Nancy M. Martin

 

 
     
 


Nancy M. Martin

* Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Chapman University

* Visiting Fellow, Clare Hall, Cambridge University

* Associate Director, Global Ethics and Religion Forum (www.GERForum.org)

* General Co-Editor, "Library of Global Ethics and Religion," Oneworld Publications Ltd., Oxford, England

* International Research Advisor, Rupayan Sansthan (Folklore Institute of Rajasthan, funded by the Ford Foundation), Jodhpur, India

* Steering Committee Member, Religion in South Asia Section, American Academy of Religion

* International Connections Committee Member, American Academy of Religion

Short Bio

Nancy M. Martin received her M.A. from the University of Chicago Divinity School and her Ph.D. from the Graduate Theological Union in conjunction with the University of California, Berkeley. An Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Chapman University, she is an historian of religion with expertise in Asian religions, gender issues, and comparative ethics. Involved in extensive fieldwork in Rajasthan, her research focuses on devotional Hinduism, women's religious lives, and the religious traditions of low-caste groups in India. Her book on the sixteenth-century saint Mirabai, entitled Mirabai: Woman Saint in India, is forthcoming with Oxford University Press. She is the recipient of a Graves Award for the Humanities and a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Humanities, and will be a Visiting Fellow at Clare Hall, Cambridge University in Spring 2003. With Joseph Runzo, she is Co-founder of the Global Ethics and Religion Forum; Co-editor of The Meaning of Life in the World Religions; Love, Sex and Gender in the World Religions; Ethics in the World Religions; and Human Rights and Responsibilities in the World Religions; and General Co-Editor of the "Library of Global Ethics and Religion" (Oneworld Publications, Ltd., Oxford). Together they jointly delivered the Lowell Lecture for 2001 in comparative ethics at Boston University, and Dr. Martin has lectured widely on devotional Hinduism, religion and human rights, and comparative ethics in India, China, Italy, Germany, Belgium, England, South Africa, and the USA, including at the Parliament of the World Religions in 1998.

 

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