The Digital Evangelicals: Contesting Authority and Authenticity After the New Media Turn

When it comes to evangelical Christianity, the internet is both a refuge and a threat. It hosts Zoom prayer groups and pornographic videos, religious revolutions and silly cat videos. Platforms such as social media, podcasts, blogs, and digital Bibles all constitute new arenas for debate about social and religious boundaries, theological and ecclesial orthodoxy, and the internet's inherent danger and value.

In The Digital Evangelicals, Travis Warren Cooper locates evangelicalism as a media event rather than as a coherent religious tradition by focusing on the intertwined narratives of evangelical Christianity and emerging digital culture in the United States. He focuses on two dominant media traditions: media sincerity, immediate and direct interpersonal communication, and media promiscuity, communication with the primary goal of extending the Christian community regardless of physical distance. Cooper, whose work is informed by ethnographic fieldwork, traces these conflicting paradigms from the Protestant Reformation through the rise of the digital and argues that the tension is culminating in a crisis of evangelical authority. What counts as authentic interaction? Who has authority over the circulation of information?

While many studies claim that technology influences religion, The Digital Evangelicals reveals how Protestant metaphors and discourses shaped the emergence of the internet and explores what this relationship with global new media means for evangelicalism.

1139885427
The Digital Evangelicals: Contesting Authority and Authenticity After the New Media Turn

When it comes to evangelical Christianity, the internet is both a refuge and a threat. It hosts Zoom prayer groups and pornographic videos, religious revolutions and silly cat videos. Platforms such as social media, podcasts, blogs, and digital Bibles all constitute new arenas for debate about social and religious boundaries, theological and ecclesial orthodoxy, and the internet's inherent danger and value.

In The Digital Evangelicals, Travis Warren Cooper locates evangelicalism as a media event rather than as a coherent religious tradition by focusing on the intertwined narratives of evangelical Christianity and emerging digital culture in the United States. He focuses on two dominant media traditions: media sincerity, immediate and direct interpersonal communication, and media promiscuity, communication with the primary goal of extending the Christian community regardless of physical distance. Cooper, whose work is informed by ethnographic fieldwork, traces these conflicting paradigms from the Protestant Reformation through the rise of the digital and argues that the tension is culminating in a crisis of evangelical authority. What counts as authentic interaction? Who has authority over the circulation of information?

While many studies claim that technology influences religion, The Digital Evangelicals reveals how Protestant metaphors and discourses shaped the emergence of the internet and explores what this relationship with global new media means for evangelicalism.

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The Digital Evangelicals: Contesting Authority and Authenticity After the New Media Turn

The Digital Evangelicals: Contesting Authority and Authenticity After the New Media Turn

by Travis Warren Cooper
The Digital Evangelicals: Contesting Authority and Authenticity After the New Media Turn

The Digital Evangelicals: Contesting Authority and Authenticity After the New Media Turn

by Travis Warren Cooper

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Overview

When it comes to evangelical Christianity, the internet is both a refuge and a threat. It hosts Zoom prayer groups and pornographic videos, religious revolutions and silly cat videos. Platforms such as social media, podcasts, blogs, and digital Bibles all constitute new arenas for debate about social and religious boundaries, theological and ecclesial orthodoxy, and the internet's inherent danger and value.

In The Digital Evangelicals, Travis Warren Cooper locates evangelicalism as a media event rather than as a coherent religious tradition by focusing on the intertwined narratives of evangelical Christianity and emerging digital culture in the United States. He focuses on two dominant media traditions: media sincerity, immediate and direct interpersonal communication, and media promiscuity, communication with the primary goal of extending the Christian community regardless of physical distance. Cooper, whose work is informed by ethnographic fieldwork, traces these conflicting paradigms from the Protestant Reformation through the rise of the digital and argues that the tension is culminating in a crisis of evangelical authority. What counts as authentic interaction? Who has authority over the circulation of information?

While many studies claim that technology influences religion, The Digital Evangelicals reveals how Protestant metaphors and discourses shaped the emergence of the internet and explores what this relationship with global new media means for evangelicalism.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780253062284
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Publication date: 08/02/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 377
File size: 5 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Travis Warren Cooper is Research Associate in the Department of Anthropology at Indiana University Bloomington.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Media and Message
1. Media Sincerity and Promiscuity: Origins
2. Evangelical Media Ecologies from Print to the Internet
3. Evangelical Theories of the Digital
Part II: Authenticity Construction across New Media: Case Studies
4. #FareWellRobBell: Heresy Discourse and the Horizontalization of Authority
5. Feminist Publics and the Progressive Evangelical Blogosphere
6. Instagram, Authenticity, Affect
Part III: Local Technologies in a Global World
7. Emerging Midwestern Evangelicals and Digital Media
8. Media Ambivalence in Emerging Evangelicalism
Conclusion: Zoom Church, Cancel Culture, and the Exportation of Evangelical Media
Appendix
Glossary
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Daniel Vaca

In The Digital Evangelicals, Cooper reveals in greater detail and with more theoretical sophistication than any other scholar what the lived experience of evangelical Christianity looks like in the contemporary media landscape. More than that, Cooper helps scholars identify tensions that digital media technologies invoke for religious cultures beyond evangelicalism.

Candy Gunther Brown

The Digital Evangelicals is a sumptuous feast that ought to win a wide audience among historians of religion, anthropologists, media scholars, and indeed anyone who wants to understand our increasingly digital world. The book deeply engages multiple scholarly literatures, boldly advances innovative arguments based on original fieldwork in local and online communities, and presents its compelling conclusions in an easily digestible style. It is timely and timeless—contextualizing recent developments in social media, cancel culture, COVID-19, and global digital cultures to clarify their significance. The methodological essay and glossary are invaluable teaching tools.

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