Social Media and Religious Change

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Religion and Society ; 53Publication details: Berlin Boston De Gruyter 2013Description: vii, 232 pages ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 978-3-11-048857-9
Subject(s):
Contents:
Includes Chapter: Campbell, H. and D. Fulton (2013). Bounded religious communities management of the challenge of new media: Baha’i negotiation with the internet. Social Media, Religion and Spirituality. (eds.) D. Herbert, A. Greenhill and M. Gillespie. Berlin, Gruyters, De: 185-200. The negotiation of new forms of media by religious groups is a dynamic and complex process that involves decision-making engaging the history, tradition and beliefs of the community. This negotiation process is especially complex for bounded religious communities, which establish rigid social and valueladen boundaries allowing them to create and maintain a unique and separate cultural system. Observing how members of bounded religious communities interact with the Internet enables us to consider how some groups resist the fluidity of networked relations and instead use technology to maintain closed social structures and solidify their unique identities. This is clearly seen in the case of the Bahá’í faith, especially in the patterns of use and limits American Bahá’ís have developed to engage with the Internet. By using the Religious Social Shaping of Technology approach, developed by Campbell (2010), as a lens to explore the challenges and choices made by the Bahá’ís, this process of technological negotiation is unpacked.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Printed  or electronic book Printed or electronic book New Zealand National Baha'i Reference Library Available

Amongst books on religion and the internet, this collection is distinctive in addressing the interaction between social and mass media in the construction of contemporary religion and spirituality, and public understandings of them. Topics discussed include the implications of social media for religious authority, the implications of mediatisation for community relations, and the challenges of social media for traditionally bounded religious communities

Includes Chapter:
Campbell, H. and D. Fulton (2013). Bounded religious communities management of the challenge of new media: Baha’i negotiation with the internet. Social Media, Religion and Spirituality. (eds.) D. Herbert, A. Greenhill and M. Gillespie. Berlin, Gruyters, De: 185-200.
The negotiation of new forms of media by religious groups is a dynamic and complex process that involves decision-making engaging the history, tradition and beliefs of the community. This negotiation process is especially complex for bounded religious communities, which establish rigid social and valueladen boundaries allowing them to create and maintain a unique and separate cultural system. Observing how members of bounded religious communities interact with the Internet enables us to consider how some groups resist the fluidity of networked relations and instead use technology to maintain closed social structures and solidify their unique identities. This is clearly seen in the case of the Bahá’í faith, especially in the patterns of use and limits American Bahá’ís have developed to engage with the Internet. By using the Religious Social Shaping of Technology approach, developed by Campbell (2010), as a lens to explore the challenges and choices made by the Bahá’ís, this process of technological negotiation is unpacked.

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