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Social Media and Religious Change

Gillespie, Marie(Edited by)Greenhill, Anita(Edited by)Herbert, David Eric John(Edited by)
Part of the Religion and Society series
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This volume offers unique insights into the mutually constitutive nature of social media practices and religious change.

Part 1 examines how social media operate in conjunction with mass media in the construction of discourses of religion and spirituality.

It includes: a longitudinal study of British news media coverage of Christianity, secularism and religious diversity (Knott et al.); an analysis of responses to two documentaries 'The Monastery' and 'The Convent' (Thomas); an evaluation of theories of the sacred in studies of religion and media within the 'strong program' in cultural sociology in the US (Lynch); and a study of the consequences of mass and social media synergies for public perceptions of Islam in the Netherlands (Herbert).

Part 2 examines the role of social media in the construction of contemporary martyrs and media celebrities (e.g., Michael Jackson) using mixed and mobile methods to analyse fan sites (Bennett & Campbell) and jihadi websites and YouTube (Nauta).

Part 3 examines how certain bounded religious communities negotiate the challenges of social media: Judaism in Second Life (Abrams & Baker); Bah'ai regulation of web use among members (Campbell & Fulton); YouTube evangelists (Pihlaja); and public expressions of bereavement (Greenhill & Fletcher).

The book provides theoretically informed empirical case studies and presents an intriguing, complex picture of the aesthetic and ethical, demographic and discursive aspects of new spaces of communication and their implications for religious institutions, beliefs and practices.

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Product Details
De Gruyter
3110488574 / 9783110488579
Paperback / softback
201.7
20/06/2016
Germany
English
viii, 232 pages : illustrations (black and white)
23 cm