2024 NetVUE Gathering at the AAR/SBL Annual Meeting Nonviolence and/as Vocation: An AAR/SBL Pre-Conference Gathering

November 21–22, 2024 San Diego, California

NetVUE will host an AAR/SBL pre-conference meeting on the theme of “Nonviolence and/as Vocation.” Aligning with the 2024 AAR theme (“Violence, Nonviolence, and the Margins”) and building on previous NetVUE pre-conference meetings, this event considers how we, as educators in the field of religious studies and theology, might confront the issues surrounding violence in our world, with particular attention to helping our students see nonviolence as a vocation. The gathering runs from Thursday, November 21, at 2:00 p.m. through Friday, November 22 at noon. The cost for those from member institutions is only $25, which includes a Thursday evening reception and dinner, as well as a light breakfast on Friday. Interested parties from non-NetVUE institutions may participate as well, at a slightly higher cost.



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2:00 p.m.

David S. Cunningham, Professor of Theology, Aquinas College (MI), and Executive Director of NetVUE, Council of Independent Colleges

2:30 p.m.

A. K. M. Adam, Lecturer in New Testament, Oriel College, University of Oxford

Agam Iheanyi-Igwe, Associate Professor of Bible & World Christianity,BushnellUniversity (OR)

Kathleen Gallagher Elkins, Associate Professor of Theology and Religious Studies, St. Norbert College (WI)

3:30 p.m.

3:45 p.m.

John Dear, Founder and Director, The Beatitudes Center for the Nonviolent Jesus

Followed by discussion with the panelists and Q& A from the audience

5:00 p.m.

6:30 p.m.

9:00 a.m.

Anantanand Rambachan, Emeritus Professor of Religion, St. Olaf College

10:15 a.m.

10:30 a.m.

Margaret Adam, Independent Scholar

Daniel Morris, Norwich University

Ellen Posman, Baldwin-Wallace University (VA)

Followed by discussion with the panelists and Q& A from the audience

12:00 p.m.

Optional; not included in the registration fee

Registered participants are invited to a Thursday afternoon reception (complimentary snacks, hors d’oeuvres, and bar), as well as dinner at a local restaurant. A light breakfast will be available on Friday morning. The cost of these meals is included in the $25 registration fee. Many participants continue the discussion over lunch on Friday as well.

Members of AAR or SBL who are registered for the Annual Meeting can obtain discounted lodging through the organization of which they are a member. Information concerning area hotels, as well as airport transfer and parking information, is available on the SBL website or  the AAR website. Limited assistance for one extra night of lodging, or for travel, is available to those registered for the pre-conference gathering whose institutions are unable to cover this cost; if you are in need of this assistance, please write to David Cunningham, executive director of NetVUE, at dcunningham@cic.edu, with details of your circumstances.


Hosted by David S. Cunningham, Executive Director of NetVUE, and Lynne Spoelhof, Director of NetVUE Operations

NetVUE also hosts a reception during the AAR/SBL Annual Meeting. All SBL and AAR participants are invited to stop by this reception, whether or not their institutions are members of the network, and whether or not they are able to participate in the pre-meeting gathering. Attendees can learn more about NetVUE (including faculty development and grant opportunities), connect with friends and colleagues with similar interests, and enjoy one another’s company.

As an affiliate member of SBL, NetVUE is able to host a session within the SBL meeting itself. This year’s session examines the work of Max Weber, whose 1917 lecture Wissenschaft as Beruf (“The Scholar’s Work”) is explored in Wendy Brown’s recently published Tanner Lectures, Nihilistic Times: Thinking with Max Weber (Harvard, Belknap, 2023). A panel of four theologians with a strong interest in scripture will consider the implications of Weber’s work (and Brown’s response to it) for the teaching and research agendas of those who regularly work with scriptures and traditions as source materials. The panel will give particular attention to Weber’s call for “value-free” teaching and to Brown’s critique.


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NetVUE is a program of the Council of Independent Colleges. NetVUE programs and services are made possible through member dues and the generous support of Lilly Endowment Inc.

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