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During the 2025-2026 academic year, the scientific committee of the Pluriel network is organizing a double event on the theme “Ethics and Aesthetics in Islamic Heritage”, which will include a webinar on October 16, 2025 at 4:00 PM (Paris time), as an introduction to the international congress to be held in Córdoba, Spain, from February 10 to 14, 2026.


Ethics (aḫlāq) and aesthetics (ǧamāliyya) play a central role in Islamic thought and heritage. In the Islamic tradition, ethics is engaged in the pursuit of virtue and harmony with divine principles. The works of al-Ġazālī often serve as a reference point, frequently examined through the synthesis of moral and spiritual virtues deployed in his writings (Moosa). Similarly, the ethics of Ibn Miskawayh, particularly in his Tahḏīb al-aḫlāq, influenced by Greco-Arabic philosophy, has been the subject of numerous studies and commentaries (Arkoun). In this vein, Muḥammad ʿAbduh’s Risālat al-tawḥīd presents an innovative reflection on ethics by linking the rational and spiritual principles of Islamic monotheism to the quest for a harmonious society founded on justice and individual freedom. For its part, Islamic aesthetics explores expressions of beauty in art, architecture, and poetry, often connected to a spiritual and symbolic quest. Works such as Oleg Grabar’s studies on Islamic art, Navid Kermani’s exploration of the aesthetic experience of the Quran, and Christiane Grubber’s analysis of the rhetoric of images in Islam demonstrate the richness of this field.
While both concepts are significant in Islam, they are generally studied separately. For instance, ethics has been analyzed from the perspective of moral philosophy or mysticism, while aesthetics has been the focus of research on art or artistic practices. Very few studies have sought to understand their articulation, their interweaving, their tensions, and the implications of this relationship for Islamic heritage. This lacuna is what this Congress intends to fill. By seeking to investigate the deep and sometimes ambivalent links between ethics and aesthetics in Islamic contexts (Arab, Persian, Turkish, Chinese, etc.), it will adopt an interdisciplinary, comparative, and dialogical approach encompassing both intra-Islamic and interreligious perspectives. It will also consider how these relationships illuminate contemporary issues related to identity, representations, and cultural dialogue.
The originality of this Congress lies in its ambition to explore the connections between ethics and aesthetics in Islam: how do these two dimensions intertwine in practices, representations, and discourses? How are they in tension? What are the conceptual and methodological challenges researchers face in contemplating their articulation?
Drawing on historical, cultural, and artistic examples, this Congress aims to explore questions such as the interconnection between ethics and aesthetics in Islamic heritage, the application of aesthetic values in daily life, the instrumentalization of art for purposes of power or religious exclusivism, the integration of art as a space for encountering the Other, theological reflections for an ethics concerned with a heritage hospitable to alterity, and the reconciliation of creative freedom with ethical responsibility.
This theme aims to explore the historical dimensions of the relationships between ethics and aesthetics in Islamic heritage, the relationship to speech and its truth, and the place of their articulation within philosophy and Sufism.
Historical Studies on Islamic Art and Associated Ethical Concepts: What links can be established between the ethics of artistic creation and the aesthetic norms developed within Islamic civilization? For example, how do geometric decorations, calligraphy, and medieval architecture convey moral and spiritual values? To what extent do they respond to a moral imperative?
Language, Aesthetics, and Truth: How does the Quranic text articulate aesthetics, ethics, and the quest for truth? In what way does Quranic rhetoric, through the notion of iʿjāz (inimitability), mobilize stylistic perfection as a vector of doctrinal and ethical authority? What theological or philosophical debates do these notions provoke?
Analysis of Classical and Contemporary Texts: The works of thinkers such as al-Fārābī, al-Ġazālī, and Ibn ʿArabī offer rich perspectives on the articulation between beauty, ethics, and spirituality. For instance, al-Ġazālī explores how sensory beauty can be a pathway to understanding divine beauty, while Ibn ʿArabī emphasizes a mystical aesthetics linked to the contemplation of divine Unity. Today, the reflections of Seyyed Hossein Nasr fit within a thought that articulates beauty and spirituality.
This second theme focuses on the concrete expressions of the articulation between ethics and aesthetics in daily life, examining practices, representations, and limits imposed by religious and cultural norms.
Impact of Religious Prohibitions on Forms of Aesthetic Expression: A reflection on the ethical justifications of prohibitions affecting iconography, architecture, music, or other arts, in connection with current theological and legal debates.
Beauty and Daily Practices: Whether in housing, textiles, craftsmanship, or clothing, how do aesthetic choices reflect ethical values? For example, “Modest fashion” can be treated as a contemporary illustration of this articulation between aesthetics and ethics, where clothing combines respect for religious principles with aspirations for the expression of a modern Islamic identity.
