Rosemary Kellison
Contact Information
Rosemary Kellison (Ph.D., 2013, Florida State University) is a comparative religious ethicist with expertise in ethics of war, gender, and feminism. Kellison’s current research draws on feminist ethical concepts of human vulnerability and solidarity in a critical examination of religious and philosophical accounts of moral damage, guilt, and grief related to the experience of war and other forms of state violence. In a second current project, Kellison explores what a feminist approach to the study of religious ethics entails, along with the place of such an approach within the larger discipline of religious studies.
Research Interests
- “Spiritual Fitness and Moral Responsibility in the Contemporary United States Military.” Journal of the American Academy of Religion 91.4 (2023): 777–97.
- “The Critical Power of an Expanded Concept of Moral Injury.” Journal of Religious Ethics 49.3 (2021): 442–61.
- “Seeing Power in Just War Reasoning.” Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal 98.3 (2015): 398–427.
- “Impure Agency and the Just War: A Feminist Reading of Right Intention.” Journal of Religious Ethics 43.2 (2015): 317–41.
- “Tradition, Authority, and Immanent Critique in Comparative Ethics.” Journal of Religious Ethics 42.4 (2014): 713–41.
- “At the Intersection of Scripture and Law: Qur’an 4:34 and Violence against Women.” Co-authored with Shannon Dunn. Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 26.2 (2010): 11–36.