Research Seminar with Professor Todd Whitmore (Thurs 4 Feb)
Professor Todd Whitmore (The University of Notre Dame) will speak on “Ethnography as a Tool for Interreligious Dialogue: Lessons from Northern Uganda.”
When: Thursday, February 4, 2021 at 3 PM
Where: Via Zoom (see below on RSVP)
This Lecture will be the first of our Spring Theology, Religious Studies, and Philosophy Seminars.
Professor Whitmore’s lecture will be delivered by Zoom. To RSVP and receive the link, please email: Peter.Admirand@dcu.ie or Joseph.Rivera@dcu.ie.
Biography
Professor Todd Whitmore uses ethnographic methods to raise theological questions. From 2005-2013, this took him to war and post-conflict zones in northern Uganda and South Sudan, leading to his book, Imitating Christ in Magwi: An Anthropological Theology (Bloomsbury/T&T Clark, December 2018). Anthropological theology turns traditional “theological anthropology” on its head, with the conviction that any account of “the person” must be richly informed by accounts of how persons in fact live. His work has led to him being appointed as Concurrent Associate Professor in the Anthropology Department.
Currently Professor Whitmore’s work is local, where he serves as a Certified Addiction Peer Recovery Coach for persons with methamphetamine and opioid addictions in northern Indiana. His research asks how Christianity, race, and class work in the construction of public ideas of who counts as an addict.
In doing “grounded” theology, Professor Whitmore believes that theologians should serve the marginalized by more than writing books. In Uganda in 2008, he co-founded, based on Catholic social teaching, a non-profit that combined agricultural training and peacebuilding. In 2018 he wrote a successful grant to train addiction recovery coaches to work in the local hospital emergency room to help those recovering from overdoses to maintain ongoing sobriety.