Loading Events

« All Events

Sonic Icons: Relation, Recognition, and Revival in a Syriac World

March 4 @ 3:30 pm
Book cover art from _ Sonic Icons Relation, Recognition, and Revival in a Syriac World_ by Sarah Bakker Kellogg (Fordham UP, 2024).

Talk Abstract: To the extent that Middle Eastern Christians register in Euro-American political imaginaries at all, they are usually invoked to make a political point about the need for Western military intervention in places like Iraq or Syria, or they are cited as an exemption to anti-Islamic immigration policies because of an assumption that their Christianity makes them easily assimilable in the so-called “Judeo-Christian” West. Sonic Icons argues that these views work against the very communities they are meant to benefit by tracking a diasporic network of Syriac Orthodox Christians—also known as Assyrians, Aramaeans, and Syriacs—in the Netherlands who intertwine religious practice with political activism to “save” Syriac Christianity from the twin threats of political violence in the Middle East and cultural assimilation in Europe.

Coming of age in a historical moment when much of their tradition has been destroyed or forgotten by war, dispossession, displacement, and genocide—their story of self-discovery is a story of survival, revival, and reinvention. Their activism is oriented toward seeking a complex form of recognition for what they understand to be the ethical core of Christian kinship in an ethnic as well as in a religious sense, despite living in societies that do not recognize this unhyphenated form of ethnoreligious identity as a politically legitimate mode of public identity. Drawing on both theological and linguistic theories of the icon, Sonic Icons rethinks foundational theoretical accounts of ethnicization, racialization, and secularization by examining how kinship gets made, claimed, and named in the global politics of minority recognition.

 

Speaker Bio: A cultural anthropologist by training (UCSC ’13), Dr. Sarah Bakker Kellogg is a sensory ethnographer whose research and writing documents minor traditions of knowledge, care, and relational world-making. Known for her methodological creativity, her work centers questions of reproduction, ethics, and justice at the intersection of religious studies, gender studies, migration studies, and political economy. The author of Sonic Icons: Relation, Recognition, and Revival in a Syriac World published by Fordham University Press (2025), she has also won numerous awards, research grants, and fellowships, including the SSRC’s International Dissertation Research Fellowship, the Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, and the Wenner Gren Hunt Postdoctoral Fellowship. Her new research project is an ethnographic and historical investigation of interfaith activist traditions organized around immigration, racial reparations, and economic justice.

Details

Other

Room Number
261

Venue