Boundaries Between Religious and Secular Art: For example, one might start with dance or theater, which, although sometimes perceived as secular forms of expression, constitute aesthetic spaces where Islamic ethical values are articulated. For instance, certain Sufi dances, such as samāʿ or the whirling dervishes’ dance, are manifestations of spiritual devotion that undergo reinterpretation or adaptation in contemporary times. Similarly, theatrical traditions like the passionate taʿziya narratives in Iran or certain contemporary plays derive from religious themes and use theater as a vehicle for ethical and spiritual reflection.
This third theme explores how aesthetics can be a source of hospitality towards the Other or an expression of its rejection, a space for constructive encounters or domination.
Relationships Between Aesthetics and Power: How can art become a tool in service of an ethical project or, conversely, be perceived as a space for transgression? This involves examining how art can be used to support ethical and social projects while questioning its potential role in contestation, particularly in Street art. On the link between art and power, recent authors such as Mohamed Iqbal or Sayyid Quṭb can be considered.
Heritage and Hospitality of Alterity: How can Islamic aesthetic legacies contribute to a more open and inclusive ethics in a context of cultural and religious diversity? Islamic aesthetic heritage, particularly through its architecture, calligraphy, and visual arts, is a terrain of hospitality and encounter with the Other. For example, the tradition of welcoming in the architecture of mosques, caravansaries, or Quranic schools invites encounters with the Other, whether believer or non-believer. Additionally, Islamic heritage and its interactions with other cultures and religions can be examined, such as in Andalusia where Christian and Jewish architectural elements were integrated into Muslim structures. Furthermore, in contemporary contexts where Muslim architecture coexists with public spaces of non-Islamic culture, the question arises of how to design buildings that dialogue with their cultural environment, akin to architectural projects like the Grand Mosque of Paris or the Islamic Center of Manhattan.
Interreligious and Intercultural Dialogue: How is Islamic art a space for encountering the Other, as well as a means to explore identity tensions and possible bridges between different traditions? In Islam, the question of representing the Other, particularly Christian or Jewish figures, has given rise to complex reflection on the boundaries of representation. This dialogue can also be observed in contemporary art, where Muslim artists use religious or historical symbols intertextually to foster encounters between different traditions. The influence of pre-Islamic aesthetic traditions (Persian, Hellenistic, Byzantine, and Syriac) on the emergence of a distinctly Islamic aesthetics and its ethical resonances can be studied. Additionally, artistic exchanges between the Muslim and Christian worlds, particularly in architecture and decorative arts during medieval and modern periods, can be explored. The impact of contemporary art in Muslim societies, where artists use traditional symbols to reflect on identity tensions in a globalized world, can also be analyzed.
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Professor of theology and Islamic studies, he directs the Centre for the Study of Cultures and Religions. He co-directed the university diploma 'Religion, Religious Freedom and Secularism' from 2013 to 2019. He coordinates Pluriel and the seminar 'Religions and Businesses'. In 2020, he became deputy director of the Research Unit 'CONFLUENCE Sciences & Humanities', UCLy. On 1 September 2023, he was appointed Dean of the Faculty of Theology at the Catholic University of Lyon for a three-year term.
Ghaleb Bencheikh el Hocine, born January 25, 1960 in Jeddah (Saudi Arabia), is a French-Algerian Islamologist, holder of a doctorate in physical sciences (fluid mechanics, Paris 6 University) and trained in philosophy. Son of Sheikh Abbas Bencheikh el Hocine, rector of the Great Mosque of Paris (1982-1989), and brother of Soheib Bencheikh, Grand Mufti of Marseille, he comes from an Algerian Sufi lineage. Known for his liberal and reformist Islam, he advocates a 'theological refoundation' of Islam adapted to modernity and republican secularism. From 2000 to 2019, he hosted the program Islam on France 2, then produced Questions d'islam on France Culture. President of the World Conference of Religions for Peace (French branch), he teaches the history of monotheisms at Paris-Dauphine University and the Secular School of Religions. Elected president of the Foundation for Islam in France (FIF) in December 2018, succeeding Jean-Pierre Chevènement, he was re-elected in 2024. The FIF supports doctoral students in Islamic studies, trains imams in secularism, launches 'popular universities' and the Lumières d'Islam website. A member of the Council of Sages on Secularism, he works on radicalization and interreligious dialogue.
Please keep your badge throughout the Congress, as it will give you free access to the Mosque-Cathedral on February 11 and 12. Simply show it at the building reception.
