Expanding Religion: Studying Migration, Diaspora and Zoroastrian Community: Professor John Hinnells in Discussion

Professor John Hinnells reflects on a lifetime of research on the effects of Diaspora on religions, and the importance of making those religions better understood in their new homes. From experience of the Zoroastrian communities of India, the U.K. and further afield, Professor Hinnells explores the role of the scholar as someone who must preserve tradition, without changing it in the process. Through forty years of engagement with the Parsi community, he shares his insights into the effects of global migration on communities and their beliefs.

Ritual and Resistance at the Margins: Ritual, ‘Outsiders’, and the Study of Culture:
Professor Sondra Hausner in Discussion

Dr Sondra Hausner draws on a wide anthropological experience spanning East and West to discuss approaches to cultural change, and solutions to the Insider-Outsider Debate. She meditates on the appeal of marginal communities for discerning scholars, showing how they highlight the elements of resistance and change that exist in classic Durkheimian theories of society. The conversation carries on to consider ritual, participant fieldwork, and the pendulum-like swing between sacred and profane in human life.