Mediatization of Religion: Boundaries between the Religion of the Intimate Sphere and the Religion of the Public Sphere
A special issue of Religions (ISSN 2077-1444).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (1 September 2020) | Viewed by 14568
Special Issue Editor
Interests: public sphere; digital media and IA; secularity and secularism; religious organizations; media, religion, and politics; mediatization of religion; symbolic communication
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Religion is an individual and collective space, both public and intimate (Sennett, 1979; Amiraux, 2018). Most researchers (Tzuriel, 1984; Ebstyne King, 2003; Marcia, 2002; Oppong, 2013) tackling the question of religion and religious identity agree that there is a moving frontier that separates and organizes the places of passage between the space of religion (intimate) and public space, especially when it comes to mediatized public sphere (Hoover, 2003; Lövheim, 2013). Indeed, the current context of the digital media involves a permanent redefinition of public and intimate spaces, resulting in the reduction of the intimate space. Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, etc. tend to impose the intimate/private as social realities with an individual responsibility to defend the private. The public-private relationship is thus modified. It becomes an imperative to change the media, political, public, societal, etc. approach of religion as a public-private space. The media visibility of the private sphere, which has modified our understanding of the private sphere, defines in a different manner the public-private relationship by creating spaces that are both public and private (Papacharissi, 2010).
This Special Issue aims to contribute to a field under construction on the (new) relations between religion and the media (mainstream and new) with public and private spheres. Many paths and issues are envisaged. In the context of the mediatization of everything (Livingstone, 2009; Bratosin, 2016a), does religion preserve the character of an intimate space? When considering religion in institutionalized social spaces such as domestic space, organizational space, and public space (Bratosin, 2014; Bratosin 2016b) is religious representation the major symbolic tool used by human kind to distinguish between those who have power and those who do not have it, whether in the public or in the private spheres? Is there a mutual exclusion of the public sphere and the ecclesia, when the historical-theoretical coincidence of the public sphere and the ecclesia is undeniable? Is the hypothesis of a post-secular society insufficient to "reconcile" religion with public and intimate spaces within the framework of the mediatization of the religious? Does the public/private distinction really separate religion from the mediatized public sphere, thus creating a privatized religion? Could the natural existence of a private religious sphere and a public secular sphere be taken for granted through the prism of media hegemony?
This thematic issue is also open to other questions that would bring theoretical, empirical proposals, and cases studies likely to advance research in this field.
Prof. Dr. Stefan Bratosin
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- mediatization
- religion
- public sphere
- intimate sphere
- power
- emerging media
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