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26 mars 2013

Media and Religion – the interplay of profane and sacred

Message du Pr Stefan Bratosin

Media and Religion – the interplay of profane and sacred

Workshop organized by the Media and Religion TWG of ECREA (European

Communication Research and Education Association), in cooperation with the Doctoral School in Media Studies of Bucharest University and the AFCOM (Association of Educators in Journalism and Communication)

Bucarest (Romania) on October 11 and 12, 2013

The modernity product, from which mass media feeds, was built on axiom of the political institutions’ laicization, education and culture. Print media, television, radio, and recently online media define themselves as institutions serving various public categories by offering them information and entertainment (essential in profane existence) and no access to the spiritual transfiguration (sacrality).

In a secular era, religion could only use the press as a medium to transmit its messages ; while the press used religion and its institutions as subjects for news or reports, or as themes for entertainment products. In many instances, mass media framed in profane code religious events, and paid attention more to values like dramatism, human interest, and conflict then to values related to sacrality and its implications. The stereotype of media profanity dominated thinking about journalistic discourse, even when not connected to religion. The press was constantly accused of “dumbing down” – the “sacred” values of politics, of civil society, of culture, of social politics and so on. However, the research from the past 20 years showed the multiple interferences between media and religion. These interferences were different than the ones between a support and content: mass media is now understood as a cultural product that can involve itself in ritual, mythological and religious dimensions. This awareness of the symbolic dimension of media was not accompanied by a thoroughgoing study of the relation between the founding categories of the two cultural systems: does a media event, attracting a powerful ritualization of media coverage, also involve a media content sacralization? Does the call for religious archetypes covered by dramatic events also involve a sacred perspective on those events and on their major actors? Does the mitologization of the journalistic discourse bring along a sacred sense/meaning?

The Bucarest workshop aims to become platform for debating the relations between sacred and profane, as they are (inter)mediated by the contemporary press. The participants are invited to address issues such as religious phenomena mediatization; using religious archetypes in media, advertising and public relations; nline religion and media; media rituals and media events; rituals of media consumption, media revelations and religious/sacred secrets; median anthropology – from the perspective of the sacred and profane categories.

The workshop is organized by the Media and Religion TWG of ECREA (European Communication Research and Education Association), in cooperation with the Doctoral School in Media Studies of Bucharest University and the AFCOM (Association of Educators in Journalism and Communication) and will be held in Bucarest (Romania) on October 11 and 12, 2013.

Deadlines:

a. May 15 for abstracts (up to 500 words)

b. June 30 for Scientific Committee confirmations

c. September 15, 2013 for full papers

Send your abstract to Docent, PhD. Johanna Sumiala University of Helsinki (chair, and Media

and religion TWG coordinator) at

Johanna.Sumiala@helsinki.fi and Professor Mihai Coman University of Bucharest (vice-chair) at mcoman53@yahoo.com

Scientific committee

Stefan Bratosin, Université Paul Valéry de Montpellier 3, France

Mia Lovheim, Uppsala University, Sweden

Knut Lundby, Lund University, Sweden

Eric Rothenbuhler, Webster University, USA

Johanna Sumiala, University of Helsinki, Finland

The best papers will be published in Revista romana de journalism si Comunicare, which is included in EBSCO, ProQuest and Scopus databasis

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