TY - JOUR T1 - Understanding the relationship between religious practice online and offline in a networked society JF - Journal of the American Academy of Religion Y1 - 2012 A1 - Heidi Campbell KW - network KW - offline KW - Online KW - religion KW - society AB - This article suggests that religious practice online, rather than simply transforming religion, highlights shifts occurring within broader Western culture. The concept of “networked religion” is introduced as a way to encapsulate how religion functions online and suggests that online religion exemplifies several key social and cultural changes at work in religion in general society. Networked religion is defined by five key traits—networked community, storied identities, shifting authority, convergent practice, and a multisite reality—that highlight central research topics and questions explored within the study of religion and the internet. Studying religion on the internet provides insights not only into the common attributes of religious practice online, but helps explain current trends within the practice of religion and even social interactions in networked society. VL - 80 UR - http://jaar.oxfordjournals.org/content/80/1/64.short IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Rethinking the online-offline connection in religion online JF - Information, Community & Society Y1 - 2011 A1 - Heidi Campbell A1 - Lövheim, Mia KW - internet and religion KW - offline KW - Online KW - religion AB - This special issue of Information, Communication and Society aims to present current research on the connection between online and offline religion and map out significant questions and themes concerning how this relationship takes shape among different religious traditions and contexts. By bringing together a collection of studies that explore these issues, we seek to investigate both how the Internet informs religious cultures in everyday life, and how the Internet is being shaped by offline religious traditions and communities. In order to contextualize the articles in the special issue, we offer a brief overview of how religion online has been studied over the past two decades with attention given to how the intersection of online-offline religion has been approached. This is followed by a discussion of key questions in the recent study of the relationship between online and offline religion and significant themes that emerge in contemporary research on religious uses of the Internet. These questions and themes help contextualize the unique contributions this special issue offers to the current discourse in this area, as well as how it might inform the wider field of Internet studies. We end by suggesting where future research on religion and the Internet might be headed, especially in relation to how we understand and approach the overlap between online and offline religion as a space of hybridity and social interdependence. VL - 18 UR - http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1369118X.2011.597416 IS - 4 ER -