Russell T. McCutcheon

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Russell T. McCutcheon
Born
Russell Tracey McCutcheon

1961 (age 62–63)
NationalityCanadian
Academic background
Southwest Missouri State University
  • University of Alabama
  • Russell Tracey McCutcheon (born 1961) is a Canadian religion scholar who earned a PhD in religious studies from the University of Toronto in 1995.[2]

    Biography

    McCutcheon is a professor in the department of religious studies at the University of Alabama, and was department chair from 2001 to 2009, and again from 2013 to 2023. He was an editor of the quarterly periodical Method & Theory in the Study of Religion from 1997 to 2001. In 2005, McCutcheon was elected President of the Council of Societies for the Study of Religion, headquartered at Rice University. He is the founder and series editor for the anthology series, Critical Categories in the Study of Religion.[3]

    He has been noted for a controversy concerning methodology in the field of religious studies. This controversy centered on a rather polemical exchange between McCutcheon and

    Robert A. Orsi, who held a teaching position at Harvard University and Harvard Divinity School, with Orsi referring to McCutcheon's book, The Discipline of Religion, as "chilling". Orsi also made the comment, "the assumption appears to be that the scholar of religion by virtue of his or her normative epistemology, theoretical acuity, and political knowingness, has the authority and the right to make the lives of others the objects of his or her scrutiny. He or she theorizes them." McCutcheon responded with a paper included in the Journal of the American Academy of Religion entitled, "It's a Lie. There's No Truth in It! It's a Sin! On the Limits of the Humanistic Study of Religion and the Costs of Saving Others from Themselves".[4]

    Books

    References

    1. ^ McCutcheon, Russell T. (1995). Manufacturing Religion: The Discourse of Sui Generis Religion and the Politics of Nostalgia (PhD thesis). Toronto: University of Toronto.
    2. ^ "Russell T. McCutcheon". Department of Religious Studies. 2017-03-30. Retrieved 2023-10-28.
    3. ^ Critical Categories in the Study of Religion accessed June 10, 2017.
    4. ISSN 1477-4585
      .