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1 Piety in the Pocket: An Introduction |
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1 | (18) |
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2 | (2) |
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Blurring Boundaries: Ubiquitous Mobile Apps |
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4 | (3) |
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Anthropological Perspectives |
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7 | (3) |
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10 | (4) |
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14 | (5) |
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Part I Community, Contexts, and Practice |
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2 Sufi Remembrance Practices in the Meditation Marketplace of a Mobile App |
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19 | (24) |
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19 | (1) |
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A Mobile Meditation Marketplace |
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20 | (4) |
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A Meditation Labyrinth: Labeling, Categorizing, and Experimental Encounters |
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24 | (5) |
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From Onground to In-App, from dhikr to `Meditation' |
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29 | (8) |
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37 | (3) |
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40 | (3) |
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3 An Ambivalent Jewishness: Half Shabbos, the Shabbos App, and Modern Orthodoxy |
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43 | (18) |
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43 | (3) |
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Contemporary Jewish Movements |
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46 | (1) |
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The Sabbath and the "Half-Sabbath" |
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47 | (2) |
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Modern Orthodoxy and Technology |
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49 | (2) |
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A Necessarily Abbreviated Case Study---the Shabbos App |
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51 | (2) |
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53 | (2) |
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55 | (3) |
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58 | (3) |
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4 From Self-Learning Pathshala to Pilgrimage App: Studying the Expanding World of Jain Religious Apps |
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61 | (22) |
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Introduction: Jains and Digital Media |
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61 | (2) |
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Sense and Method in Studying Religious Apps |
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63 | (1) |
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Challenge One: Sampling for an App Corpus |
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64 | (2) |
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Challenge Two: Structuring the Corpus |
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66 | (3) |
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Why App? Jain Apps in Context |
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69 | (1) |
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Themes in App Development Motivation |
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70 | (1) |
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Ethnography as Reality Check |
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71 | (2) |
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Ethnography to Contextualize Jain App Use |
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73 | (1) |
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Concluding Thoughts: Toward an Anthropology of Mobile Applications |
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74 | (1) |
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Concluding Thoughts: On Religious Apps |
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75 | (1) |
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76 | (3) |
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79 | (4) |
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5 Latinx Muslims "Like" One Another: An Ethnographic Exploration of Social Media and the Formation of Latinx Muslim Community |
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83 | (24) |
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83 | (2) |
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Background, Definitions, Previous Literature, and Methodology |
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85 | (4) |
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LMFG Cosmopolitan Identity Construction Themes |
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89 | (1) |
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90 | (2) |
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92 | (2) |
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94 | (3) |
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97 | (1) |
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98 | (1) |
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99 | (3) |
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102 | (5) |
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Part II Authority, Subjectivity, and Networks of Knowledge |
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6 "Siri Is Alligator Halal?": Mobile Apps, Food Practices, and Religious Authority Among American Muslims |
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107 | (24) |
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Methods, or What Does a Digital Ethnographer Do? |
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109 | (1) |
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Muslims and Food Practices |
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110 | (2) |
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Authority and Community in the Muslim American Digital Context |
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112 | (3) |
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Scan Halal, a Food Finder App Case Study |
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115 | (4) |
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Zabihah, a Food Site Finder App Case Study |
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119 | (6) |
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Conclusions---And, Is Alligator Halal? |
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125 | (3) |
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128 | (3) |
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7 iPrayer: Catholic Prayer Apps and Twenty-First-Century Catholic Subjectivities |
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131 | (22) |
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Confession App: Lay Catholic Authority |
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133 | (5) |
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Beads App: Rote Creativity |
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138 | (4) |
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Pray App: Sacred Pragmatism |
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142 | (2) |
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144 | (4) |
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148 | (5) |
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8 Mobile Apps and Religious Processes Among Pentecostal-Charismatic Christians in Zimbabwe |
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153 | (24) |
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The Digital and Being Human: Beyond the Binary |
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153 | (2) |
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OMG's Religious-Themed Mobile Applications |
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155 | (1) |
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Online Religious Communities |
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156 | (4) |
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Religious Communities, Identities and Personhood |
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160 | (3) |
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In-App Charisma, Authority and Surveillance |
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163 | (3) |
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Mobile Apps and Religious Entrepreneurs |
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166 | (2) |
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168 | (2) |
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170 | (1) |
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171 | (6) |
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Part III Space, Mobility, and Materiality |
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9 Medieval "Miracle of Equilibrium" or Contemporary Shrine of "Rock-Hard Faith"?: The Role of Digital Media in Guiding Visitors' Experiences of Rocamadour, France |
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177 | (22) |
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177 | (1) |
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Landscape and Rocamadour's Panorama |
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178 | (4) |
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The Contested Image of Rocamadour |
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182 | (3) |
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A Portable Panorama: Rocamadour in Smartphone Apps |
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185 | (5) |
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190 | (1) |
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191 | (2) |
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Repercussions and Conclusions |
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193 | (3) |
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196 | (3) |
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10 Bringing Creation to a Museum Near You |
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199 | (20) |
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The Creation Museum Model |
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200 | (2) |
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Creationism, Museums, and the Quest for Cultural Reproduction |
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202 | (2) |
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204 | (1) |
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205 | (4) |
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209 | (5) |
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214 | (1) |
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215 | (4) |
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11 The JW Library App, Jehovah's Witness Technological Change, and Ethical Object-Formation |
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219 | (22) |
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220 | (2) |
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"Living a Spiritual Life," Ethical Subject-Formation, and Extending the Ethical Object |
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222 | (2) |
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Watch Tower Artifacts and Ethical Object-Formation |
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224 | (2) |
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Changing Views Toward ICTs: From an "Educationally Valuable but Sexually Deviant Cesspool" to Using www.jw.org/ in Christ's Way |
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226 | (2) |
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A Brief Overview of the JW Library Mobile App |
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228 | (2) |
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The Daily Text: JW Library as a Technology of Ethical Subject-Formation |
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230 | (3) |
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Spiritual Haptics: JW Library as a Technology of Ethical Object-Formation |
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233 | (2) |
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Conclusion: The Medium Is the Morality |
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235 | (2) |
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237 | (4) |
Notes on Contributors |
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241 | (4) |
Index |
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245 | |