Religion In The Media Age

Overview

Looking at the everyday interaction of religion and media in our cultural lives, Hoover’s new book is a fascinating assessment of the state of modern religion.

Recent years have produced a marked turn away from institutionalized religions towards more autonomous, individual forms of the search for spiritual meaning. Film, television, the music industry and the internet are central to this process, cutting through the monolithic assertions of ...

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Overview

Looking at the everyday interaction of religion and media in our cultural lives, Hoover’s new book is a fascinating assessment of the state of modern religion.

Recent years have produced a marked turn away from institutionalized religions towards more autonomous, individual forms of the search for spiritual meaning. Film, television, the music industry and the internet are central to this process, cutting through the monolithic assertions of world religions and giving access to more diverse and fragmented ideals.

While the sheer volume and variety of information travelling through global media changes modes of religious thought and commitment, the human desire for spirituality also invigorates popular culture itself, recreating commodities — film blockbusters, world sport and popular music — as contexts for religious meanings.

Drawing on research into household media consumption, Hoover charts the way in which media and religion intermingle and collide in the cultural experience of media audiences.

Religion in the Media Age is essential reading for everyone interested in how today mass media relates to contemporary religious and spiritual life.

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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780415314220
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication date: 4/26/2006
  • Series: Religion, Media, and Culture Ser.
  • Edition description: ANN
  • Pages: 352
  • Product dimensions: 6.14 (w) x 9.21 (h) x 0.88 (d)

Table of Contents

1 What this book could be about 7
2 From medium to meaning : the evolution of theories about media, religion, and culture 26
3 Media and religion in transition 45
4 Articulating life and culture in the media age : plausible narratives of the self 84
5 Reception of religion and media 113
6 Cultural objects and religious identity among born-agains and mainstream believers 147
7 Cultural objects and religious identity among metaphysical believers, dogmatists, and secularists 176
8 Representing outcomes 205
9 Media and public religious culture post-09/11/01 and post-11/2/04 233
10 Conclusion : what is produced? 264
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