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From Jesus to the Internet examines Christianity as a mediated phenomenon, paying particular attention to how various forms of media have influenced and developed the Christian tradition over the centuries. It is the first systematic survey of this topic and the author provides those studying or interested in the intersection of religion and media with a lively and engaging chronological narrative. With insights into some of Christianity's most hotly debated contemporary issues, this book provides a much-needed historical basis for this interdisciplinary field.
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From Jesus to the Internet examines Christianity as a mediated phenomenon, paying particular attention to how various forms of media have influenced and developed the Christian tradition over the centuries. It is the first systematic survey of this topic and the author provides those studying or interested in the intersection of religion and media with a lively and engaging chronological narrative. With insights into some of Christianity's most hotly debated contemporary issues, this book provides a much-needed historical basis for this interdisciplinary field.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Wiley & Sons
- 1. Auflage
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Juni 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 150mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 386g
- ISBN-13: 9781118447383
- ISBN-10: 1118447387
- Artikelnr.: 42296253
- Verlag: Wiley & Sons
- 1. Auflage
- Seitenzahl: 336
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Juni 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 150mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 386g
- ISBN-13: 9781118447383
- ISBN-10: 1118447387
- Artikelnr.: 42296253
Peter Horsfield is Professor of Communication at RMIT University, Australia. From 1987-1996, he was Dean of the Uniting Church Theological Hall and Lecturer in Applied Theology in the United Faculty of Theology in Melbourne, Australia. His early study, Religious Television: The American Experience (2004) was influential in assessing the impact of the emerging phenomenon of televangelism in the U.S. From 1997-2005 he was a member of the International Study Commission on Media Religion and Culture. He has researched and published extensively in the area of the interaction of media and religion, with a particular focus on Christianity. He is the co-editor of several books, including Emerging Research in Media, Religion and Culture (2005) and Belief in Media: Cultural Perspectives on Media and Christianity (2004).
Acknowledgements xi Introduction 1 What's this book about? 1 What do we
mean by Christianity? 2 What do we mean by media? 4 Media and the
historical development of Christianity 7 1 In the Beginning 10 The social
and media context 11 Jesus in his media context 14 Remaking Jesus in speech
and performance 22 2 Making Jesus Gentile 28 Context: the media world of
the Roman Empire 28 Early Christian writing 30 Paul and letter writing 32
The end of the beginning 39 3 The Gentile Christian Communities 42 The
appeal of Christianity 42 Multimedia communities 43 Christian writings 45
The reception and circulation of Christian writings 56 Resistance to
writing 58 4 Men of Letters and Creation of "The Church" 62 The
Catholic?]Orthodox brand 63 Tertullian 68 Cyprian 70 Origen - the media
magnate of Alexandria 72 Writing out women 74 5 Christianity and Empire 80
Imperial patronage and imperial Christianity 80 Councils, creeds, and
canons 84 Constructing time - Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History 90 The
scriptures as text and artifact 93 6 The Latin Translation 99 Latin roots
99 After the fall 106 Monasteries and manuscripts 110 Written Latin and the
consolidation of medieval Christendom 117 7 Christianity in the East 125
The Church of the East 125 Islam 130 Writing the voice 132 Regulating the
eyes 134 8 Senses of the Middle Ages 141 The medieval context 142 Making
