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OP42


Religious Communities in the Virtual Age (Recovira): Presentation of Preliminary Results 
Convenors:
Marcus Moberg (Åbo Akademi University)
Alana Vincent (Umeå Universitet)
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Chairs:
Alana Vincent (Umeå Universitet)
Joshua Edelman (Manchester Metropolitan University)
Format:
Panel
Location:
Gamma room
Sessions:
Tuesday 5 September, -, -
Time zone: Europe/Vilnius

Short Abstract:

This panel presents the preliminary results of the project Recovira: Religious Communities in the Virtual Age, funded by the Collaboration of Humanities and Social Sciences in Europe consortium (Chanse)

Long Abstract:

While, historically, religious life has been something of a refuge from the digitisation of society, the COVID-19 pandemic changed that. The social restrictions imposed by the pandemic rapidly accelerated religious communities' embrace of digital tools and structures in order to continue their essential social and psychological work during this crisis. These developments have opened up new and productive possibilities for how European religion is lived out, and these developments are likely to persist long after the pandemic has ended. But exactly what the consequences of this rapid digitisation of religious life in Europe will be, for majority and minority traditions, requires further research. How will issues such as religious authority, community belonging and membership, the (digital) sense of sacred place, the making of meaningful and affectively potent rituals and the relationship of religious communities to the wider public sphere change when those communities exist primarily, or even completely, in the digital realm?

Recovira explores these issued in seven European countries on the basis of ethnographic research on mainstream, long-established minority and emergent or newly-built religious communities. In addition the project also a) reviews and analyses large-scale social surveys of European experience of and engagement with religion and the digital; (b) conducts a social and broadcast media analysis of changing coverage of religion in response to the pandemic; and (c) conducts an aesthetic analysis of online and hybrid rituals with the tools of performance studies. This panel presents preliminary results from participating countries including Finland, Germany, Poland, Slovenia, Sweden, and the UK.

Accepted papers:

Session 1 Tuesday 5 September, 2023, -
Session 2 Tuesday 5 September, 2023, -