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CP01


Training Total Devotion: Emotions and Narrative as Technologies in Radical Religion 
Convenors:
Laura Feldt (University of Southern Denmark)
Ingvild Sælid Gilhus (University of Bergen)
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Discussant:
Erica Baffelli (University of Manchester)
Format:
Panel
Location:
Theta room
Sessions:
Tuesday 5 September, -, -
Time zone: Europe/Vilnius

Short Abstract:

The panel analyses and discusses forms of total devotion or radical religion in religious groups and how such groups make use of media – textual, material, and other – that exploit emotionality and narrativity as both externalised and embodied technologies for training and sustaining membership.

Long Abstract:

Understanding religion as a multi-facetted cultural phenomenon that invariably involves aesthetic-sensory-material mediation (Grieser and Johnston 2017; Meyer 2009, 2011; Morgan 2010, 2012, 2018), means that religion and technology can be understood as fundamentally entangled. Religious narratives, texts, materiality, or other sources cannot be used as a form of direct access to “religion” without consideration of concrete technologies, media, and forms of sensory and embodied experience. Narrativity and emotionality (and other forms of sensory experience) are foundationally formative of human experience and identity (Scheer 2012, Feldt and Geertz 2020). Sensory and emotional experience is deeply socialized and interlaced with narrativity, and both play crucial roles for religious identity formation and group cohesion. The contributions to this panel will analyse forms of total devotion in religious groups and how such groups make use of a variety of media – textual, material, and other – that exploit emotionality and narrativity as both externalised and embodied technologies for training and sustaining membership. We understand “total devotion” as a broad umbrella term. It can encompass forms of religious extremism and terrorism, fundamentalism, super-religiosity, and radical religion, but also non-violent forms of devotion that can be seen as all-encompassing or aiming at full perfection by either actors in the field, or by scholars based on etic definitions and understandings, or both. Stories and accounts of intense and total devotion and of idealised devout actors use emotional and narrative technologies to mobilise their audiences, striving to implant their ideals of devotion and intensify the religiosity of the group, training them for total devotion.

The work presented springs from the Total Devotion project, funded by the Independent Research Fund, Denmark: www.sdu.dk/radrel

Accepted papers:

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