1 hr 15 min

WILLIAM ROBERT: CONFRONTING TRAGEDY, CONFRONTING OURSELVES Wonderstruck

    • Spirituality

What do you want? Who are you bound to? Who are you, really? And what will you do when faced with difficult decisions? These are some of the questions at the heart of religion and tragedy, dramas about extreme situations, impossible choices, and their consequences. William Robert, a professor of religion at Syracuse University, studies religion by studying tragedies, since both ask the same kinds of big questions about being human: questions about love and connection, about purpose and passion, about morality and mortality. And they’re persistent questions that don’t have final answers. In performance-based classes and workshops, and in print, William uses tragic dramas to rethink how religion works, what it does, and why it matters. His most recent book, Unbridled: Studying Religion in Performance, won the American Academy of Religion’s Religion and the Arts Book Award. On this episode of Wonderstruck, William and host Elizabeth Rovere discuss performance and pedagogy as practices of wonder that generate learning. Using teaching methods that draw upon embodied participation, earnest curiosity, props and disarming playfulness, William breaks down the barriers of academia to reach new and transformative conclusions. "When we're using our bodies, we are inevitably thinking and feeling together," he says. "The intellectual and the affective and the corporeal dimensions are all mixed together. And that's much more powerful than just the intellect."
https://wonderstruck.org
https://www.instagram.com/wonderstruckpod/
https://www.youtube.com/@wonderstruckpod
https://www.facebook.com/wonderstruckpod
https://twitter.com/wonderstruckpod
https://www.tiktok.com/@wonderstruckpod
https://artsandsciences.syracuse.edu/people/faculty/robert-william/
https://artsandsciences.syracuse.edu/news-all/news-2024/william-robert-wins-american-academy-of-religion-book-award/
https://a.co/d/3xYgkQE
https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/U/bo128919176.html

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

What do you want? Who are you bound to? Who are you, really? And what will you do when faced with difficult decisions? These are some of the questions at the heart of religion and tragedy, dramas about extreme situations, impossible choices, and their consequences. William Robert, a professor of religion at Syracuse University, studies religion by studying tragedies, since both ask the same kinds of big questions about being human: questions about love and connection, about purpose and passion, about morality and mortality. And they’re persistent questions that don’t have final answers. In performance-based classes and workshops, and in print, William uses tragic dramas to rethink how religion works, what it does, and why it matters. His most recent book, Unbridled: Studying Religion in Performance, won the American Academy of Religion’s Religion and the Arts Book Award. On this episode of Wonderstruck, William and host Elizabeth Rovere discuss performance and pedagogy as practices of wonder that generate learning. Using teaching methods that draw upon embodied participation, earnest curiosity, props and disarming playfulness, William breaks down the barriers of academia to reach new and transformative conclusions. "When we're using our bodies, we are inevitably thinking and feeling together," he says. "The intellectual and the affective and the corporeal dimensions are all mixed together. And that's much more powerful than just the intellect."
https://wonderstruck.org
https://www.instagram.com/wonderstruckpod/
https://www.youtube.com/@wonderstruckpod
https://www.facebook.com/wonderstruckpod
https://twitter.com/wonderstruckpod
https://www.tiktok.com/@wonderstruckpod
https://artsandsciences.syracuse.edu/people/faculty/robert-william/
https://artsandsciences.syracuse.edu/news-all/news-2024/william-robert-wins-american-academy-of-religion-book-award/
https://a.co/d/3xYgkQE
https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/U/bo128919176.html

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

1 hr 15 min