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Introduction: The Cultural Construction of Religion in the Media Age
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Stewart M. Hoover
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix
- Introduction: The Cultural Construction of Religion in the Media Age 1
- 1. Overview: The “Protestantization” of Research into Media, Religion, and Culture 7
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Part I: MEDIATION IN POPULAR RELIGIOUS PRACTICE
- 2. Protestant Visual Practice and American Mass Culture 35
- 3. Believing in Elvis: Popular Piety in Material Culture 63
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PART 2. THE MEDIATION OF RELIGION IN THE PUBLIC SPHERE
- 4. Public Art as Sacred Space: Asian American Community Murals in Los Angeles 87
- 5. All the World’s a Stage: The Performed Religion of the Salvation Army, 1880–1920 113
- 6. “Turn It Off !”: TV Criticism in the Christian Century Magazine, 1946–1960 138
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PART 3. RELIGION MADE PUBLIC THROUGH THE MEDIA
- 7. Between Objectivity and Moral Vision: Catholics and Evangelicals in American Journalism 163
- 8. The Southern Baptist Controversy and the Press 188
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PART 4. IMPLICIT RELIGION AND MEDIATED PUBLIC RITUAL
- 9. Scapegoating and Deterrence: Criminal Justice Rituals in American Civil Religion 201
- 10. Ritual and the Media 219
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PART 5. EXPLICIT AND PUBLIC EXPRESSION IN NEW MEDIA CONTEXTS
- 11. Allah On-Line: The Practice of Global Islam in the Information Age 237
- 12. Internet Ritual: A Case Study of the Construction of Computer-Mediated Neopagan Religious Meaning 254
- 13. Religious Sensibilities in the Age of the Internet: Freethought Culture and the Historical Context of Communication Media 276
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PART 6. SPECIFIC RELIGIONS AND SPECIFIC MEDIA IN NATIONAL AND ETHNIC CONTEXTS
- 14. Religious Television in Sweden: Toward a More Balanced View of Its Reception 291
- 15. Religious to Ethnic-National Identities: Political Mobilization Through Jewish Images in the United States and Britain, 1881–1939 305
- 16. Between American Televangelism and African Anglicanism 328
- 17. “Speaking in Tongues, Writing in Vision”: Orality and Literacy in Televangelistic Communications 345
- CONTRIBUTORS 361
- INDEX 367
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- CONTENTS v
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ix
- Introduction: The Cultural Construction of Religion in the Media Age 1
- 1. Overview: The “Protestantization” of Research into Media, Religion, and Culture 7
-
Part I: MEDIATION IN POPULAR RELIGIOUS PRACTICE
- 2. Protestant Visual Practice and American Mass Culture 35
- 3. Believing in Elvis: Popular Piety in Material Culture 63
-
PART 2. THE MEDIATION OF RELIGION IN THE PUBLIC SPHERE
- 4. Public Art as Sacred Space: Asian American Community Murals in Los Angeles 87
- 5. All the World’s a Stage: The Performed Religion of the Salvation Army, 1880–1920 113
- 6. “Turn It Off !”: TV Criticism in the Christian Century Magazine, 1946–1960 138
-
PART 3. RELIGION MADE PUBLIC THROUGH THE MEDIA
- 7. Between Objectivity and Moral Vision: Catholics and Evangelicals in American Journalism 163
- 8. The Southern Baptist Controversy and the Press 188
-
PART 4. IMPLICIT RELIGION AND MEDIATED PUBLIC RITUAL
- 9. Scapegoating and Deterrence: Criminal Justice Rituals in American Civil Religion 201
- 10. Ritual and the Media 219
-
PART 5. EXPLICIT AND PUBLIC EXPRESSION IN NEW MEDIA CONTEXTS
- 11. Allah On-Line: The Practice of Global Islam in the Information Age 237
- 12. Internet Ritual: A Case Study of the Construction of Computer-Mediated Neopagan Religious Meaning 254
- 13. Religious Sensibilities in the Age of the Internet: Freethought Culture and the Historical Context of Communication Media 276
-
PART 6. SPECIFIC RELIGIONS AND SPECIFIC MEDIA IN NATIONAL AND ETHNIC CONTEXTS
- 14. Religious Television in Sweden: Toward a More Balanced View of Its Reception 291
- 15. Religious to Ethnic-National Identities: Political Mobilization Through Jewish Images in the United States and Britain, 1881–1939 305
- 16. Between American Televangelism and African Anglicanism 328
- 17. “Speaking in Tongues, Writing in Vision”: Orality and Literacy in Televangelistic Communications 345
- CONTRIBUTORS 361
- INDEX 367