Guy Redden
Mediating Faiths
Religion and Socio-Cultural Change in the Twenty-First Century
Herausgeber: Bailey, Michael
Guy Redden
Mediating Faiths
Religion and Socio-Cultural Change in the Twenty-First Century
Herausgeber: Bailey, Michael
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Mediating Faiths brings together scholars working across a range of fields, including cultural studies, media, sociology, anthropology, cultural theory and religious studies, in order to illustrate how religion continues to be responsive to the very latest social and cultural developments in the environments in which it exists. They raise fundament
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Mediating Faiths brings together scholars working across a range of fields, including cultural studies, media, sociology, anthropology, cultural theory and religious studies, in order to illustrate how religion continues to be responsive to the very latest social and cultural developments in the environments in which it exists. They raise fundament
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 155mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 431g
- ISBN-13: 9781032099316
- ISBN-10: 1032099313
- Artikelnr.: 62152041
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 256
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 155mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 431g
- ISBN-13: 9781032099316
- ISBN-10: 1032099313
- Artikelnr.: 62152041
Michael Bailey is Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the University of Essex. He has held visiting fellowships at Goldsmiths, University of London, the ESRC Centre for Research on Socio-Cultural Change (a collaboration between the Open University and the University of Manchester), the London School of Economics, Wolfson College and the Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities, University of Cambridge. Guy Redden teaches cultural studies at the University of Sydney. He has previously lectured at Prince of Songkla University, Thailand, the University of Queensland, Australia, where he earned his PhD, and Lincoln University in the UK. He has published widely about the commodification of religion and alternative cultures. His articles include 'The New Age: Towards a Market Model', Journal of Contemporary Religion, 20(2), 2005; and 'The New Agents: Personal Transfiguration and Radical Privatisation in New Age Self-Help', Journal of Consumer Culture 2(1), 2002. He is a former editor of M/C: A Journal of Media and Culture.
Chapter 1 Editors' Introduction Religion as Living Culture, Michael Bailey,
Guy Redden; Part I New Media Religion; Chapter 2 Transformations in British
Religious Broadcasting, Stephen Hunt; Chapter 3 Alternative Islamic Voices
on the Internet, Aini Linjakumpu; Chapter 4 Mediatizing Faith: Digital
Storytelling on the Unspoken 1 This research is carried out in cooperation
with Birgit Hertzberg Kaare. Our case study is part of a larger research
project, 'MEDIATIZED STORIES. Mediation Perspectives on Digital
Storytelling among Youth', funded by the Research Council of Norway
2006-2011, at http://www.intermedia.uio.no/mediatized/, accessed 7
September 2010. Karoline Tømte and Sissel Nyegaard-Larsen provided
invaluable help as research assistants. I am also grateful to Gordon Lynch
for references on religion in youth cultures in the UK and the USA., Knut
Lundby; Chapter 5 Haredim and the Internet: A Hate-Love Affair, Yoel Cohen;
Part II Consumption and Lifestyle; Chapter 6 Fixing the Self: Alternative
Therapies and Spiritual Logics, Ruth Barcan, Jay Johnston; Chapter 7
Religious Media Events and Branding Religion, Veronika Krönert, Andreas
Hepp; Chapter 8 The After-Life of Born-Again Beauty Queens, Karen W. Tice;
Chapter 9 How Congregations are Becoming Customers, Rob Warner; Chapter 10
US Evangelicals and the Redefinition of Worship Music, Anna E. Nekola; Part
III Youth; Chapter 11 The Making of Muslim Youth Cultures in Europe, Thijl
Sunier; Chapter 12 Religious Experience of a Young Megachurch Congregation
in Singapore, Joy Kooi-Chin Tong; Part IV Politics and Community; Chapter
13 Recent Literary Representations of British Muslims, Claire Chambers;
Chapter 14 Destiny, the Exclusive Brethren and Mediated Politics in New
Zealand, Ann Hardy; Chapter 15 Social Security with a Christian Twist in
John Howard's Australia 1 My gratitude to Anthony Lambert and Arthur
Randell for helping me to clarify and explain the issues outlined in this
contribution. Thanks also to the editors for their comments, which have
helped to improve the theoretical focus of the chapter., Holly
Randell-Moon; Chapter 16 Mediated Spaces of Religious Community in Manila,
Philippines, Katharine L. Wiegele;
Guy Redden; Part I New Media Religion; Chapter 2 Transformations in British
Religious Broadcasting, Stephen Hunt; Chapter 3 Alternative Islamic Voices
on the Internet, Aini Linjakumpu; Chapter 4 Mediatizing Faith: Digital
Storytelling on the Unspoken 1 This research is carried out in cooperation
with Birgit Hertzberg Kaare. Our case study is part of a larger research
project, 'MEDIATIZED STORIES. Mediation Perspectives on Digital
Storytelling among Youth', funded by the Research Council of Norway
2006-2011, at http://www.intermedia.uio.no/mediatized/, accessed 7
September 2010. Karoline Tømte and Sissel Nyegaard-Larsen provided
invaluable help as research assistants. I am also grateful to Gordon Lynch
for references on religion in youth cultures in the UK and the USA., Knut
Lundby; Chapter 5 Haredim and the Internet: A Hate-Love Affair, Yoel Cohen;
