Pop goes religion
Author(s) -
İver B. Neumann
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
european journal of cultural studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.835
H-Index - 44
eISSN - 1460-3551
pISSN - 1367-5494
DOI - 10.1177/1367549406060809
Subject(s) - magic (telescope) , period (music) , reading (process) , sovereignty , harry potter , sociology , early modern period , phenomenon , consumption (sociology) , popular culture , close reading , history , aesthetics , literature , media studies , epistemology , art , philosophy , law , social science , political science , politics , archaeology , physics , quantum mechanics
International audienceThe success of the phenomenon may be seen as co-constitutive of the general resurfacing of religion in Europe and the United States. The first part of this article introduces Geertz's definition of the religious, which includes magic as ‘slippage'. The second part draws on historical work on witchcraft in early-modern Europe to demonstrate that Harry's world shares so many traits with the lifeworlds of that period that its self-presentation as being an evolved version of those worlds is a credible one. The article speculates that the observable de-differentiation between the religious and consumption of popular culture artefacts such as may herald an individualization of the religious that is of a kind with the individualization of magic observed by Mauss. It is closely tied to the duality between individualized reading and mass-medialized social consumption, and suits the post-sovereign subject
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