A Dominican, Emmanuel Pisani holds a PhD in philosophy and Arabic studies (Lyon III University), a PhD in theology (Catholic University of Lyon), a canonical licentiate in theology, and a DEA in political science (IEP Bordeaux). He received the Mohammed Arkoun Prize in 2014 for his thesis in Islamic studies entitled 'Heterodox and Non-Muslims in al-Ghazālī's Thought.'
Director of the Dominican Institute for Oriental Studies (IDEO, Cairo), he teaches at the Catholic Institute of Paris, where he directed the Institute of Sciences and Theology of Religions (2013-2021).
Holder of a PhD in Oriental Languages, Civilizations and Societies (Sorbonne Nouvelle, 2022) and affiliated member of the Centre for the History of Medieval and Modern Societies (MéMo, Paris Nanterre/Paris 8), Yacine Baziz has also been a teacher in the Versailles Academy since 2013. His work focuses on Arab-Andalusian literature, cultural history, and memorial constructions around Ibn Ḥazm of Córdoba, from the medieval period to Orientalism and contemporary receptions. He is also interested in intertextuality in Arabic biographical dictionaries, employing digital humanities approaches (literometrics, text mining). He has taught practical Arabic and media Arabic at undergraduate level at Sorbonne Nouvelle and regularly publishes articles and papers on these themes.
Mohamed-Ali Mostfa holds a PhD in linguistics and Anglophone cultures, is Associate Professor at the Catholic University of Lyon (UCLy), and is accredited to supervise research (HDR) in sociology.
He is a member of the research unit Confluence: Sciences and Humanities (EA 1598), associate researcher at the Centre for the Study of Cultures and Religions (CECR), coordinating member of the PLURIEL platform (University Platform for Research on Islam in Europe and Lebanon), and co-director of the 'Mohammed Arkoun' Islamic studies training program, in partnership with UCLy, Jean Moulin Lyon 3 University, Lumière Lyon 2 University, and Sciences Po Lyon.
A graduate in Arabic language and literature (Cairo University), this specialist in medieval Arab studies and information sciences has been working since 2018 at IDEO (Dominican Institute for Oriental Studies) as a reference cataloguer, conducting research on the editorial history of Arabic works and their authors for an innovative cataloguing system. A former collaborator at the Dar Comboni Institute, he served as junior editor for an academic journal of literary criticism. An Arabic teacher (private and online courses) and translator, he has published a study on theatre in Quaderni di Studi Arabi and translated several reference works.
Holder of a PhD in Arabic language and literature (Saint Joseph University of Beirut), his research focuses on narrative discourse and identity issues in Lebanon, through analysis of novelistic works. A public secondary school Arabic teacher since 2008, he also serves as lecturer at USJ (Institute of Oriental Literature) and has taught Arabic as a foreign language at AUB (CAMES program). In parallel, he works as proofreader and linguistic editor for research centers, academic journals, and publishing houses, and participates in designing textbooks and curricula for Arabic language teaching, particularly for university audiences and heritage learners. He publishes in peer-reviewed journals and contributes to international conferences.
Holder of a PhD in philosophy obtained in 2019, this specialist works at the intersection of the history of philosophy and contemporary religious studies. She was Assistant Professor in history of philosophy at the University of Moncton (Edmundston campus, humanities sector) from 2022 to 2024, and has been Associate Professor at the University of Sherbrooke, at the Centre for Contemporary Religious Studies (CERC), since 2022. She is currently Assistant Professor at the Royal Military College Saint-Jean.
Holder of a PhD from Michel de Montaigne Bordeaux III University in Arabic philosophy (highest honors with distinction) and holder of the agrégation in Arabic, this researcher conducts work at the intersection of Islamic philosophy, intellectual history, and literary studies. His research focuses particularly on logic and Andalusian thought (Averroes, Fārābī), the circulation of texts and concepts, as well as the political stakes of scriptural heritage. He has published in Studia Islamica and MIDEO, contributed to the Encyclopédie philosophique universelle (PUF), and authored studies on Mahmoud Darwish, medieval Arab theatre, and the Arab world's perspective on Pierre Loti.
Associate researcher at PISAI (Rome) and IREMAM (Aix-Marseille University), he works on the history of Christian-Muslim relations and Mediterranean mediations in the 20th century. Holder of a PhD in history (AMU) and a Master's in philosophy (Dominican University College, Ottawa), he has been conducting post-doctoral research since 2023 in Belo Horizonte on the White Fathers' approach to Islam. He teaches history, literary history, and the geopolitics of religions, following positions in Nairobi, Rome, Marseille, and Ottawa. His working languages include French, Italian, English, Portuguese, and Swahili.