Part II Consumption and Lifestyle; Chapter 6 Fixing the Self: Alternative
Therapies and Spiritual Logics, Ruth Barcan, Jay Johnston; Chapter 7
Religious Media Events and Branding Religion, Veronika Krönert, Andreas
Hepp; Chapter 8 The After-Life of Born-Again Beauty Queens, Karen W. Tice;
Chapter 9 How Congregations are Becoming Customers, Rob Warner; Chapter 10
US Evangelicals and the Redefinition of Worship Music, Anna E. Nekola; Part
III Youth; Chapter 11 The Making of Muslim Youth Cultures in Europe, Thijl
Sunier; Chapter 12 Religious Experience of a Young Megachurch Congregation
in Singapore, Joy Kooi-Chin Tong; Part IV Politics and Community; Chapter
13 Recent Literary Representations of British Muslims, Claire Chambers;
Chapter 14 Destiny, the Exclusive Brethren and Mediated Politics in New
Zealand, Ann Hardy; Chapter 15 Social Security with a Christian Twist in
John Howard's Australia 1 My gratitude to Anthony Lambert and Arthur
Randell for helping me to clarify and explain the issues outlined in this
contribution. Thanks also to the editors for their comments, which have
helped to improve the theoretical focus of the chapter., Holly
Randell-Moon; Chapter 16 Mediated Spaces of Religious Community in Manila,
Philippines, Katharine L. Wiegele;
Chapter 1 Editors' Introduction Religion as Living Culture, Michael Bailey,
Guy Redden; Part I New Media Religion; Chapter 2 Transformations in British
Religious Broadcasting, Stephen Hunt; Chapter 3 Alternative Islamic Voices
on the Internet, Aini Linjakumpu; Chapter 4 Mediatizing Faith: Digital
Storytelling on the Unspoken 1 This research is carried out in cooperation
with Birgit Hertzberg Kaare. Our case study is part of a larger research
project, 'MEDIATIZED STORIES. Mediation Perspectives on Digital
Storytelling among Youth', funded by the Research Council of Norway
2006-2011, at http://www.intermedia.uio.no/mediatized/, accessed 7
September 2010. Karoline Tømte and Sissel Nyegaard-Larsen provided
invaluable help as research assistants. I am also grateful to Gordon Lynch
for references on religion in youth cultures in the UK and the USA., Knut
Lundby; Chapter 5 Haredim and the Internet: A Hate-Love Affair, Yoel Cohen;
Part II Consumption and Lifestyle; Chapter 6 Fixing the Self: Alternative
Therapies and Spiritual Logics, Ruth Barcan, Jay Johnston; Chapter 7
Religious Media Events and Branding Religion, Veronika Krönert, Andreas
Hepp; Chapter 8 The After-Life of Born-Again Beauty Queens, Karen W. Tice;
Chapter 9 How Congregations are Becoming Customers, Rob Warner; Chapter 10
US Evangelicals and the Redefinition of Worship Music, Anna E. Nekola; Part
III Youth; Chapter 11 The Making of Muslim Youth Cultures in Europe, Thijl
Sunier; Chapter 12 Religious Experience of a Young Megachurch Congregation
in Singapore, Joy Kooi-Chin Tong; Part IV Politics and Community; Chapter
13 Recent Literary Representations of British Muslims, Claire Chambers;
Chapter 14 Destiny, the Exclusive Brethren and Mediated Politics in New
Zealand, Ann Hardy; Chapter 15 Social Security with a Christian Twist in
John Howard's Australia 1 My gratitude to Anthony Lambert and Arthur
Randell for helping me to clarify and explain the issues outlined in this
contribution. Thanks also to the editors for their comments, which have
helped to improve the theoretical focus of the chapter., Holly
Randell-Moon; Chapter 16 Mediated Spaces of Religious Community in Manila,
Philippines, Katharine L. Wiegele;
Guy Redden; Part I New Media Religion; Chapter 2 Transformations in British
Religious Broadcasting, Stephen Hunt; Chapter 3 Alternative Islamic Voices
on the Internet, Aini Linjakumpu; Chapter 4 Mediatizing Faith: Digital
Storytelling on the Unspoken 1 This research is carried out in cooperation
with Birgit Hertzberg Kaare. Our case study is part of a larger research
project, 'MEDIATIZED STORIES. Mediation Perspectives on Digital
Storytelling among Youth', funded by the Research Council of Norway
2006-2011, at http://www.intermedia.uio.no/mediatized/, accessed 7
September 2010. Karoline Tømte and Sissel Nyegaard-Larsen provided
invaluable help as research assistants. I am also grateful to Gordon Lynch
for references on religion in youth cultures in the UK and the USA., Knut
Lundby; Chapter 5 Haredim and the Internet: A Hate-Love Affair, Yoel Cohen;
Part II Consumption and Lifestyle; Chapter 6 Fixing the Self: Alternative
Therapies and Spiritual Logics, Ruth Barcan, Jay Johnston; Chapter 7
Religious Media Events and Branding Religion, Veronika Krönert, Andreas
Hepp; Chapter 8 The After-Life of Born-Again Beauty Queens, Karen W. Tice;
Chapter 9 How Congregations are Becoming Customers, Rob Warner; Chapter 10
US Evangelicals and the Redefinition of Worship Music, Anna E. Nekola; Part
III Youth; Chapter 11 The Making of Muslim Youth Cultures in Europe, Thijl
Sunier; Chapter 12 Religious Experience of a Young Megachurch Congregation
in Singapore, Joy Kooi-Chin Tong; Part IV Politics and Community; Chapter
13 Recent Literary Representations of British Muslims, Claire Chambers;
Chapter 14 Destiny, the Exclusive Brethren and Mediated Politics in New
Zealand, Ann Hardy; Chapter 15 Social Security with a Christian Twist in
John Howard's Australia 1 My gratitude to Anthony Lambert and Arthur
Randell for helping me to clarify and explain the issues outlined in this
contribution. Thanks also to the editors for their comments, which have
helped to improve the theoretical focus of the chapter., Holly
Randell-Moon; Chapter 16 Mediated Spaces of Religious Community in Manila,
Philippines, Katharine L. Wiegele;