Reprint

Digital and Spatial Studies of Religions

Edited by
August 2023
202 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-7800-2 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-7801-9 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Digital and Spatial Studies of Religions that was published in

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

Digital and spatial studies of religions have developed rapidly as prominent research fields over the last two decades. This “spatial turn” has rippled through humanities and social sciences disciplines, and digital and spatial perspectives now occupy a central position in religious studies. However, various research efforts have led to disparate approaches to the digital and spatial study of religions without providing integrated and synergized connections between the digitalization and visualization of religious studies.

This reprint aims to support and promote both digital and spatial studies of religions through interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary perspectives, including those of all historical periods, regions, and religions. Collectively, this reprint demonstrates that digital and spatial studies are unique and constructive ways of discovering, developing, and delivering religious studies that remain undiscovered or unaddressed through conventional research methodology. In an effort to supplement the current digital humanities in general, and the spatial study of religions in particular, the reprint presents theoretical or applied research papers on Chinese religious sites and mapping that are theory-driven, innovative, and data-based.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
Buddhist temple; Hangzhou; GIS; visualization; religion; Spatial Humanities; Regional Religious System; local gazetteer; Water Deities beliefs; spatiotemporal evolution; the Pearl River Delta; historical GIS; Buddha statues; transmission routes; Qingzhou style; Malay Peninsula; regional religious systems; center–periphery relationship; William Skinner; macro-region; hierarchy; administrative system; economic system; Greater China; digital theology; digital natives; existential opportunity and threat; irreversible commitment; religious disaffiliation; social media; Chinese tomb murals; spatial study of religions; GIS; spatial analysis; reciprocity; efficacy; exchange; religious regulation; mosques; Kashgar region; spatial distribution pattern; spatial analysis; GIS; folk religion; Xishen (the God of Happiness); spatial practice; space-time knowledge; Bagua (The Eight Diagrams); pagoda; Shanxi; northern dynasties; network analysis