Calum McCracken I
One of the pleasures of my teaching and curatorial work, in Universities and Museums, has been welcoming young budding scholars to the table. Our research and thinking together has always been fruitful. Today’s conversation kicks off a series of conversations with young scholars on themes I have been privileged to work on with each of them
In the last number of months Calum McCracken has joined me in exploring the rise of Christian nationalism. Since I have always been a bit cautious in studying the diseases of religion, culture, and society not wanting to catch the infection I decided we would begin our work and this conversation considering the Civil Rights Movement that animated much of the 1960 and think about how religion was at play in the gifts it bequeathed to our society. We would then move on to thinking about how the same texts and narratives and similar theological ideas can also be at work in the rise of Christian Nationalism.
Calum did a lovely piece of research exploring culture, pluralism and human rights focused on how this theme unfolded in Quebec and the work of Charles Taylor on this issue. He was also engaged by the Commonwealth Human Rights Initiative and I had the pleasure of discussing some of his work and having larger conversations with him on international challenges we face given the legacy of colonialism.
We begin these three podcasts thinking about his own intellectual growth over the last few years. We explore the Civil Right Movement, the place of religion and religious ideas in the growth of this movement with particular emphasis on the prophetic tradition. We touch on the work of Dr. Martin Luther King, his drawing on the thinking of Reinhold Niebuhr and Gandhi, on Malcolm X and Dorothy Day, and the political landscape in which they worked and which they sought to transform.
In our next podcast we will explore the policy changes in the United States that endeavoured to address racism and poverty.
Our third podcast digs into the roots of Christian Nationalism and its current rise in liberal democratic societies.
Welcome to our conversation.