Why Study Religion? with Ph.D Student Alyssa Bedrosian

Why Study Religion? is a video series in which the CSR asks its faculty, students, staff, and guests what is important to them about the academic study of religion and why more folks should consider pursuing it. Find out more about the Center and its initiatives HERE. To learn more about OSU’s Religious Studies Major, visit our website at THIS LINK.

Why does Alyssa Bedrosian, a Ph.D Candidate in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese Studies, study religion? Shurouq Ibrahim, CSR’s Graduate Research Associate, interviewed Alyssa to find out. Watch the video below for her response!

Shurouq: How would you answer the question: Why study religion?

Transcript:

Alyssa Bedrosian:

My research explores Catholic feminism and abortion rights activism in the United States and in Latin America. So, I am really interested in this relationship between feminism and religion broadly, and feminism and Catholicism specifically, and the potential of Catholic feminism and other religious feminisms to advance abortion rights.

What I have really found through my research is that most feminist scholarship tends to ignore religion and/or dismiss women’s religiosity. When feminist scholarship does address religion, it tends to focus on religious fundamentalisms without recognizing the plurality and diversity that characterize many religious traditions. And for me, this results in feminist scholarship and feminist activism that I think really falls short. Across the United States and Latin America, where my research is focused, most people identify as Christian, with women tending to be more religious than men. But, feminist scholarship continues to dismiss the religious beliefs and the religious practices of most people in the Americas.

Feminist scholar bell hooks talks a lot about the importance of building a mass feminist movement that is accessible and speaks to a lot of different people. And so, I think to do this, we need to start having nuanced conversations about religion and feminism.

 

Alyssa Bedrosian is a fourth-year Ph.D student in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese Studies and a 2024-25 Global Arts + Humanities Discovery Theme Graduate Team Fellow. Bedrosian’s interdisciplinary research explores feminisms in Latin America and the United States. Her dissertation examines twenty-first-century Catholic feminism and abortion rights activism in Mexico, Argentina, and the United States. 

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