time 143 Seeing space 145 Rituals and hearing 150 Nice touch: relics,
saints, and pilgrimage 154 9 The New Millennium 162 Marketing the Crusades
163 Scholasticism and universities 168 Cathedrals 173 Catholic reform 175
The Inquisition 180 10 Reformation 187 Printing and its precursors 187
Martin Luther 191 John Calvin 195 Reworking the Bible 198 The changing
sensory landscape 200 Catholic responses 207 Ignatius of Loyola 209 11 The
Modern World 214 The legacy of the Reformation 214 Catholic mission 216 The
impact of print 219 Evangelical Revivalism 223 Protestant mission 232 12
Electrifying Sight and Sound 237 The technologies of the audiovisual 237
Christianity and the twentieth?]century media world 240 Mainline mediation
242 The Evangelical Coalition 246 Fundamentalism and Pentecostalism 254 13
The Digital Era 261 The empire of digital capitalism 261 Digital practice
264 Global Pentecostalism 270 Media and Christian sexual abuse 276
Tradition and change 279 Conclusion 285 References 293 Index 311
mean by Christianity? 2 What do we mean by media? 4 Media and the
historical development of Christianity 7 1 In the Beginning 10 The social
and media context 11 Jesus in his media context 14 Remaking Jesus in speech
and performance 22 2 Making Jesus Gentile 28 Context: the media world of
the Roman Empire 28 Early Christian writing 30 Paul and letter writing 32
The end of the beginning 39 3 The Gentile Christian Communities 42 The
appeal of Christianity 42 Multimedia communities 43 Christian writings 45
The reception and circulation of Christian writings 56 Resistance to
writing 58 4 Men of Letters and Creation of "The Church" 62 The
Catholic?]Orthodox brand 63 Tertullian 68 Cyprian 70 Origen - the media
magnate of Alexandria 72 Writing out women 74 5 Christianity and Empire 80
Imperial patronage and imperial Christianity 80 Councils, creeds, and
canons 84 Constructing time - Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History 90 The
scriptures as text and artifact 93 6 The Latin Translation 99 Latin roots
99 After the fall 106 Monasteries and manuscripts 110 Written Latin and the
consolidation of medieval Christendom 117 7 Christianity in the East 125
The Church of the East 125 Islam 130 Writing the voice 132 Regulating the
eyes 134 8 Senses of the Middle Ages 141 The medieval context 142 Making
time 143 Seeing space 145 Rituals and hearing 150 Nice touch: relics,
saints, and pilgrimage 154 9 The New Millennium 162 Marketing the Crusades
163 Scholasticism and universities 168 Cathedrals 173 Catholic reform 175
The Inquisition 180 10 Reformation 187 Printing and its precursors 187
Martin Luther 191 John Calvin 195 Reworking the Bible 198 The changing
sensory landscape 200 Catholic responses 207 Ignatius of Loyola 209 11 The
Modern World 214 The legacy of the Reformation 214 Catholic mission 216 The
impact of print 219 Evangelical Revivalism 223 Protestant mission 232 12
Electrifying Sight and Sound 237 The technologies of the audiovisual 237
Christianity and the twentieth?]century media world 240 Mainline mediation
242 The Evangelical Coalition 246 Fundamentalism and Pentecostalism 254 13
The Digital Era 261 The empire of digital capitalism 261 Digital practice
264 Global Pentecostalism 270 Media and Christian sexual abuse 276
Tradition and change 279 Conclusion 285 References 293 Index 311
Acknowledgements xi Introduction 1 What's this book about? 1 What do we
mean by Christianity? 2 What do we mean by media? 4 Media and the
historical development of Christianity 7 1 In the Beginning 10 The social
and media context 11 Jesus in his media context 14 Remaking Jesus in speech
and performance 22 2 Making Jesus Gentile 28 Context: the media world of
the Roman Empire 28 Early Christian writing 30 Paul and letter writing 32
The end of the beginning 39 3 The Gentile Christian Communities 42 The
appeal of Christianity 42 Multimedia communities 43 Christian writings 45
The reception and circulation of Christian writings 56 Resistance to