Ahmed Kaza holds a PhD in philosophy and is a professor of higher education at Chouaib Doukkali University (El Jadida, Morocco). He defended his thesis in 2005 at Mohammed V University in Rabat and obtained his habilitation in 2018. His work focuses on philosophical and mystical thought, particularly the work of Ibn Arabi, to which he devoted the book The Image between Occultation and Manifestation in Ibn Arabi (Mouminoun Bila Houdoud, 2018). He regularly participates in national and international conferences (Turkey, United Arab Emirates) on hermeneutics, metaphysics, religious phenomena, digitization, and ethics.
Holder of the agrégation and a doctorate in literature (philosophy), Essaid Labib is a lecturer-researcher at the Faculty of Letters and Human Sciences of Chouaib Doukkali University (El Jadida). Holding a bachelor's and master's degree in French studies, he develops work at the intersection of philosophy, aesthetics, and film studies, with a marked interest in gender issues and contemporary readings of Michel Foucault. He is a member of the Moroccan Association of Film Critics, the Association for Feminist and Gender Studies, and the Centre for Aesthetic and Artistic Research. His recent publications include 'Foucault and Queer Theory in Judith Butler' (2023) and Fi ta'wīl al-'amal al-fannī (2025), as well as articles in French on Moroccan cinema (2023).
A historian of contemporary Islamic doctrines, Constance Arminjon is Director of Studies at EPHE-PSL (Religious Sciences Section), holding the chair in 'Intellectual History of Contemporary Shi'ism,' after serving as Associate Professor from 2012 to 2022. A former student at EHESS (doctorate, 2011) and accredited to supervise research (2020), she works on the recomposition of religious authority, relations between Shi'ism and the state, as well as debates on human rights and hermeneutical renewals. Author of several reference works (CNRS Éditions, Cerf, Labor et Fides), she also maintains sustained editorial activity (editorial boards, scientific expertise and evaluation). She works in Arabic, Persian, and English.
Bruno Martín Baumeister is Senior Lecturer in business law at Universidad Pontificia Comillas (Madrid). Trained in law at ICADE, he completed two LL.M. degrees at the College of Europe (scholarship from the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs) and at the Europa-Institut of Saarland University ("La Caixa" scholarship), before obtaining a doctorate in law there. A former corporate lawyer, he practiced at Clifford Chance and Cuatrecasas, among others. He regularly participates in conferences and has been a visiting scholar at Georgetown, Fordham, Hong Kong University, and Jindal Global University. His research focuses on corporate law, securities, Islamic finance, and corporate finance law.
Lebanese researcher and educator specializing in philosophy (logic and epistemology), he has taught general philosophy and coordinated social science content in several secondary schools. Holding a State Doctorate in Philosophy from the Lebanese University (with distinction), he has been an associate professor at the Lebanese University since 2014 and also teaches at Saint Joseph University of Beirut. Since September 2022, he has directed the Institute of Oriental Letters. He participates in conferences in Lebanon and internationally. His research focuses on epistemology and complex thinking, formal and mathematical logic, the connections between philosophy, architecture, and Arab music, as well as hermeneutics and methods of scientific reasoning. Among his publications: Mabāḥith fī al-ibistīmūlūjiyā (Dar al-Jil) and Textes philosophiques traduits (Dar al-Kutub al-Ḥadītha).
Associate Professor of Arabic Language, Literature, and Civilization at the University of Caen Normandy, Faisal Kenanah also teaches classical literature at Sorbonne Nouvelle. Holding a doctorate from the University of Bordeaux III, he devotes his research to Abbasid prose, exploring humanism and ethics through the work of Abū Hayyān al-Tawhīdī, particularly through the lens of animal figures and scholarly sociabilities. His work extends to the didactics of Arabic as a foreign language and the history of ideas. Author of works on medieval thought and pedagogical methods, he directs international conferences promoting dialogue between East and West.
Holding a doctorate in Religious Studies (2020), obtained jointly from the University of Montreal and the École Pratique des Hautes Études (PSL), she conducted several religious anthropology surveys in Syria and Lebanon before pursuing doctoral research between Paris and Montreal. Her thesis, published by Brill in 2023 under the title Louis Massignon et la mystique musulmane, examines the epistemology of Islamic studies and the role of subjectivity in religious studies. Since June 2024, she has been an assistant professor at Ibn Haldun University (Istanbul) in the philosophy department. Her work focuses on the vision of the natural world in classical Sufism and environmental ethics. ORCID: 0009-0000-1883-3615.
