Ken Chitwood

Lecturer, Concordia College New York | Journalist-fellow, USC Center for Religion and Civic Culture

The Conversation

Lecturer, Concordia College New York | Journalist-fellow, USC Center for Religion and Civic Culture

As a religion scholar, Ken's work focuses on global Islam, Islam in the Americas, Puerto Rican Muslims, Latina/o Muslims, hemispheric American religion, translocal religion, intersections of religion & culture, Christian-Muslim relations, global Christianity, Muslim minorities, & ethnographic methods and manifestations of religion beyond religion in a global and digital age. Additionally, he has published work on Judaism in Latin America and the Caribbean, religion and popular culture, and other relevant topics.Ken is a member of the American Academy of Religion, the Latin American Studies Association, the Caribbean Studies Association, Theta Alpha Kappa, and is an Associate Research Member of the Waikato Islamic Studies Group.Ken has been reviewing books on Christianity, Islam, religion, anthropology, culture, and history for six years with Publisher's Weekly, the Houston Chronicle, Reading Religion from the American Academy of Religion, and other scholarly and popular publications. In that time Ken has read and reviewed over 100 books and monographs. Furthermore, he is an award-winning religion newswriter fascinated by the intersection of religion & culture.


Several Muslims pray facing Mecca before a rough-stone niche in the wall

Why the Al-Aqsa Mosque has often been a site of conflict

The Masjid Al-Aqsa of Jerusalem is linked in the Quran to the story of the night journey of Prophet Muhammad from Mecca to Jerusalem and has deep religious meaning for Muslims across the world.

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How an ancient Islamic holiday became uniquely Caribbean