writing 58 4 Men of Letters and Creation of "The Church" 62 The
Catholic?]Orthodox brand 63 Tertullian 68 Cyprian 70 Origen - the media
magnate of Alexandria 72 Writing out women 74 5 Christianity and Empire 80
Imperial patronage and imperial Christianity 80 Councils, creeds, and
canons 84 Constructing time - Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History 90 The
scriptures as text and artifact 93 6 The Latin Translation 99 Latin roots
99 After the fall 106 Monasteries and manuscripts 110 Written Latin and the
consolidation of medieval Christendom 117 7 Christianity in the East 125
The Church of the East 125 Islam 130 Writing the voice 132 Regulating the
eyes 134 8 Senses of the Middle Ages 141 The medieval context 142 Making
time 143 Seeing space 145 Rituals and hearing 150 Nice touch: relics,
saints, and pilgrimage 154 9 The New Millennium 162 Marketing the Crusades
163 Scholasticism and universities 168 Cathedrals 173 Catholic reform 175
The Inquisition 180 10 Reformation 187 Printing and its precursors 187
Martin Luther 191 John Calvin 195 Reworking the Bible 198 The changing
sensory landscape 200 Catholic responses 207 Ignatius of Loyola 209 11 The
Modern World 214 The legacy of the Reformation 214 Catholic mission 216 The
impact of print 219 Evangelical Revivalism 223 Protestant mission 232 12
Electrifying Sight and Sound 237 The technologies of the audiovisual 237
Christianity and the twentieth?]century media world 240 Mainline mediation
242 The Evangelical Coalition 246 Fundamentalism and Pentecostalism 254 13
The Digital Era 261 The empire of digital capitalism 261 Digital practice
264 Global Pentecostalism 270 Media and Christian sexual abuse 276
Tradition and change 279 Conclusion 285 References 293 Index 311
mean by Christianity? 2 What do we mean by media? 4 Media and the
historical development of Christianity 7 1 In the Beginning 10 The social
and media context 11 Jesus in his media context 14 Remaking Jesus in speech
and performance 22 2 Making Jesus Gentile 28 Context: the media world of
the Roman Empire 28 Early Christian writing 30 Paul and letter writing 32
The end of the beginning 39 3 The Gentile Christian Communities 42 The
appeal of Christianity 42 Multimedia communities 43 Christian writings 45
The reception and circulation of Christian writings 56 Resistance to
writing 58 4 Men of Letters and Creation of "The Church" 62 The
Catholic?]Orthodox brand 63 Tertullian 68 Cyprian 70 Origen - the media
magnate of Alexandria 72 Writing out women 74 5 Christianity and Empire 80
Imperial patronage and imperial Christianity 80 Councils, creeds, and
canons 84 Constructing time - Eusebius' Ecclesiastical History 90 The
scriptures as text and artifact 93 6 The Latin Translation 99 Latin roots
99 After the fall 106 Monasteries and manuscripts 110 Written Latin and the
consolidation of medieval Christendom 117 7 Christianity in the East 125
The Church of the East 125 Islam 130 Writing the voice 132 Regulating the
eyes 134 8 Senses of the Middle Ages 141 The medieval context 142 Making
time 143 Seeing space 145 Rituals and hearing 150 Nice touch: relics,
saints, and pilgrimage 154 9 The New Millennium 162 Marketing the Crusades
163 Scholasticism and universities 168 Cathedrals 173 Catholic reform 175
The Inquisition 180 10 Reformation 187 Printing and its precursors 187
Martin Luther 191 John Calvin 195 Reworking the Bible 198 The changing
sensory landscape 200 Catholic responses 207 Ignatius of Loyola 209 11 The
Modern World 214 The legacy of the Reformation 214 Catholic mission 216 The
impact of print 219 Evangelical Revivalism 223 Protestant mission 232 12
Electrifying Sight and Sound 237 The technologies of the audiovisual 237
Christianity and the twentieth?]century media world 240 Mainline mediation
242 The Evangelical Coalition 246 Fundamentalism and Pentecostalism 254 13
The Digital Era 261 The empire of digital capitalism 261 Digital practice
264 Global Pentecostalism 270 Media and Christian sexual abuse 276
Tradition and change 279 Conclusion 285 References 293 Index 311