An understanding of religion as a practice of mediation has great potential to open up new methods and theories for a critical study of religion. Leading beyond the privileged medium of the text, this understanding approaches religion as a multi-media phenomenon that mobilizes the full sensorium. The central point of this article is that forms of visual culture are a prime medium of religion, and studying them offers deep insights into the genesis of worlds of lived experience. Pictorial media streamline and sustain religious notions of the visible and the invisible and involve embodied practices of seeing that shape what and how people see. Discussing the implications of the “pictorial turn” for the study of religion, I argue that a more s...
Born from anthropologists' sense of surprise at religious media phenomena, over the past two decades...
This article compares the role of media in three religious movements in Ghana, a country where the m...
Based on the hypothesis that the inclusion of visual media provides insights into non-verbal communi...
An understanding of religion as a practice of mediation has great potential to open up new methods a...
This article seeks to contribute to a more adequate understanding of the adoption of modern audiovis...
The power of pictures cannot be understood by a sole focus on pictures, but needs to be based on a r...
Written from the point of view of a historian of religion\s, the article asks why the so-called “vis...
Compared to the broad and well established field of research on media within religions, the usage of...
This introduction places the articles presented in this special issue in a broader frame by outlinin...
If images are life-forms, and objects are the body they animate, then media are the habitats or ecos...
Sight is both celebrated and denigrated in religion. In some contexts it is extolled as a source of ...
This dissertation concerns metaphors of vision as they relate to religious identity. Given the impor...
This introduction places the articles presented in this special issue in a broader frame by outlinin...
This article describes how a recently refined visual ethnographic research method, “narrated photogr...
(in English): This thesis wants to introduce the visual culture as an interesting method for religio...
Born from anthropologists' sense of surprise at religious media phenomena, over the past two decades...
This article compares the role of media in three religious movements in Ghana, a country where the m...
Based on the hypothesis that the inclusion of visual media provides insights into non-verbal communi...
An understanding of religion as a practice of mediation has great potential to open up new methods a...
This article seeks to contribute to a more adequate understanding of the adoption of modern audiovis...
The power of pictures cannot be understood by a sole focus on pictures, but needs to be based on a r...
Written from the point of view of a historian of religion\s, the article asks why the so-called “vis...
Compared to the broad and well established field of research on media within religions, the usage of...
This introduction places the articles presented in this special issue in a broader frame by outlinin...
If images are life-forms, and objects are the body they animate, then media are the habitats or ecos...
Sight is both celebrated and denigrated in religion. In some contexts it is extolled as a source of ...
This dissertation concerns metaphors of vision as they relate to religious identity. Given the impor...
This introduction places the articles presented in this special issue in a broader frame by outlinin...
This article describes how a recently refined visual ethnographic research method, “narrated photogr...
(in English): This thesis wants to introduce the visual culture as an interesting method for religio...
Born from anthropologists' sense of surprise at religious media phenomena, over the past two decades...
This article compares the role of media in three religious movements in Ghana, a country where the m...
Based on the hypothesis that the inclusion of visual media provides insights into non-verbal communi...