The Politics of Sanctity and Human Rights
- Starts: 12:00 pm on Friday, April 3, 2026
- Ends: 1:30 pm on Friday, April 3, 2026
Join the CURA community for the upcoming colloquium featuring work by Anat Biletzki, Albert Schweitzer Professor of Philosophy, Quinnipiac University on April 3. This year-long conversation brings together an interdisciplinary community of scholars of culture, religion, and world affairs.
Please note that reading the paper in advance is required for attendance. CURA workshops are dedicated to focused, in depth feedback and discussion. A copy of the paper(s) will be sent to registered participants one week in advance of each session.
Abstract: This article is currently a stand-alone piece (to be incorporated into a book – Political Despair), which entertains an opening, philosophical step proposing the idea of an essential political divorce between religion and human rights. It argues for that disconnection as a conceptual-terminological necessity born of the unbridgeable void between the sanctity demanded by religion and the humanity revered by human rights. I go on to show that the problematic abyss also exists in the “down-to-earth” practices of the institution of religion, resulting in insoluble self-questioning tensions.
- Audience:
- public
- Address:
- Pardee School of Global Studies, 154 Bay State Road
- Room:
- 2nd floor (Eilts Room)
- Fees:
- free
- Deadline:
- 3/30/2026
- Contact Organization:
- Institute on Culture, Religion & World Affairs: CURA