Holder of a doctorate in private law, he works at the Oued Souss High School in Aït Melloul. He defended his thesis at the Faculty of Legal, Economic and Social Sciences of Ibn Zohr University on "ethics of medical work in Morocco" using a comparative legal approach. Holding a master's degree in private law specializing in family law in Moroccan and comparative law (FSJES, Agadir), he also holds a degree in Sharia and law (Faculty of Sharia, Aït Melloul). He completed his training with a summer program at Georgetown University on "Religion and Society".
Doctoral student in philosophy and Arab studies at ENS Lyon, she is preparing a thesis on political metaphors in al-Ghazālī, examining the links between mysticism, morality, and political theory. Her background combines contemporary philosophy (EHESS), religious studies (EPHE), and management (ESCP), with research on Sufism, secularization in Islam, and political-economic dynamics. As a teaching assistant and then lecturer at ENS Lyon, she teaches master's courses on Arab political thought, Islamic philosophy, legal doctrines, Middle East conflicts, and research methods. She publishes on mystical epistemology and contributes to edited volumes and reviews, while regularly participating in seminars and academic conferences. Active in the Diwan association, she helps coordinate networks of young researchers.
Holder of a doctorate in aesthetics (Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne University, 2020), his research focuses on the "other spaces" of the Middle East and the aesthetics of testimony. Trained in Arab studies, aesthetics, and urban studies (Sorbonne Abu Dhabi), he explores contemporary artistic and cartographic practices, from starchitecture to counter-cartographies. Teaching assistant in aesthetics at Paris 1 (2023-2025) after a doctoral contract (2021-2023), he teaches philosophy of art, comparative aesthetics, research methodology, and digital humanities. He has published on neo-geography and alternative cartographies, and has participated in several academic conferences. Trilingual (French, English, Arabic).
Ida Zilio-Grandi is an Associate Professor at Ca' Foscari University of Venice (DSAAM), specializing in Arabic language and literature as well as Islamic thought. A graduate in Oriental languages from Ca' Foscari and holder of a doctorate from L'Orientale University of Naples, her research focuses on the Quran (evil, figures such as Mary, Cain, Jonah), Islamic ethics, and Judeo-Christian-Islamic convergences. From 2019 to 2023, she directed the Italian Cultural Institute in Abu Dhabi. She teaches at several Italian universities, coordinates master's programs (LEISAAM, MIM), and participates in the Islam Committee in Italy (Ministry of the Interior). A member of the Mediterranean Dialogue (Collège des Bernardins), she has published Le virtù del buon musulmano (2020) and studies on Islamic environmental morality.
Holder of a doctorate in sociology and graduate of the Faculty of Human and Social Sciences of Tunis (University of Tunis), she has developed expertise focused on the analysis of contemporary social dynamics. Her doctoral training combines theoretical approaches and field research, with particular attention to institutional transformations, the recomposition of social ties, and issues of knowledge production. Her work is part of a sociology attentive to contexts, actors, and power relations, contributing to academic debate within the human and social sciences.
Clémence Guinot is an independent researcher, prison intervention specialist, and author-illustrator. Trained in Islamic studies, anthropology, and communication, she dedicated her master's thesis (PISAI, Rome) to conceptions of art in Islam according to Nasr Hamid Abu Zayd. From 2022 to 2025, she worked within prison services on combating violent radicalization, providing individual follow-up, building reintegration pathways, and facilitating cultural mediation workshops in multidisciplinary coordination. She also develops writing and visual creation activities, and is involved in educational and intercultural dialogue projects.
A Dominican, Emmanuel Pisani holds a doctorate in philosophy (Arab studies, University of Lyon-III) and a doctorate in theology (Catholic University of Lyon). Holding a canonical licentiate in theology and a DEA in political science (IEP Bordeaux), he received the Mohammed Arkoun Prize in 2014 for a thesis in Islamic studies entitled "Heterodox and Non-Muslims in the Thought of al-Ghazālī." Director of the Dominican Institute for Oriental Studies (IDEO, Cairo), he teaches at the Catholic Institute of Paris, where he directed the Institute of Sciences and Theology of Religions from 2013 to 2021.
Professor of Higher Education at Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University in Fez, Hicham Belhaj conducts research at the interface of literatures, arts, and thought. His work examines transmission, interdisciplinarity, and forms of text-image dialogue (scriptopictoriality, ekphrasis), with particular attention to contemporary art and Moroccan writings. He coordinated the collective work Littératures, arts et transmission (2023) and published several books, including Approche de la mythologie (2017). His articles appear in indexed journals, notably French Cultural Studies (2025). He regularly participates in national and international conferences on aesthetics, phenomenology, and contemporary cultural issues.
