Arts and Sciences Hall (ASH) University of Nebraska at Omaha |
UNO Religious Studies Program
ASH
Suite 205
|
|
|
|
|
Professor Stovers early research focused on hermeneutics as the methodological key to interpreting religious texts for contemporary understanding. In 1976 he studied modern religious meanings as affected by the European Enlightenment through a National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) summer fellowship at Yale University under the tutelage of Professor Hans Frei. In the fall of 1979 he held a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of Chicago where he studied with the Islamics scholar, Professor Fazlur Rahman of the Oriental Institute. In the summer of 1980 he was again a summer NEH fellow, and he studied the nexus of anthropology and psychoanalytic theory with Professor Melford Spiro at the University of California at San Diego. In the fall of 1981, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of California in Berkeley where he studied Shii Islam with Professor Hamid Algar. In the fall of 1982 Professor Stover took a leave of absence to apprentice with healers practicing non-allopathic medicine in California. This initiated a turn toward experiential studies in religion, partly displacing and partly complementing his earlier focus on textual studies. In the fall of 1985, his concern with experiential religion led him to participation in ceremonies of indigenous peoples. His primary teachers in traditional indigenous ceremonies have been the members of the Has No Horse family of the Wakpamni Lake community on Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota. In the fall of 1992 Professor Stover became the Coordinator of the new Native American Studies program at UNO and he served as coordinator for three years. Besides serving on the Native American Studies faculty, he served on the faculty of the Womens Studies program at UNO. He was also an adjunct professor in the Department of Preventive and Societal Medicine in the College of Medicine at UNMC and a fellow of the Center for Great Plains Studies based at UNL. His publications of note are: [1] "Linguisticality and Theology: Applying the Hermeneutics of Hans-Georg Gadamer," Sciences Religieuses/Studies in Religion, 5:1 (1975-76) 34-44. [2] "Orientalism and the Otherness of Islam," Sciences Religieuses/Studies in Religion, 17:1 (1988), 27-40. [3] "The Other Side of the Story: Indigenous Interpretation of Contact with Europeans," The Age of Exploration: Spain and New Spain; proceedings of the Fifth Annual Klutznik Symposium, ed. by Bryan F. LeBeau and Menachem Mor; Omaha, NE: Creighton University Press, 1996, 97-116. [4] "Eurocentrism and Native americans," Cross Currents, 47:3 (Fall 1997), 390-397. [5] "Religious Freedom, Native American: Legal and Philosophical Context," The Encyclopedia of Native American Legal Tradition, ed. by Bruce Johansen; Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1998, 265-273. [6] "A Postcolonial Reading of Black Elk," The Black Elk Reader, ed. by Clyde Holler; Syracuse: University of Syracuse Press, 2000, 127-144. [7] "Postcolonial Sun Dancing at Wakpamni Lake," Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 69/4 (December 2001), 817-836. Dr. Stover's email address is dstover@mail.unomaha.edu. Site maintenance done
by All rights reserved 2001 |
|