A Loaf for Learning: Teaching the Study of Religion with Food

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How to Cite:
King, S. J. (2019). A Loaf for Learning: Teaching the Study of Religion with Food. Religious Studies and Theology, 38(1-2), 27–37. https://doi.org/10.1558/rsth.38376

Full description

Cooking and eating in the Religious Studies classroom is a challenging and valuable pedagogical practice which turns upside down students' individualist ideas of religion as belief inside people's heads, drawing them out into the complexity of lived religion, and in so doing breaks open the modernist study of religion itself. Teaching with food upsets gendered stereotypes about whose religion counts, and it brings students into direct confrontation with the boundaries, borders, taboos and pleasures that are at the heart of religions and the religious. Cooking and eating with students reminds them that religion is not actually a category separate from the other aspects of human life and culture; it's connected! With food, the classroom becomes a different place, where students move beyond religion as intellectual interiority into the complexity of everyday religion as lived.

  • type
    Image
  • created on
  • file format
    jpeg
  • file size
    31 KB
  • container title
    Religious Studies & Theology
  • creator
    Sarah J. King
  • issn
    1747-5414 (online)
  • issue
    38.1/2
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield, United Kingdom
  • rights
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • volume
  • doi