dc.contributor.author
Udupa, Sahana
dc.contributor.author
Kramer, Max
dc.date.accessioned
2023-07-18T10:28:54Z
dc.date.available
2023-07-18T10:28:54Z
dc.identifier.uri
https://refubium.fu-berlin.de/handle/fub188/40133
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.17169/refubium-39855
dc.description.abstract
In India and its diaspora in the UK, online activities of various sorts—tweeting, blogging, messaging, trolling, and tagging—have become central to tensions surrounding religion's presence in public life and the stakes of belonging to the nation. Three clusters of social media practices undergird these digital mediations: piety, surveillance, and fun. Such practices reveal how internet-enabled mediations reenergize religion as a political category of difference under majoritarian right-wing regimes and the transnational context of Islamophobia, while also offering distinct possibilities for imagining politics through the pleasures, visibilities, and reflections induced by digital circulations. Rather than approaching the internet as an abstract technological context or discrete channels for communication, this analysis theoretically positions it as an arena of “multiple interfaces.” It signals contiguities and collisions that digital practice has opened up among the very real communities and structures of authority, under conditions shaped by longer colonial histories.
en
dc.format.extent
13 Seiten
dc.rights
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial‐NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
dc.rights.uri
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
dc.subject
Indian diaspora
en
dc.subject
Islamophobia
en
dc.subject
majoritarian nationalism
en
dc.subject
religious politics
en
dc.subject
social media
en
dc.subject.ddc
300 Sozialwissenschaften::300 Sozialwissenschaften, Soziologie::301 Soziologie, Anthropologie
dc.title
Multiple interfaces
dc.type
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
dc.title.subtitle
Social media, religious politics, and national (un)belonging in India and the diaspora
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.doi
10.1111/amet.13117
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.journaltitle
American Ethnologist
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.number
2
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.pagestart
247
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.pageend
259
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.volume
50
dcterms.bibliographicCitation.url
https://doi.org/10.1111/amet.13117
refubium.affiliation
Politik- und Sozialwissenschaften
refubium.affiliation.other
Institut für Sozial- und Kulturanthropologie
refubium.resourceType.isindependentpub
no
dcterms.accessRights.openaire
open access
dcterms.isPartOf.issn
0094-0496
dcterms.isPartOf.eissn
1548-1425
refubium.resourceType.provider
DeepGreen