ABSTRACT

This exciting volume explores how religious meaning is generated and performed in our present digital media ecosystem. It uses the spatial metaphor of a third space to visualize the mobility of everyday religion and to explore the dynamic ways in which contemporary subjects imagine, produce, and navigate new religious and spiritual places.

Comprised of seven original essays, this book provides a rigorous discussion of the complex intersections of the digital and religion, demonstrating how third spaces of religion stand out by virtue of their in-betweenness. They exist between private and public, between institution and individual, between authority and individual autonomy, between large media framings and individual "pro-sumption," and between local and translocal. Including probing analysis of how Muslim, Catholic, and Neo-Pagan identities are cultivated and developed online, case studies reflect on the creative outcomes of this condition of in-betweenness and the emergence of other places of religious and spiritual meaning.

Blending theoretical analysis with grounded empirical research, this book is essential reading for students and scholars of contemporary religion, media and religion, sociology of religion, religion, and popular culture.

chapter 1|36 pages

Introduction

Media Theory and the Third Spaces of Digital Religion

chapter 2|16 pages

Neda

Religious Manifestations of a Digital Martyr

chapter 5|15 pages

The Sacred Tech

Identity, Aesthetics, and Practice in Neo-Pagan Digital Spaces

chapter 6|15 pages

Facebook as a Third Space of Digital Catholicism

The “Catholic” in Circulation and Reconstruction

chapter 7|14 pages

Rewriting Religion

How LGBTQ Individuals are Finding a Place of Belonging Online