Archival
- Supported by a $500,000 grant from the Henry Luce Foundation, the Public Scholarship Project will assemble an interdisciplinary working group which will meet regularly and collaborate over a period of three years. The project Working Group includes
- The Center for Media, Religion and Culture completed a study funded by the Ford Foundation on the ways religion is represented, experienced and understood through the media today. The project, entitled 鈥淔inding Religion in the Media,鈥 explored
- The Center for Media, Religion and Culture is pleased to launch the Third Spaces Blog as a place to survey and reflect on contemporary mediations of religion and spirituality. Much of what we know of the 鈥渞eligious鈥 is at least present in
- This project aims to broaden our understanding of cultural and technological convergence by exploring "media ambivalence,鈥 namely, the reluctance of individuals and communities to embrace the so-called 鈥渄igital imperative鈥 whole heartedly, sometimes
- As a collaboration between the Center for Media, Religion and Culture and KGNU, this quarterly radio show was a work of public scholarship dedicated to bringing the conversations being had at the center out to the public. With interviews conducted
- This research, supported by a grant from the Social Sciences Research Council, was a joint project of the center and the University of Colorado鈥檚 Center for Asian Studies. It developed a profile of Muslims and of Islam in the six states of the
- This four-year-long study (2006 to 2010) is part of a larger project supported by the Lilly Endowment. Stewart Hoover and Lynn Schofield Clark are co-investigators of the overall effort. The center鈥檚 focus is on questions of masculinity,
- This project, funded by the Lilly Endowment, examind how media are used as a resource in family and individual meaning-making practices. It was co-directed by Stewart Hoover and Lynn Schofield Clark, and lasted from 2001 to 2006. Hoover鈥檚 work
- This was an interdisciplinary study, funded by the Lilly Endowment that continued from 1996 to 2001. It focused on the meaning of media in family and household contexts, looking particularly at how what the late media scholar Roger Silverstone
- This was a two-year-long effort (1991 to 1993) that continued Stewart Hoover鈥檚 work on religion journalism. Funded by the Lilly Endowment, the project enabled survey as well as qualitative research, and included studies of the profession of