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Religious revelation, secrecy and the limits of visual representation
Authors
Benedict Anderson
Birgit Meyer
+46 more
Cati Coe
Michel De Certeau
Hent De Vries
Marleen De Witte
Marleen De Witte
Marleen De Witte
Ze D’Abreu
Dale F. Eickelman
Peter Geschiere
Peter Geschiere
Paul Gifford
Paul Gifford
Faye Ginsburg
Rosalind I. J. Hackett
Martin Jay
Manfred Josuttis
Brian Larkin
Bruno Latour
David Lyon
Laura U. Marks
Birgit Meyer
Birgit Meyer
Birgit Meyer
Birgit Meyer
Birgit Meyer
Birgit Meyer
Birgit Meyer
Rachel Moore
Rosalind C. Morris
J. D. Y. Peel
S. Brent Plate
Rafael Sanchez
Manfred Schneider
Jenny Slatman
Vivian Sobchack
Patricia Spyer
Marijke Steegstra
Jeremy Stolow
Michael Taussig
Michael Taussig
Peter Van der Veer
Peter Van der Veer
Peter Van der Veer
Rijk Van Dijk
Rijk Van Dijk
Jojada Verrips
Publication date
1 January 2006
Publisher
Doi
Abstract
This article seeks to contribute to a more adequate understanding of the adoption of modern audiovisual mass media by contemporary religious groups. It does so by examining Pentecostal-charismatic churches as well as the Christian mass culture instigated by its popularity, and so-called traditional religion in Ghana, which develop markedly different attitudes towards audiovisual mass media and assume different positions in the public sphere. Taking into account the complicated entanglement of traditional religion and Pentecostalism, approaching both religions from a perspective of mediation which regards media as intrinsic to religion, and seeking to avoid the pitfall of overestimating the power of modern mass media to determine the world, this article seeks to move beyond an unproductive recurrence to oppositions such as tradition and modernity, or religion and technology. It is argued that instead of taking as a point of departure more or less set ideas about the nexus of vision and modernity, the adoption of new mass media by religious groups needs to be analyzed by a detailed ethnographic investigation of how these new media transform existing practices of religious mediation. Special emphasis is placed on the tension between the possibilities of gaining public presence through new media, and the difficulty in authorizing these media, and the experiences they induce, as authentic. Copyright © 2006 SAGE Publications
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