Mediations of Religion and Politics as “Affective Infrastructures”: A Cross-Disciplinary Reflection on Contemporary Politics

Authors

  • Stewart M. Hoover Department of Media Studies University of Colorado Boulder

Keywords:

politics, nationalism, religion, race, gender, cultural studies

Abstract

This article explores the emergent politics of the 21st century through an analysis of the interactions of media and religion in these relations. It argues that to fully understand the dynamics underlying the new forms of populism emerging across the globe, it is necessary to account for them as movements of religious nationalism encompassing race, gender, and nostalgia, made possible by modern media imaginaries. The article argues that disciplined and substantive work on religion remains a lacuna within media and cultural studies, and that its explorations provide an example of how such work could address this critical gap. It concludes by suggesting a specific theoretical approach rooted in its consideration of relations of religion and media: that we think of media texts that circulate in these discourses of religious nationalism as “affective infrastructures” that do important work in making unstable and contradictory imaginaries possible and weaponizing them to political purpose. 

Author Biography

Stewart M. Hoover, Department of Media Studies University of Colorado Boulder

Professor of Media Studies and Religious Studies at the University of Colorado at Boulder, where he directs the Center for Media, Religion, and Culture.  He is an internationally-recognized expert on media and religion.  He is author co-author or editor of ten books, including Media, Home, and Family, and Religion in the Media Age, and Does God Make the Man: Media, Religion, and the Crisis of Masculinity, co-authored with Curtis Coats, and the edited volume, The Media and Religious Authority.

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Published

2021-06-29

Issue

Section

Features