%0 Book Section %B RItual, Media, and Conflict %D 2011 %T Performing Rituals in Virtual Worlds – A Contested Field %A Heidbrink , S %A Radde-Antweiler, K. %A Miczek, N %K ritualized media %K Rituals %K Virtual %X Rituals can provoke or escalate conflict, but they can also mediate it and although conflict is a normal aspect of human life, mass media technologies are changing the dynamics of conflict and shaping strategies for deploying rituals. This collection of essays emerged from a two-year project based on collaboration between the Faculty of Religious Studies at Radboud University Nijmegen in the Netherlands and the Ritual Dynamics Collaborative Research Center at the University of Heidelberg in Germany. An interdisciplinary team of twenty-four scholars locates, describes, and explores cases in which media-driven rituals or ritually saturated media instigate, disseminate, or escalate conflict. Each multi-authored chapter is built around global and local examples of ritualized, mediatized conflict. The book's central question is: "When ritual and media interact (either by the mediatizing of ritual or by the ritualizing of media), how do the patterns of conflict change?" %B RItual, Media, and Conflict %G English %U http://books.google.com/books?id=JX_IhpLDygQC&pg=PA3&lpg=PA3&dq=Ritual,+Media+and+Conflict&source=bl&ots=1iFZveKmse&sig=kQO2xAWWQ6CEGp-UvMpqfAgypnc&hl=en&sa=X&ei=-lksT9GkHeLE2wWojMiJDw&ved=0CEcQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=Ritual%2C%20Media%20and%20Conflict&f=false %0 Journal Article %J Masaryk University Journal of Law and Technology %D 2007 %T Exploring the religious frameworks of the digital realm: Offline-Online-Offline transfers of ritual performance %A Heidbrink , S %K Communication %K information %K methodology %K Ritual %K study of religion %K technology %X Looking at the constantly growing field of religion online, the shifts in and the new definition of religious frameworks become an increasingly important topic. In the field of religious rituals, it is not only the participant, location and conduction of the ritual that is affected by this shift; also the researchers have to overthrow their former theologically resp. systemic based definition of religiousness and spirituality due to the fact that on the Internet, religion is defined and realized in a completely different way by its participants. This is true even in the field of Christianity as the example of a ritual created by some British „Emerging Church“ groups shows. These loosely defined groups which span all denominational borders of the Christian spectrum have been established since the late 1980s mainly in the UK in order to organize church services they refer to as „Alternative Worship“. The Internet plays an important role as a platform of communication and (self-)organization of the members and as technically and aesthetically challenging means of (re)presentation. Some events that were conducted in real life, like the multimedia labyrinth installation in St Paul`s cathedral in 2000, have even been „reconstructed“ in virtual space , generating a new form of worship. Interestingly but not unexpectedly, these transfer processes entail consequences for spirituality in real life. What exactly happens during the transfer into the digital realm? What are the interdependencies between offline and online and how do they affect worship and worshippers? These questions will be followed, employing the results and ideas of modern Ritual and Religious Studies, sheding light on a new field of (post)modern Christianity. %B Masaryk University Journal of Law and Technology %V 1 %G English %U http://www.digitalislam.eu/article.do?articleId=1703 %N 2