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Anthropological Perspectives on the Religious Uses of Mobile Apps

Anthropological Perspectives on the Religious Uses of Mobile Apps

Hardcover

Comparative ReligionAnthropologyGeneral Sociology

ISBN10: 3030263754
ISBN13: 9783030263751
Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan
Published: Oct 21 2019
Pages: 248
Weight: 1.29
Height: 0.88 Width: 5.83 Depth: 8.27
Language: English
Chapter 1: Piety in the Pocket: An Introduction1.1 Histories/Contexts1.2 Blurring Boundaries: Ubiquitous Mobile Apps1.3 Anthropological Perspectives1.4 Book OrganizationPart I: Community, Contexts, and PracticeChapter 2: Sufi Remembrance Practices in the Meditation Marketplace of a Mobile App2.1 Introduction2.2 A Mobile Meditation Marketplace2.3 A Meditation Labyrinth: Labeling, Categorizing, and Experimental Encounters2.4 From Ongrount to In-App, From Dhikr to 'meditation'2.5 Concluding ReflectionsChapter 3: An Ambivalent Jewishness: Half Shabbos, the Shabbos App, and Modern Orthodoxy3.1 Introduction3.2 Contemporary Jewish Movements3.3 The Sabbath and the half-Sabbath3.4 Modern Orthodoxy and Technology3.5 A Necessarily Abbreviated Case Study - the Shabbos AppChapter 4: From Self-Learning Pathshala to Pilgrimage App: Studying the Expanding World of Jain Religious Apps4.1 Introduction: Jains and digital media4.2 Sense and method in studying religious apps4.3 Challenge one: sampling for an app corpus4.4 Challenge two: structuring the corpus4.5 Why app? Jain apps in context4.6 Themes in app development motivation4.7 Ethnography as reality check4.8 Ethnography to contextualize Jainn app use4.9 Concluding thoughts: Towards and anthropology of mobile applications4.10 Concluding thoughts: On religious apps4.11 RecommendationsChapter 5: Latinx Muslims Like One Another: An Ethnographic Exploration of Social Media and the Formation of Latinx Muslim Community5.1 Introduction5.2 Background, definitions, previous literature, and methodology5.3 LMFG cosmopolitan identity construction themes5.4 Everyday piety5.5 Digital visual culture5.6 The Latinax Muslim mythos5.7 The global umma5.8 Politics5.9 ConclusionPart II: Authority, Subjectivity, and Networks of KnowledgeChapter 6: Siri is Alligator Halal? Mobile Apps, Food Practices and Religious Authority in American Muslim Communities6.1 Methods, or what does a digital ethnographer do?6.2 Muslims and food practices6.3 Authority and community in the Muslim American digital context6.4 Scan Halal, a food finder app case study6.5 Zabihah, a food site finder app case study6.6 Conclusions-And, is alligator halal?Chapter 7: iPrayer: catholic Payer Apps and Twenty-first Centry Catholic Subjectivities7.1 Confession app: lay Catholic authority7.2 Breads app: rote creativity7.3 Pray app: Sacred pragmatism7.4 ConclusionChapter 8: Mobile Apps and Religious Processes among Pentecostal Charismatic Christians in Zimbabwe8.1 The digital and being human: beyond the binary8.2 OMG's religious-themed mobile applications8.3 Online religious communities8.4 Religious communities, identities and personhood8.5 In-app charisma, authority and surveillance8.7 Rituals8.8 ConclusionPart III: Space, Mobility, and ImmaterialityChapter 9: Medieval Miracle of Equilibrium or Contemporary Shrine of Rock-Hard Faith?: The Role of Digital media in Guiding Visitors' Experiences of Rocamadour, France9.1 Introduction9.2 Landscape and Rocamadour's panorama9.2 The contested image of Rocamadour9.4 A portable panorama: Rocamadour in smartphone apps9.5 Sacralizing the secular9.6 An online oratory9.7 Repercussions and conclusionsChapter 10: Bringing C

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