Tuesday, December 8, 2020

 Dear Readers,

In a few weeks, I will be in conversation with Professor Ayala Fader of Fordham University on her new book "Hidden Heretics". Please browse through the enclosed invitation. If you are interested in attending, you are most welcome to join on January 13, 2021 at 4pm (Israel Time) and 9am EST at the following link:  

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84458529805

 



Monday, June 8, 2020

New Publication on Jewish ultra-orthodox students in Israeli higher education




Dear Readers,

Just published a new manuscript with my Phd student, Eldar Fehl, titled: "Legitimizing academic knowledge in religious bounded T communities: Jewish ultra-orthodox students in Israeli higher education". This is a rare occasion for me to write about non-media issues, however, for those interested in bounded communities, they may find this appealing. The larger study does have connections to the legitimation of new media among Jewish ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) students, something to (hopefully) be published in the future.

To view the full paper online see: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijer.2020.101609



Tuesday, January 7, 2020

Ethnography of Sacred Communities: Shifting Horizons of Online Religiosity (Upcoming Event)



Dear Readers,

Below you can read about an event I am developing with colleagues for the upcoming Anthropological conference in Portugal, July 2020. A Session that will be held online, given the COVID-19 crisis



easa
European Association of Social Anthropologists
Association Européenne des Anthropologues Sociaux


0640 paper proposals 
Ethnography of Sacred Communities: Shifting Horizons of Online Religiosity




Convenors:
Oren Golan (University of Haifa)
Elisa Farinacci (University of Bologna)
Nurit Stadler (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
Michele Martini (University of Cambridge)
 Please Send message to convenors via the easa website

Short abstract:
This panel focuses on the ways communal boundaries (internal and external), religious taboos, rituals and material culture are shaped, reproduced and changed via media platforms. Thus, illuminating contemporary religious authority, the anthropology of mediatisation and communal representation.

Long abstract:
For the past two decades, religious communities have been increasingly embracing online means to represent themselves, augment visibility, proselyte creed, and fortify their boundaries. In this panel, we focus on agents, institutional agencies and devotees that are pivotal in this endeavor. Ergo, we inquire about the ways in which communal boundaries (internal and external), religious taboos, rituals and material culture are shaped, reproduced and changed via a variety of digital media platforms including official websites, blogs, social media, films, television series, and web series. We invite scholars who employ ethnographic and netnographic accounts, and network analysis to shed light on these communities and their representations. This panel aims at fostering our understanding of key categories that are at the heart of current debates in anthropology and media studies, such as: * Emergent roles of online authority. * Negotiation of online/offline religious communities. * Anthropology of mediatisation. * Representations of religious communities in the media. * The ways the religious third space is constructed and mediated.