ABSTRACT

How do minority Christian churches adapt to and negotiate with the changes brought about by deep mediatization? How do they use their media to present themselves to their followers and the general public? This book aims to answer these questions by investigating how minority organizations of two different Christian traditions in the UK and Poland – the Seventh-day Adventist Church and the Orthodox Churches – use their own media to position themselves in their social, religious, and political environments.

Based on the analyses of media practices, media content, and interview material, the study develops the new concept of media settlers, which pertains to religious organizations that use their media to fulfill their own aims: expand, assert their authority, and maintain their communities. They do so through five key media practices, which can be defined as strategies: acknowledgment, authorization, omission, replication of content, and mass-mediatization of digital media.

This book is of particular interest to scholars of religion and mediatization, mainly sociologists, graduate students, and qualitative researchers working with discourse analysis. It is an insightful read for anyone interested in the Seventh-day Adventist and Orthodox Churches nowadays.

chapter |29 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|34 pages

Media settlers

Corporate actors' shaping of media

chapter 2|27 pages

Going with the trends

Adapting to deep mediatization

chapter 3|26 pages

Shaping the media

Negotiating the trends of deep mediatization

chapter 4|32 pages

United in narratives

Integrating the church community

chapter 5|28 pages

Being a part of this world

Narrative alignment with society

chapter 6|28 pages

Being different

Narrative engagement with power dynamics

chapter |19 pages

Conclusion