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Religion and Media
Contributor(s): de Vries, Hent (Editor), Weber, Samuel (Editor)
ISBN: 0804734968     ISBN-13: 9780804734967
Publisher: Stanford University Press
OUR PRICE:   $152.00  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: September 2002
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: " I cannot overestimate the importance of this book, which will become mandatory reading for all courses in media studies, histories of religion, anthropologies of modernity, cosmopolitics, the global order, and new forms of sociality. Reading it has been a source of rare intellectual satisfaction and aesthetic pleasure." -- Rosalind Carmel Morris, Columbia University
" The collection of essays Religion and Media is an important contribution to a variety of disciplines, including but not limited to philosophy, media studies, sociology, religious studies, anthropology and literary theory. It is huge in scope, theoretically ambitious and is sure to become a stardard work in courses and seminars in media studies, literary theory and comparative religion where the status of the religious is at issue. . . . The volume itself offers a panorama of the most recent developments in the emergent nexus of religious studies, media studies, philosophy and sociology." -- MEDIENwissenschaft
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Sociology Of Religion
- Social Science | Media Studies
- Religion | Philosophy
Dewey: 291.175
LCCN: 2001020661
Series: Cultural Memory in the Present
Physical Information: 1.64" H x 6.45" W x 9.29" (2.21 lbs) 672 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

The latter part of the twentieth century saw an explosion of new media that effected profound changes in human categories of communication. At the same time, a return to religion occurred on a global scale. The twenty-five contributors to this volume--who include such influential thinkers as Jacques Derrida, Jean-Luc Nancy, Talal Asad, and James Siegel--confront the conceptual, analytical, and empirical difficulties involved in addressing the complex relationship between religion and media.

The book's introductory section offers a prolegomenon to the multiple problems raised by an interdisciplinary approach to these multifaceted phenomena. The essays in the following part provide exemplary approaches to the historical and systematic background to the study of religion and media, ranging from the biblical prohibition of images and its modern counterparts, through theological discussion of imagery in Ignatius and Luther, to recent investigations into icons and images that think in Jean-Luc Marion and Gilles Deleuze. The third part presents case studies by anthropologists and scholars of comparative religion who deal with religion and media in Indonesia, India, Japan, South Africa, Venezuela, Iran, Poland, Turkey, present-day Germany, and Australia.

The book concludes with two remarkable documents: a chapter from Theodor W. Adorno's study of the relationship between religion and media in the context of political agitation (The Psychological Technique of Martin Luther Thomas' Radio Addresses) and a section from Niklas Luhmann's monumental Die Gesellschaft der Gesellschaft (Society as a Social System).