Diasporic Hybridity: How It Impacts Religious Identity and Practice in Today’s Pluralistic World
A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 1 July 2025 | Viewed by 510
Special Issue Editors
Interests: religion and diaspora; religiosity and hybridity; religious pluralism; comparative theology; hermeneutics; New Testament studies
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
We are pleased to introduce a Special Issue on "Diasporic Hybridity", and how this phenomenon impacts religious identities and practices in contexts/societies characterized by religious diversity and pluralism. Diasporic hybridity refers to a compendium of experiences consisting of the following key features: an uprooting (intentional, unintentional, or even coerced) from what was considered an original homeland and the movement to a new, often inhospitable place/context/situation in which individuals and/or communities come to acquire a complex hybrid identity due to being simultaneously located in two (or more) worlds.
Moreover, diasporic hybridity is also frequently accompanied by phenomena such as a sense of being in multiple worlds without a real home; the various and sundry experiences of marginalization, discrimination, and oppression; and the intricate negotiation between and balancing of multiple, asymmetrically related worlds present in oneself or one's community, among other things.
With all of these abovementioned nuances as foundational presuppositions, we pose this key question: What are the concrete ways by which diasporic hybridity influences and impacts religious identities and practices in contexts characterized by religious pluralism and diversity?
This Special Issue aims to advance our understanding of the phenomenon of diasporic hybridity and its relationship with the themes of religious diversity and pluralism. We also seek to elucidate the effects this has on our contemporary globalized world. To these ends, submissions from scholars across disciplines such as religious studies, theology, anthropology, sociology, political science, and cultural studies are encouraged. By compiling interdisciplinary scholarship on this topic, we aim to offer further insights into the abovementioned topic.
Furthermore, this Special Issue aims to add a variety of new viewpoints and empirical discoveries to the current literature regarding the interplay between hybridity, diaspora, religion, and pluralism. By uniting researchers from other disciplines and possibly investigating a variety of case studies from various geographic regions, this Special Issue will provide a forum for critical engagement with the theoretical frameworks that form our understanding of hybrid identities in various diaspora contexts, religion, and pluralism.
Dr. Julius-Kei Kato
Dr. Peniel Rajkumar
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- diasporic hybridity (in the context of “diasporic hybridity,” all of the key expressions below)
- religion and diaspora
- religion and hybridity
- religious pluralism
- religious diversity
- religious identities
- religious practices
- interreligious dialogue
- religious communities
- yheology and pluralism
- postcolonial thought
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