Dr Raúl E. Zegarra Lecture

Dr Raúl E. Zegarra Lecture, 3 October 2024

Dr Raúl E. Zegarra

Dr Raúl E. Zegarra 

Dr Raúl E. Zegarra (Harvard Divinity School) will speak on: 

 

 “Revisiting A Revolutionary Faith: On Tradition, Innovation, and New Forms of Spirituality

 

When: Thursday, October 3rd at 3 PM

Where: Via Zoom (Meeting ID: 934 8349 7436  Passcode: 610950)

 

This Lecture is part of Dublin City University’s Theology, Philosophy, and Religious Studies Research Seminars.

Latest book

 

 

For Peter Admirand’s review of the book, see here.

 

 

Bio

 

Raúl E. Zegarra is the author of four books, multiple book chapters, academic articles, and translations. Raúl received his PhD from The University of Chicago, and holds master's degrees in philosophy and theology from the Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú and the University of Notre Dame, respectively. His research focuses on the relationship between faith and politics, with particular emphasis on how this relationship shapes the identity and commitments of minoritized groups. Raúl is Assistant Professor of Roman Catholic Theological Studies at Harvard Divinity School, and is part of the editorial and advisory team at the Hispanic Theological Initiative (Princeton, NJ). He was formerly an Assistant Professor of Theology at Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Among his recent awards, Raúl has received the New Scholar Essay Prize for Catholic Studies in the Americas (Fordham University, 2023), the Max Weber Kolleg Research Fellowship (University of Erfurt, 2022), and the Manfred Lautenschlaeger Award for Theological Promise (University of Heidelberg, 2021). He is also a regular op-ed contributor to Peruvian newspaper El Comercio. Raúl fourth book, A Revolutionary Faith, (Stanford UP, 2023) is devoted to liberation theology’s contributions to a theory of social justice that welcomes the role of religious commitments. He is currently working on a new book project—Sacred Identities: Latines and the Intersectional Politics of Faith—that attempts to problematize some of the assumptions of Latine theology and cultural studies regarding the relationship between race, gender, and religion in the Latine community.