Ep. 5: How to See the Unseen?
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How can you see the unseen? And does it matter if you don’t “believe” in it, as a scholar of religion?
This week, I’m thinking through how we, as scholars of religion (yes, that includes you if you’re listening), come to see and engage the unseen, regardless of whether we “believe” in it or can perceive it through our physical senses.
I also share how I encounter and draw on the unseen in my own intellectual work and practices, and what this has taught me about a much broader, more embodied understanding of the unseen. One that goes beyond flickering lights, things flying across rooms, or haunting silhouettes.
Follow me on socials @imanabdk for more of my thinking on the unseen.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction
00:40 The unseen tested me
02:26 What is the unseen?
03:28 Does it matter if I believe in the unseen?
05:58 Stop trying to arbitrate the real
12:21 Beyond ghosts
14:00 My encounters with the unseen
18:50 Broadening what we consider the unseen
Works referenced:
Ahmad Greene-Hayes, “Hair, Roots, and Crystal Balls: Archival Viscerality, Black Conjuring Traditions, and the Study of American Religions,” Journal of the American Academy of Religion 91, no. 4 (2023): 798–819.
Amira Mittermaier, Dreams That Matter: Egyptian Landscapes of the Imagination (University of California Press, 2010).
Safiya Bukhari, The War Before: The True Life Story of Becoming a Black Panther, Keeping the Faith in Prison & Fighting for Those Left Behind (The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2010).