Prof. Jonathan Stockdale

Professor, Religion, Spirituality, and Society

Jonathan Stockdale’s scholarly interests focus on Japanese religion and culture. He is the author of Imagining Exile in Heian Japan: Banishment in Law, Literature, and Cult (University of Hawaii Press, 2015), which examines how Japanese literature and political players treated the notion of banishment after the Japanese Imperial Court adopted exile, rather than capital punishment, to deal with offenders during the Heian period (794–1185 AD). Stockdale’s recent research examines the presence of whale graves, and whale memorials, and the spiritualization of whales in Japanese history and modern memory. Stockdale teaches Introduction to the Study of World Religions; Japanese Religious Traditions; Imagining Religion: Scholars, Theories, and Cases in the Study of Religion; and Japanimals: Knowledge, Power, and Spirituality at the Intersection of Species.

Education
BA Kenyon College 1987
MA University of Chicago 1993
PhD University of Chicago 2004
Classes
Intro to World Religions REL 202-A Fall 2024
Chinese Religious Traditions REL 234-A Fall 2024
Imagining Religion REL 340-A Fall 2024
Zen Insights and Oversights CCS 104-A Spring 2025
Japanese Religious Traditions REL 233-A Spring 2025
Body in Comparative Religion REL 440-A Spring 2025

Contact Information

Wyatt 124