Written from the point of view of a historian of religion\s, the article asks why the so-called “visual turn” has not left a major effect on the study of religion\s as an academic discipline and how things could be improved to that effect. It offers a synthetic account of earlier and contemporary involvements of scholars of religion and scholarly networks with images and visual culture, pointing to a general lack of sustained training and little exposure to relevant methodology and theory developed in relevant neighbouring disciplines. The author argues that the study of religion\s would benefit from increased attention to images and visual culture, emphasizing the potential of earlier (iconology in the Warburg-Panofsky tradition and the Gr...
Compared to the broad and well established field of research on media within religions, the usage of...
In recent debates the neglect of the material dimension of religion and the foregrounding of beliefs...
The main argument of the article tends towards the assumption that the visual sphere of culture is o...
(in English): This thesis wants to introduce the visual culture as an interesting method for religio...
An understanding of religion as a practice of mediation has great potential to open up new methods a...
In this paper the author shares some of the findings, observations, and stimulating insights from co...
I argue first that ‘religion ’ is either a natural-kind sortal or an artifactual-kind sortal. Second...
Visual culture is the name of a now well-established academic field, the disciplinary and symbolic s...
The article contains fragments of three chapters form the book Image Science. Iconology, Visual Cult...
There are many perspectives, turns, tendencies and paradigms in the history of cultural studies. Not...
There is a distinct possibility that, in the twenty-first century, Religious Studies as a discipline...
In this review essay, I consider three recent collections, one edited by anthropologists, one by an ...
The article deals with the relationship between religion and contemporary art, discussing their conf...
This dissertation examines the ways in which new meanings and new categories of knowledge about reli...
The article focuses on the changing landscape of modern Christianity. It does so by analysing the us...
Compared to the broad and well established field of research on media within religions, the usage of...
In recent debates the neglect of the material dimension of religion and the foregrounding of beliefs...
The main argument of the article tends towards the assumption that the visual sphere of culture is o...
(in English): This thesis wants to introduce the visual culture as an interesting method for religio...
An understanding of religion as a practice of mediation has great potential to open up new methods a...
In this paper the author shares some of the findings, observations, and stimulating insights from co...
I argue first that ‘religion ’ is either a natural-kind sortal or an artifactual-kind sortal. Second...
Visual culture is the name of a now well-established academic field, the disciplinary and symbolic s...
The article contains fragments of three chapters form the book Image Science. Iconology, Visual Cult...
There are many perspectives, turns, tendencies and paradigms in the history of cultural studies. Not...
There is a distinct possibility that, in the twenty-first century, Religious Studies as a discipline...
In this review essay, I consider three recent collections, one edited by anthropologists, one by an ...
The article deals with the relationship between religion and contemporary art, discussing their conf...
This dissertation examines the ways in which new meanings and new categories of knowledge about reli...
The article focuses on the changing landscape of modern Christianity. It does so by analysing the us...
Compared to the broad and well established field of research on media within religions, the usage of...
In recent debates the neglect of the material dimension of religion and the foregrounding of beliefs...
The main argument of the article tends towards the assumption that the visual sphere of culture is o...