Holding a bachelor's degree (2020) and a master's in modern literature with honors from the University of Rouen (2022), this doctoral student in comparative literature has been conducting since 2023 a thesis on "The Algerian War in Theater: Through Memories and Descendants." Alongside her research, she teaches French: home tutor at Acadomia since 2020, teacher at Collège des Ormeaux (Le Havre) since September 2024, and lecturer at the University of Le Havre from September to December 2024. A French native speaker, she is fluent in Spanish (C1) and Italian (B2), with basic knowledge of English (A2) and Arabic (A1). Her interests include literature, theater, the arts, and travel.
Doctoral student in Arabic linguistics and civilizations at Lumière Lyon 2 University (ED 3LA, CERLA laboratory), Nada Amin is preparing a thesis on "Gender and Political Transitions in Post-revolutionary Egypt (2011-2024)," analyzing the politicization of gender issues in the "New Republic" project. Her background combines gender studies, international relations, and Islamic studies (DU in Islamology, certificate in religious studies and social sciences at IDEO). Lecturer and course instructor (Paris 8, Sorbonne Nouvelle, Paris Cité, INALCO), she teaches Arabic language, history, and political sociology of Arab worlds. Active in academic events, she co-organizes study days with HALQA/IISMM and regularly presents her work at conferences. She publishes on feminisms, political Islam, and minorities in Egypt.
Senior lecturer at the Faculty of Languages, Arts and Human Sciences (FLASH) in Settat since September 2022, Noureddine Fadily specializes in French literatures. After teaching experience at middle school level (2008-2015) then high school level (2015-2022), he continues his teaching and research activities at Hassan I University. Coordinator of the "Literature and Culture" program, he is a permanent member of the LIDEAL laboratory and an associate member of the Laboratory of Languages, Arts and Human Sciences of Settat. He participates in research on French language didactics within the Moroccan section of AIRDF. He also contributes to academic events (journals, conferences).
Siham Amraoui is a doctoral student in the Ph.D. French Program at the City University of New York (CUNY), where she conducts research in literature and Francophone studies. She has been teaching French at Hunter College (CUNY) since 2023 and Arabic at City College of New York (CUNY) since 2024. Her interdisciplinary background combines literature, law, and humanities, with training in digital law and litigation, as well as advanced studies in French language. She has also worked in education in France and in the legal sector. She presented her work at Columbia University (2025) and Harvard University (2025) on dystopia in Boualem Sansal's writings.
Holder of the agrégation in Arabic and a doctorate in philosophy (Arabic languages and civilizations), Mohamed Ben Mansour has been a senior lecturer in Arab studies at ENS Lyon since 2018 and is a member of the Triangle laboratory (UMR 5206 CNRS). His research focuses on the connections between poetics, rhetoric, and power in medieval Islam, particularly during the Abbasid period, as well as on mirrors for princes and freedom of speech. He published Le poète et le Prince (Geuthner, 2021) and several articles on poetic parrhesia, politics, and translation. He directs master's programs and contributes to ENS Lyon recruitment examinations.
Dr Jaime Flaquer is a full professor at Loyola University (Faculty of Theology of Granada) and director of the Andalusian Chair for Dialogue of Religions (CANDIR). Specializing in theology of religions, fundamental theology, and Christian-Muslim relations, he participates in several interreligious dialogue forums. He coordinates the Islam cluster of the Kircher Network and sits on the academic council of the PLURIEL platform. Trained in philosophy (University of Barcelona) and theology (Loyola Faculties, Paris), he obtained a doctorate in Islamic studies at EPHE-Sorbonne with a thesis on Jesus in Ibn ʿArabī (with distinction summa cum laude). His international background has nurtured research focused on Ibn ʿArabī, Islam-science relations, and doctrinal issues between Quran and Logos.
A Catholic theologian, Dirk Ansorge trained in philosophy and Catholic theology at several European universities and in Jerusalem. After teaching at the Catholic Academy of the Diocese of Essen, he has held the chair of dogmatic theology and history of dogma at Hochschule Sankt Georgen (Frankfurt am Main) since 2011. Vice-rector from 2014 to 2018, he currently directs the Alois Kardinal Grillmeier Institute, dedicated to the history of dogma, ecumenism, and interreligious dialogue. His work focuses on creation, sacraments, Christology, and ecclesiology, as well as the links between religion and politics in the Middle East. In 2023, he was elected president of the association of Catholic faculties and institutes in Germany.
