germany”
Session 7: Looking Forward: From the Field to the
Proposal
(Sunday, 9 AM – 12:30 PM)
In the first half of this final session, we will revisit the question of the shape and structure of our emerging interdisciplinary field in the light of our discussions of student projects. We will also try to consolidate some of the lessons learned during the workshop, especially as these pertain to the fit between research questions, methods, and evidence.
In the second half of the session, we focus on the question: where to go
from here? We consider some strategies for making the best use of the
period of summer research, and ways of avoiding some common
pitfalls. We will also discuss the process of moving forward
towards the preparation of a dissertation proposal. And we will discuss
our plans for the September workshop.
Social Science Research Council