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#CFP: Religion, Digital Media & Politics

#CFP: Religion, Digital Media & Politics

Call for papers 2026

From Disciples to Followers: Questioning the Digital Experience of Religions Online

The 2026 UCSIA Summer School draws attention to the ambivalence and enthusiasm brought forth by religion going digital, both locally and globally. Recognizing the increasing importance of digital ways of experiencing and communicating about faith, religious practice and identity, this year’s summer school focuses on the ways in which religious publics and religious forms of publicity are being reshaped by digital technologies, platforms and political economies. The online mediation of religion – whether in terms of theology, ritual, ethics, or politics – raises new questions about power, knowledge and ignorance. These questions emerge when long-standing religious traditions and their communities intersect with new industries and technologies.

The content of the summer school will be guided on the one hand by questions regarding the internal dynamics of religious traditions, such as:

On the other hand, questions of representation and (theo)politics will come to the fore, such as:

The UCSIA Summer School is a one-week mentoring programme that encourages junior scholars to explore the interdisciplinary ways of analysing the relationship between religion, culture and society. Key elements of the programme are expert lectures on theory-building and methodology, paper presentations by participants and individual mentoring by the faculty. For this interdisciplinary summer school on online publics and the digital experiences of religion, we welcome research projects from junior scholars (PhD or postdoctoral level) working in humanities, social sciences and law.

The UCSIA Summer School 2026, titled From Disciples to Followers: Questioning the Digital Experience of Religions Online, marks the end of a three-year cycle of summer schools, focused on the entanglements of religion and politics, the communities in which they take shape and function, and the injustices they entail or critique.