jscott


Jamie S Scott

Photo of Jamie S Scott

Department of Humanities

Professor Emeritus
Senior Scholar

Office: McLaughlin College, 029
Phone: 416-736-2100 Ext: 77342
Email: jscott@yorku.ca


Professor Emeritus and Senior Scholar Jamie S. Scott joined York University’s faculty in 1985. He has taught a variety of undergraduate and graduate courses in Religion and Culture. His current research interests include interdisciplinary work in World Religions in Canada, Religion and Film, Religion and Architecture, and Literary Tourism and Industrial Heritage.

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Professor Emeritus and Senior Scholar Jamie S. Scott joined York University’s faculty in 1985. He has taught a range of undergraduate courses in Religion and Culture, notably “World Religions in Canada,” “Introduction to the Study of Religion,” “Contemporary Religious Thought,” “Religion and Film,” “Religion and Television,” “Religion and Postcolonial Literatures” and “Christianity and Film.” Professor Scott's more recent publications include “Postcolonial Islam in My Son the Fanatic: From Deobandi Revivalism to the Secular Transposition of the Sufi Imaginary.” Humanities 10.1 (2021): 1-34; “Mosques in Canada: From the Qur’anic Masjid to Sharif Senbel’s ‘Canadian Islamic Regionalism[s]’,” in A Medieval Legacy: The Ongoing Life of Forms in the Built: Essays in Honour of Malcolm Thurlby (Montreal: Éditions Patrimonium, 2020: 373-401); “Religion and Postcolonial Writing,” in The Cambridge History of Postcolonial Literature (Cambridge University Press, 2011: 739-70); and “Representing Sacred Space: Pilgrimage and Literature,” in Loci Sacri: Understanding Sacred Places (Leuven University Press, 2012: 138-67). He is contributing editor of The Religions of Canadians (University of Toronto Press, 2012), the only comprehensive study of world religions in Canada. His current research interests involve interdisciplinary work in World Religions in Canada, Religion and Film, Religion and Architecture, and Literary Tourism and Industrial Heritage. Professor Scott has twice served as Director of the Graduate Program in Interdisciplinary Studies (2006-2008 and 2009-2013), and he has taught a variety of courses and supervised MA and PhD students in the graduate programs in English, Geography, Humanities and Interdisciplinary Studies.

Degrees

PhD in Religion and Literature, University of Chicago
MA in English Literature, Queen’s University
MA in Religious Studies, Carleton University
BA in English Literature and Language, Downing College, Cambridge University

Research Interests

Religion , Arts and Culture