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Department of Religious Studies Faculty
Whitney Bauman
Ph.D., Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, California
Assistant Professor
Religion and Science

       

My teaching and research interests in Religious Studies fall within the broad field of "Religion and Ecology."  The driving question of my interests and commitments to the field is: How do religious beliefs, insights, doctrines, and practices shape the material-physical worlds around us?  This question assumes that some sort of "religious sentiment" is part of what it means to be a human being in the world.  In other words, even if one considers oneself atheist or outside of any established religious tradition, as humans we still seek to value the world, to make sense of the world, and to ask questions about the meaning of life.  These tasks have largely been left to "religions" in the recorded history of human beings.  Thus, even if one does not adhere to or practice a given tradition, it is undeniable that these religions have shaped the cultures in which we live and the answers to these big questions in life.  In my work, I analyze how answers to these "big questions" have shaped the human relationship with the rest of the natural world.  In doing so, I see the human world--culture, thought, economics, ideas, etc.--as part of the rest of the natural world.  Furthermore, I am interested in analyzing how these "big questions" are changed by forces such as global climate change and globalization.  In the end, I understand these religious questions to be questions about ethics: how ought we to live responsibly as human beings vis. a vis. the rest of the natural world. 
This work has been at the heart of my education. After being turned on to "Religion and Ecology" in a course at Hendrix College entitled "Religion, Animals, and the Earth"  I went on to complete a Master of Theological Studies at Vanderbilt Divinity School.  My thesis there, "The Illusion of the Isolated Self" propelled me into questions of how theological and philosophical anthropology shape human-earth understandings and relations.  After completing my Masters, I worked on the Science and Religion Course Program  at the Center for Theology and the Natural Sciences.  Also during this time, I began working for a group at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley called the Theological Roundtable on Ecological Ethics and Spirituality or TREES.  For five years, we hosted courses and forums dealing with various topics at the intersection of religious studies and environmental studies.  All of this "field work" became the basis of my dissertation at the Graduate Theological Union, "From Creatio ex Nihilo to Terra Nullius: The Colonial Mind and the Colonization of Creation." This project, primarily from an eco-feminist and post-colonial critical stance, explores how the Christian understanding of "creation out of nothing" helped to provide a theological and metaphorical support system for a logic of domination toward human and earth others. After the completion of my dissertation, and before joining the FIU faculty, I worked as a Program Associate for the Forum on Religion and Ecology.  

 

Forthcoming/Recent Publications:
Theology, Creation and Environmental Ethics: From Creatio ex Nihilo to Terra Nullius (Routledge, Forthcoming 2009).

 
-Assistant Editor, The Berkshire Encyclopedia of Sustainability: The Spirit of Sustainability (Berkshire Publishing Group, Forthcoming 2008).

 
-“The Problem of a Transcendent God for the Well-Being of Continuous Creation” in Dialog: A Journal of Theology 46.2(Summer 2007): 120-127.

 
-“The Eco-Ontology of Social/ist Eco-Feminist Thought” in Environmental Ethics 29 (Fall 2007): 279-298.

 
- “Creatio ex Nihilo, Terra Nullius, and the Erasure of Presence” in Ecospirit: Religions and Philosophies for the Earth, Catherine Keller and Laurel Kearns eds. (New York, NY: Fordham University Press, 2007), 353-372.

 
Forthcoming/Recent Presentations:
- “Opening the Language of Religion and Ecology” (Paper Accepted to the American Philosophical Association Meeting, Philadelphia, PA: December 27-30, 2008).

 
-“Haute Couture and Environmental Couture: The End of Transcendence and the Opening of Ecological Aesthetics,” (Paper Accepted to the International Association for Environmental Philosophy Conference, “Thinking Through Nature: Philosophy for an Endangered World” June 19-22, 2008).

 
-“Religion, Environmental Justice, and City Ecology” (Paper presented at the Eco-City Conference, San Francisco, CA, April 23, 2008).

 
-“Thinking Beyond the Enchantment, ReEnchantment, and DisEnchantment of ‘Nature’,” (Paper delivered to the second meeting of the International Society for the Study of Religion, Nature, and Culture, Morelia, Mexico, January 17-20, 2008).

 
Current Courses:
Earth Ethics
Ethics and the Environment
Religion and Science
BioEthics
 

Curriculum Vitae

Professor Bauman's Suggested Websites

Inherited Land Colloquium February 2009