[Air-L] CFP: Chapters on the Internet and Apocalyptic Belief
RGH
rgh at rghoward.com
Mon Apr 6 14:25:07 PDT 2009
DEADLINE May 1, 2009
CALL FOR BOOK CHAPTER PROPOSALS
(Please distribute widely, and my apologies for any cross-posting.)
Network Apocalypse: Visions of the End in an Age of Internet Media
This edited collection of work by international scholars would
document how Internet communication is creating, adapting, and
recreating beliefs about an imminent mass transformation resulting in
the end of human history. How are ancient prophetic beliefs faring
in our everyday lives as they have become technologized by network
communication? How do religious communities sharing these beliefs
use the Internet? Are everyday religious believers empowered or
disempowered by Internet technologies? Are gender, ethic, and racial
divisions being broken down or reinforced? How are text-based
prophetic traditions adapting to the more dynamic and fluid
understanding of the Word in our digital age?
The answers to these questions are important for scholars from a wide
range of disciplines working on questions about how the Internet is
changing some of our most powerful and recurring religious beliefs.
Each chapter of this book will focus on a specific sample of
discourse that features apocalyptic beliefs. Comparative and
theoretical chapters are also welcomed. Methods may be quantitative,
qualitative, or a combination of both.
Chapter topics might include by are not limited to:
Christian, Islamic, Jewish, or other traditional apocalyptic
expression online;
specific apocalyptic groups using the Internet;
online prophecy and/or prayer practices;
apocalyptic games, gamers, or gaming;
apocalyptic expression in virtual worlds;
apocalyptic communication via mobile communication technologies;
new apocalyptic religious movements using the Internet;
apocalyptic ideas or discourses that rely on theories of technology
including concepts of “Gaia-mind,” “singularity,” and etc.
Please submit the following documents via email to Rob Howard
(rgh at rghoward.com) by May 1, 2009:
1) a preliminary title for the proposed chapter
2) a 100-250 word abstract of the proposed chapter
3) a current CV
The successful abstracts will form part of a book proposal submitted
in response to a request from Sheffield Phoenix Press for a series
titled “The Apocalypse in Popular Culture.” Full texts will be
requested at a later date. Sheffield Phoenix Press is an academic
press specializing in topics of religion that is seeking to expand
its catalog on apocalyptic belief in contemporary society.
Robert Glenn Howard http://rghoward.com
_______________________________
University of Wisconsin -- Madison
Associate Professor, Department of Communication Arts
Associate Chair, Folklore Program
Affiliated Faculty, Religious Studies and the Center for the Study of
Upper Midwestern Culture
Editor, Western Folklore
More information about the Air-L
mailing list