Affiliation:
1. Institute of Communication and Media Studies, Pázmány Péter Catholic University, 1088 Budapest, Hungary
Abstract
This paper interprets the changing traits of religiosity in modern and postmodern societies from the perspective of spatial turn. The analysis examines the impact of social experience and action on spatial structure and how changes in spatial structure have influenced individual actions and experiences over the past decade, with a specific emphasis on the relationship to transcendence. The analysis explores the impact of the interaction of social spaces and actions on religiosity, in order to provide new insights into the interpretation of religious phenomena through a novel approach to the study of religion. It focuses on the consequences of individualisation, hybridisation, and globalisation, and analyses how these transformations are shaping contemporary religiosity in the global north. The paper argues that spatial structural changes are reinforcing more individualised forms of religiosity, often separated from traditional institutionalised religiosity. This gives greater scope to subject-organised ‘patchwork religiosity’, which inevitably reinforces a new kind of religious syncretism. The reflection unravels the spatial aspects of this transformation in a novel way.
Funder
Hungarian National Scientific Research Foundation
Reference123 articles.
1. A Christian Cancellation of the Secularist Truce? Waning Christian Religiosity and Waxing Religious Deprivatization in the West;Achterberg;Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion,2009
2. Procrastination on Social Media: Predictors of Types, Triggers and Acceptance of Countermeasures;Alblwi;Social Network Analysis and Mining,2021
3. Appadurai, Arjun (1996). Modernity at Large: Cultural Dimensions of Globalization, University of Minnesota Press.
4. Bauman, Zygmunt (2000). Liquid Modernity, Polity.
5. Faith Action on Urban Social Issues;Beaumont;Urban Studies,2008