Media, Religion, and the Public Sphere
Abstract
:1. Religion and Public Sphere—Theoretical Frame
- RQ 1: In which situations can a public sphere be created within religious institutions or ceremonies?
- RQ2: Which circumstances lead the media to cover specific events using a religious discourse, and to set public sphere debates into a religious vocabulary?
- RQ 3: What are the means of journalistic discourse that contribute to the sacralization of these events and the set of the public sphere in a religious frame?
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- The situations where the public sphere is built within religious institutions or ceremonies of a religious nature; field research (anthropological, sociological, and historical) leads to the identification of the concrete forms in which the public sphere was embedded in ceremonial manifestations with a religious underlayer.
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- The situations where, in the modern and post-modern world, the public sphere is built through the mass media or social media, through a discourse loaded with religious terms, references, and symbols; in such cases, we are no longer dealing with existing religions, but with ad hoc discursive constructs firmly anchored in the religious imaginary.
2. Religion Integrating the Public Sphere
In addition, as highlighted by Friedland (2002, p. 393) “religion is perhaps the only language in which ordinary people can reach the public sphere” and “religious institutions often constitute the closest thing to a civil society, an arena for sociality, collective organization and the provision of services outside state control”; as a consequence, we can identify two complementary situations: (a) the appearance of certain public sphere generated by various religious events and (b) the existence of certain public spheres inside certain religious institutions or ceremonies.“The public sphere cannot be the form of a singular, albeit universalizing, tradition. The notion of the public sphere can regain theoretical coherence and conceptual plausibility—also for framing empirical analysis—only if carefully reconstructed by drawing on the conceptual resources of a plurality of partly overlapping and partly conflicting discursive traditions”.
The religious language and the religious ceremonial setting were thus used as instruments of political dialogue. Hoexter (2002) shows that, in the Islamic world, waqf (endowments) made by people from all social layers contributed not only to ensuring public services but also to the discussion of values, norms, and political circumstances: “Study of the waqf reveals a very lively public sphere, involving rulers, governors, and senior officials, side by side with all strata of the Muslim community—rich and poor, male and female—all of them participating in the creation and improvement of the public space” (p. 134).These public spheres were arenas in which different sectors of the society could voice their demands in the name of the basic premises of Islamic vision. Indeed, the dynamics of these public spheres cannot be understood without taking into account the crucial importance in them of the place of the community, rooted also in the basic premise of Islam, that of the equality of all believers and of their access to the sacred—conceptions that have necessarily given members of the community a right to participate, if not in the political arena, certainly in the communal and religious ones, in the promulgation and voicing of norms of public order.
Starting from the idea that the anthropologists’ mission is “to examine the ways in which agencies and structures engaged in development designate public spheres for presenting and contesting the political, and the manner of creating publics that produce and consume development in varied inter-linked sites,” K. Sivaramakrishnan (2000, p. 432) analyzes the role of the disproof rituals in the creation of a public sphere in the West Bengali pre-rural populations. In the same spirit, in a classical study, S.F. Moore (1996) analyzing a political reunion from a Tanzanian village in 1973 reaches the conclusion that the meetings from Kilimanjaro function as a form of political “co-ceremony”—these meetings are ritualistically staged so that they allow the interpretation of what was a sign of political accord. Moreover, Barnes (1996) argues that the ceremonies initiated by the local chiefs from Nigeria are constituted in a court for public opinion formation; the rituals organized by local clan leaders are placed outside the official state structures, and offer a forum where individuals can express themselves, where opposed opinions can confront each other, and where, through all these, the debate of social values is taking place: “The civic rituals and activities surrounding chiefs affairs constitute a public sphere in that they take place in a socially interactive realm that stands between the private (domestic, familial) and the state” (Barnes 1996, p. 35; see also Holder 2004; Snyder 1997).“In the wara, then, the locus of political action resides in emergent social interaction, not in any single agent as in the idealized model of Western democratic tradition. The discursive interaction between senior males in the wara blurs the boundaries between individual voice and individual subjectivity, fuses individual perspectives, and erases the boundaries between an orator’s speech and the speech of others”.
