Keeping It 101: A Killjoy's Introduction to Religion Podcast
A podcast by Profs. Ilyse Morgenstein Fuerst and Megan Goodwin - Mercoledì
98 Episodio
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You Don't Know African Diasporic Religions
Pubblicato: 29/09/2021 -
World Religions, But Better
Pubblicato: 15/09/2021 -
LIVE! "Public Humanities, Public Jokes" with Dr. J. Barton Scott @ the University of Toronto
Pubblicato: 04/09/2021 -
Review Session: Teamwork Makes the Dreamwork
Pubblicato: 19/05/2021 -
Twitter, Jinn, and the Great Conjunction with Dr. Ali Olomi
Pubblicato: 05/05/2021 -
Islam Is More than You Think It Is
Pubblicato: 21/04/2021 -
Was Jesus a Wizard? with Dr. Shaily Patel
Pubblicato: 07/04/2021 -
Very Special Episode: 'Rona Revisited
Pubblicato: 31/03/2021 -
Early Christianity Is Actually Kind of Interesting
Pubblicato: 24/03/2021 -
White Evangelicalism Racism with Dr. Anthea Butler
Pubblicato: 10/03/2021 -
White American Evangelicalism + Racism = BFF
Pubblicato: 24/02/2021 -
Simran Jeet Singh Keeps Going
Pubblicato: 10/02/2021 -
Public Scholarship and Representation
Pubblicato: 27/01/2021 -
Welcome Back, Nerds!
Pubblicato: 13/01/2021 -
BONUS: Keeping It 101 Course Evals with Prof. Kristian Petersen
Pubblicato: 04/01/2021 -
Review Session: What Did We Learn? Where Do We Go From Here?
Pubblicato: 09/12/2020 -
Extra Credit with Professor Judith Weisenfeld
Pubblicato: 25/11/2020 -
Gender, Sexuality, and Religion in what's NOT the United States
Pubblicato: 11/11/2020 -
Gender, Sexuality, and Religion in what's now the U.S.
Pubblicato: 28/10/2020 -
Race and Religion in South Asia &, well, Not-the-US
Pubblicato: 14/10/2020
Keeping it 101 is the podcast that helps our nerdy listeners make sense of religion. Why religion? Well, if you read the news, have a body, exist in public, or think about race, gender, class, ability, or sexuality, you likely also think about religion — even if you don’t know it yet. Let us show you why religion is both a lot more important and a little easier to understand than you might think. Put us in your earholes and let us show you why religion isn’t done with you — even if you’re done with religion.