This article addresses the question of how responses to the arts and popular culture, as mediated through on-line fan activity, may contribute to the development of religious/spiritual exploration in contemporary Western societies. It offers a critical reading of 40 short essays posted by fans of the rock band U2 on a fan site from the perspective of how respondents expose their personal, critical reflections on their developing selves. The function of the U2 songs reflected upon, the listeners’ responses, the strategies/processes used, and the resources upon which they draw in the task of reflection are noted and examined. The article maps a multi-disciplinary programme for examining responses, uses one sociological framework (as provided ...
One finds differences and even tension in the way in which congregations worship in the new millenni...
Religious issues are studied in various ways, most prominently by sociologists of religion. This pap...
U2 is a rock band. This statement may seem obvious when one looks at a career spanning almost thirty...
Exploring U2: Is This Rock \u27n\u27 Roll? features new writing in the growing field of U2 studies. ...
U2 and the Religious Impulse, edited by Scott Calhoun, Professor of English at Cedarville University...
This thesis explores the music of rock band U2, utilizing two perspectives: current research in popu...
Setting its discussion in the wider context of the decline of institutional religion among young adu...
During the second half of the 20th century, researchers warned of the negative effects of cultural ...
Increasingly in the twenty first century, the separate worlds of popular music and the sacred overla...
This thesis is concerned with how fans experience, create meaning from, and contribute to the creat...
U2’s success and significance are due, in large part, to finding inventive, creative solutions for o...
This article explores how both producers and consumers of user-created music videos on YouTube commu...
Religious issues are studied in various ways, most prominently by sociologists of religion. This pap...
U2's success and significance are due, in large part, to finding inventive, creative solutions ...
This article explores and reflects upon the role that music consumption may be playing in the flexib...
One finds differences and even tension in the way in which congregations worship in the new millenni...
Religious issues are studied in various ways, most prominently by sociologists of religion. This pap...
U2 is a rock band. This statement may seem obvious when one looks at a career spanning almost thirty...
Exploring U2: Is This Rock \u27n\u27 Roll? features new writing in the growing field of U2 studies. ...
U2 and the Religious Impulse, edited by Scott Calhoun, Professor of English at Cedarville University...
This thesis explores the music of rock band U2, utilizing two perspectives: current research in popu...
Setting its discussion in the wider context of the decline of institutional religion among young adu...
During the second half of the 20th century, researchers warned of the negative effects of cultural ...
Increasingly in the twenty first century, the separate worlds of popular music and the sacred overla...
This thesis is concerned with how fans experience, create meaning from, and contribute to the creat...
U2’s success and significance are due, in large part, to finding inventive, creative solutions for o...
This article explores how both producers and consumers of user-created music videos on YouTube commu...
Religious issues are studied in various ways, most prominently by sociologists of religion. This pap...
U2's success and significance are due, in large part, to finding inventive, creative solutions ...
This article explores and reflects upon the role that music consumption may be playing in the flexib...
One finds differences and even tension in the way in which congregations worship in the new millenni...
Religious issues are studied in various ways, most prominently by sociologists of religion. This pap...
U2 is a rock band. This statement may seem obvious when one looks at a career spanning almost thirty...