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Cyber sisters: Buddhist women’s online activism and practice

chapter
posted on 2015-01-01, 00:00 authored by E Tomalin, C Starkey, Anna HalafoffAnna Halafoff
While the churches are emptying, other virtual religious places as the religious websites seem to be filling up. The researcher focusing on religion and internet or digital religion as an object of study must seek answers to a number of questions. Is computer-mediated religious communication a particular communication process whose object is what we conventionally call religion? Or is it a modern, independent form of religious expressiveness that finds its new-born status in the web and its particular language? To examine the questions above, and others, the book collects more empirical data, claiming that the Internet will have a specific or novel impact on how religious traditions are interpreted. The blurring of previous boundaries (offline/online, virtual/local, illegitimate/legitimate religion) is another theme common to all the contributions in this volume.

History

Title of book

Religion and internet

Volume

6

Series

Annual review of the sociology of religion

Chapter number

1

Pagination

11 - 33

Publisher

Brill

Place of publication

Leiden, The Netherlands

ISBN-13

9789004297951

ISBN-10

9004297952

Language

eng

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2015, Brill

Extent

12

Editor/Contributor(s)

D Enstedt, G Larrson, E Pace

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