Youssef Boutahar is a tenured professor of English, media, and cultural studies at the ENS of Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah University (Fez), where he directs the Applied Human Sciences Laboratory and coordinates the TESOL degree program. Holding a PhD in intercultural studies (with highest honors), he was also a Fulbright FLTA at Mercyhurst University (USA). His research spans media studies, gender, postcolonialism, discourse analysis, university pedagogy, and English for specific purposes. He has taught at several Moroccan institutions (engineering, communication, rhetoric) and supervises master's theses and doctoral dissertations. Author of works on Orientalism, religious minorities, and hybrid learning, he also researches the impact of generative AI on academic writing.
Holding a PhD in practical theology, Jean Patrick Nkolo Fanga is a professor of practical theology and academic director, engaged in pastoral training and applied research on African and migratory ecclesial realities. His work focuses particularly on ministry practice, homiletics, church governance, competency-based management, and conflict resolution. He has conducted several research stays in France and Northern Europe, with international support for publication. Author of reference monographs and numerous articles, he has also served as president of the International Society for Practical Theology and contributes to ecumenical and interreligious dynamics.
Holder of a PhD in Literature, Education and Humanist Culture, she is a lecturer-researcher at the Faculty of Educational Sciences in Rabat (Morocco). Her work examines the links between eroticism, aesthetic education, and Moroccan francophone writing, combining literary, cultural, and pedagogical approaches. She regularly participates in conferences and cultural events in Morocco and internationally, particularly in France, Belgium, the United States, and several African countries. She recently published 'Inhabiting Exile in Khatibi's Writing: Towards a Poetics of Plurality' in the journal LOXIAS.
A legal scholar and researcher in cultural studies, Raja Sakrani is an associate researcher at the Émile Durkheim Advanced Centre for Research about Crisis Analysis (University of Bonn). From 2009 to 2022, she scientifically coordinated the Käte Hamburger Centre "Law as Culture," contributing to its design, funding research, and implementation. Her work focuses on the history of Islamic law and exchanges between Islamic traditions and Europe, religious socialization, legal and extra-legal modes of conflict resolution, as well as narrative memories and crossed identities. She also analyzes the evolution of human rights in the Muslim world, particularly for women and minorities. Co-director of the "Convivencia" project (2015-2018), she has been a member of Pluriel since 2020 and has taught in Paris, Bonn, Basel, Madrid, and Oñati.
Marie-Laure Davigo is an independent researcher specializing in art history and archaeology of Eastern Christianity, with a particular interest in Coptic icons and their conservation issues. Holding a degree in religious studies (EPHE/PSL, 2022, with highest honors) and trained in philosophy (Loyola Faculties of Paris), she is pursuing a degree at the Institut Chrétiens d'Orient. Her work focuses on Egypt and Jerusalem in the 18th-19th centuries, as well as ecumenical and interreligious dialogues. She is preparing a scientific catalog of unpublished icons (IFAO) and will publish in 2025 in Eastern Christian Art. She conducts research at the Byzantine Library of the Collège de France and regularly presents her findings at international conferences.
Associate professor and director of the Louis Pouzet Center for Ancient and Medieval Civilizations Studies at Saint Joseph University of Beirut, she specializes in classical Arabic philosophy. Her research focuses on critical editions and the study of manuscripts relating to medieval Arab Christian thought. She has published numerous articles on collation methods, dating, and text establishment, as well as their intellectual contextualization. Her work particularly focuses on the writings of Yaḥyā ibn ʿAdī and ʿĪsā ibn Zurʿa, which she helps make accessible to researchers.
A lecturer-researcher in international relations at the School of Social Sciences at Keele University (UK) since 2005, Naveed Sheikh teaches Terrorism Studies, Security Studies, and Middle Eastern international relations, and supervises dissertations and theses at all levels. Teaching commitments have been recognized with several certifications and awards, including the Keele Students' Union Teaching and Learning Award (2014) and the University Award for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (2018). Program director in international relations (2018-2021), Naveed Sheikh has also served since 2009 as editor-in-chief of the international journal Politics, Religion & Ideology. Naveed Sheikh teaches at the College of Europe (Warsaw) as a visiting professor and has conducted research and teaching stays at Harvard, Notre Dame, Louisville, Hosei (Tokyo), and the Cambridge Muslim College, as well as in Indonesia (UIII). Holding a PhD from Cambridge, a master's from Durham, and a bachelor's from Buckingham, research focuses on ideologies, religion, and politics in the Middle East and the Muslim world.
