Exploring the social without a separate domain for religion: on actor-network theory and religion

In post-secular societies—after secularisation—it may increasingly be the case that the connecting and structuring of religious matter is done outsidedesignated religious sites and without appointed religious experts. The centres of calculation have changed and so the connections between these are d...

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Main Authors: Mika Lassander, Peik Ingman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Donner Institute 2012-01-01
Series:Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/scripta/article/view/67427
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spelling doaj-fa9b58956cda4387b37e3ee4e137bddc2020-11-25T01:14:09ZengDonner InstituteScripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis0582-32262343-49372012-01-012410.30674/scripta.67427Exploring the social without a separate domain for religion: on actor-network theory and religionMika Lassander0Peik Ingman1Åbo Akademi UniversityÅbo Akademi UniversityIn post-secular societies—after secularisation—it may increasingly be the case that the connecting and structuring of religious matter is done outsidedesignated religious sites and without appointed religious experts. The centres of calculation have changed and so the connections between these are different. The former ways of translation and ordering are transforming into new ones. By exiting the designated sites religious matter has found new freedom with the new associations and inventions in the processes of translation. Less control leads to more heterogeneous agencies and facilitates the mobility of religious materials. This less controlled mobility of religious actants can also produce an apparent increase of religious matter, but this does not necessarily mean the return of religion. In any case, this increased plurality combined with increased mobility calls for perspectives which can recognise novelty, andnot just in comparison with previous states of affairs. Actor-network theory (ANT) is about tracing the webs of associations between myriad actants whose collective actions produce what we call ‘society’. Dismissing the notion of ‘the social’ as a kind of ‘stuff ’, ANT insists that sociology should focus on the interactional processes—the circulation of ‘the social’ among human and non-human actants—collectively assembling emerging states of affairs.https://journal.fi/scripta/article/view/67427Religious changeSociology and religionPostsecularismReligion -- DefinitionTheorySocial interaction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mika Lassander
Peik Ingman
spellingShingle Mika Lassander
Peik Ingman
Exploring the social without a separate domain for religion: on actor-network theory and religion
Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis
Religious change
Sociology and religion
Postsecularism
Religion -- Definition
Theory
Social interaction
author_facet Mika Lassander
Peik Ingman
author_sort Mika Lassander
title Exploring the social without a separate domain for religion: on actor-network theory and religion
title_short Exploring the social without a separate domain for religion: on actor-network theory and religion
title_full Exploring the social without a separate domain for religion: on actor-network theory and religion
title_fullStr Exploring the social without a separate domain for religion: on actor-network theory and religion
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the social without a separate domain for religion: on actor-network theory and religion
title_sort exploring the social without a separate domain for religion: on actor-network theory and religion
publisher Donner Institute
series Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis
issn 0582-3226
2343-4937
publishDate 2012-01-01
description In post-secular societies—after secularisation—it may increasingly be the case that the connecting and structuring of religious matter is done outsidedesignated religious sites and without appointed religious experts. The centres of calculation have changed and so the connections between these are different. The former ways of translation and ordering are transforming into new ones. By exiting the designated sites religious matter has found new freedom with the new associations and inventions in the processes of translation. Less control leads to more heterogeneous agencies and facilitates the mobility of religious materials. This less controlled mobility of religious actants can also produce an apparent increase of religious matter, but this does not necessarily mean the return of religion. In any case, this increased plurality combined with increased mobility calls for perspectives which can recognise novelty, andnot just in comparison with previous states of affairs. Actor-network theory (ANT) is about tracing the webs of associations between myriad actants whose collective actions produce what we call ‘society’. Dismissing the notion of ‘the social’ as a kind of ‘stuff ’, ANT insists that sociology should focus on the interactional processes—the circulation of ‘the social’ among human and non-human actants—collectively assembling emerging states of affairs.
topic Religious change
Sociology and religion
Postsecularism
Religion -- Definition
Theory
Social interaction
url https://journal.fi/scripta/article/view/67427
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