3. Media Creating a Religious-Framed Public Sphere
Within the media events, the journalistic discourse brings numerous mutations: they derive from the fact that, different from the regular regime of news (which involves creating a distance between the journalist and the event, a distance globally expressed through the term “objectivity”), they generate processes of an affective merging of actors—event heroes, journalists, and spectators—with the respective events: “The conferral of media event status on a given occasion consists in pulling it away from the news and translating it in a fictional register. The result is a text which neutralizes the opposition between fiction and news”. (Dayan and Katz 1992, p. 114). In the process of transposing public ceremonies in such a format, journalists impose a new narrative coherence, an assembly of interpretations, symbols, and specific connotations, which can differ from ritualistic logic or performers’ intentions, as well as a host of new “peripheral narrations”, which can sometimes be more numerous and more attractive than the initial event (Dayan and Katz 1992, p. 83). Consequently, journalists “are not mere broadcasters or commentators of facts, they bring them to life. Thus, they appear as creators of the moment or apostles” (Dayan and Katz 1992, p. 91).“The members of a society experience the media event together: not routine, with the interruption of the normal broadcasting flow, across networks, live organized outside the media, organized by centers of power, preplanned, presented with reverence and ceremony, electrifying large audiences”.
It is evident that the media-events concept is “embarrassing” for the classic public sphere theories: it suggests the possibility that mechanisms for information, participation, discussion, and interpretation of politics are not based on the principles of argumentative rationality, but on those of symbolic thought. The major consequences of this anthropological perspective for the classic political sciences and communication theories have not been exploited enough. In this respect, Coman (2003) argues that ritual acts and discourses are ways to activate both matters of public interest and some viewpoints (expressed in a symbolic language) over those matters. This means that media events, be they restorative or transformative, are creators of public spheres—they contribute not only to the “representation” of a certain reality but also to its staging into public debate. On a minor level, the mass media is just an amplifier (in space and in time) of the audience and of the speed in the transmission of various forms of social communication. On a higher level, the mass media becomes the creator of ritual systems. The acceptance of this function of the mass media also forces cultural anthropology into rethinking the theoretical models regarding the ritual agents, the ritual invention, and the relationship between the ritual, media, and religion. The fervor by which the media takes over certain types of ceremonies and makes them public at a global scale, its capacity to create new ceremonies, to impose them as public events and as themes for public debate is not an accident, a “disease” or a media “slip-over”. This power explains the easiness by which the media contribute to the ritualizing of certain events, in other words, to their translation into a ceremonial language and to their projection in symbolic codes—to make the reading of them more dynamic, more conflictual, and more public.“What Katz’ research suggests is how important the media is for actively constructing common identities and common solidarities (…) it suggests that the media is concerned not only with the diffusion of information to a mass public, but also—and this is particularly true for media events—with the dramatization of civil society and the creation of a common cultural framework for building common identities”.
Journalists can be considered the architects of ritualistic experiences, which allow audiences to interpret the various forms of social mobilization as grand collective rites, able to express not just the interests of limited groups, but the aspirations of an entire social body; thus, by using the language of rite, journalists are creating what Turner (1969) called a liminal, subjunctive frame in which one can experience various forms of symbolic interpretation of reality and of articulation of social order. Consequently, media events appear as a concretization of social processes of confrontation and battle to master the production of meaning. This perspective places the group of journalists in the ranks of “ritualistic officiants”: in the modern world, in certain moments, through their action, they create new frames and forms and propose a religious vocabulary and significations to give meaning, in the public sphere, to those events.“I believe ritualization is a mechanism that allows journalists to establish their position and social role through their discourses, presenting themselves as representatives of Culture in situations that mark and legitimize social differences and endow the journalists (for a short time) with ‘ritual mastery’ of the processes of debating and interpreting events of great importance for the group”.
4. Media, Public Sphere, and Religion
5. Conclusions and Limitations
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Mihai, C. Media, Religion, and the Public Sphere. Religions 2023, 14, 1253. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101253
Mihai C. Media, Religion, and the Public Sphere. Religions. 2023; 14(10):1253. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101253
Chicago/Turabian StyleMihai, Coman. 2023. "Media, Religion, and the Public Sphere" Religions 14, no. 10: 1253. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14101253