Jesús Daniel Alonso Porras was born in Córdoba. After graduating in 1989 with a degree in philosophy and letters (geography and history) from the University of Córdoba, he joined the secondary education teaching corps in 2001. In 2003, he obtained a leave of absence to pursue ecclesiastical studies at the San Pelagio Conciliar Seminary. Ordained priest on May 9, 2009, he specialized in Rome: licentiate in Church Cultural Heritage (2012) at the Pontifical Gregorian University, training at the Vatican Secret Archives School and the Pontifical Institute of Christian Archaeology. In 2019, he defended a doctoral thesis on the adaptation of the church model to the Islamic context based on the Great Mosque of Córdoba. He currently holds diocesan responsibilities in cultural heritage and teaches at the San Pelagio Theological Institute.
José Luis Llaquet de Entrambasaguas is a senior lecturer at Loyola University (Seville, Córdoba, and Granada campuses). Holding doctorates in law (University of Barcelona) and canon law (ICT-France), he is also an honorary doctorate recipient from Ovidius University. His academic career combines law, theology, philosophy, and conflict mediation. Accredited by ANECA and AQU, he has three research six-year terms (CNEAI). A former diocesan judge and notary of an ecclesiastical tribunal, he also served as a substitute magistrate. He has been teaching since 1991 and regularly participates in international events. His work focuses on modern and contemporary spirituality, legal history, ecclesiastical, canon, and university law, as well as indigenous peoples and Christian-Muslim dialogue.
Professor and Dominican (OP), Claudio Monge has lived and worked in Istanbul since 2004, where he directs the Dominican Study Institute. Holding a doctorate in fundamental theology (Strasbourg), specializing in Abrahamic traditions, he explores theology of religions, Turco-Ottoman Islam, sacred hospitality, and issues of otherness. He has taught as a visiting professor at Fribourg, Bologna, Toronto, and Porto Alegre, among others. A consultor to the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue since 2014, he participates in several research networks, including PLURIEL. His recent works develop a theology of hospitality and a Mediterranean reading of living together.
Holding a doctorate in Protestant theology (joint supervision, Universities of Strasbourg and Leipzig), she devoted her thesis to Paul Ricœur's ecumenical hermeneutics and its significance for dialogue processes in France. Since 2021, she has taught systematic theology at the University of Geneva (bachelor's and master's levels), with a marked interest in eschatology, the Trinity, kenosis, the relationship between faith and truth, God and time, as well as interreligious dialogue. She directs IRSE, leads the project "For a Theology Engaging Religions," and chairs the Equality and Diversity Commission. Her work focuses on ecumenism, interreligious hospitality, and theology of Israel.
Gabriel Khairallah is a lecturer at the Faculty of Modern Letters and the CLN of Saint Joseph University of Beirut. Holding a doctorate from Sorbonne Nouvelle University (Paris III), his work focuses on the family crisis and individual autonomy in Naguib Mahfouz and François Mauriac. He also holds a double Master 2 (Paris III–Loyola) dedicated to the figure of God in Children of Gebelawi, as well as a master's on forgiveness in Paul Ricoeur. He has taught at USJ since 2011 and has been teaching at Sciences Po Paris since 2013 and Sciences Po Aix since 2024. His research explores the connections between sacred texts and literature, literature and religion, politics and feminism. He has published in international journals and conference proceedings and has been director of the Cercle de la Jeunesse Catholique since 2018.
Gracia López Anguita is a professor in the Department of Arabic and Islamic Studies at the University of Seville, where she teaches Arabic language and classical Arabic and Islamic thought. Holding a degree in Arabic philology from the University of Granada, she obtained a European doctorate in 2014 at Seville with a thesis on Ibn 'Arabi's treatise Uqlat al-mustawfiz, which received an Extraordinary Prize. Her research focuses on the thought of Ibn 'Arabi and his school. Her publications include Historia del Sufismo en Al-Andalus (2009) and Ibn Arabi y su época (2018). She was a visiting researcher in Tehran (2018) and at EPHE Paris (2021, 2022). She currently participates in an R&D&I project on cultural and religious identity in Sufism in Morocco and Senegal (hagiographies, gender, symbolism).
Registration before November 15, 2025 automatically qualifies for reduced rates.
Reservations under the name AFPICL/PLURIEL: Hotel names and addresses have been sent to you by email.
WARNING: Train strikes in Spain
Strikes are planned for February 9, 10 and 11 following a tragic accident. High-speed lines to Córdoba will be affected. We invite you to check traffic and prefer the alternative bus routes below.
The Congress will be held in three different locations:
For your free dinners:
Córdoba Tourism Office:
(For registered participants only - Saturday 14 February)
Guides and inspiration for your free time in Granada:
By email: pluriel@univ-catholyon.fr
By phone (emergency only): +33 663 740 136 (Lorraine Guitton)