Ebook
Existing through the ordeals of the Communist regimes of the last century and then facing the expansion of the Internet and the digitalization of the present one, East-European Orthodoxy seeks to re-establish itself on the geopolitical and religious map of today's world. Dragoș-Ioan Șamșudean argues that, within this context, new religious actors such as Ortho-bloggers, manifest themselves in the digital environment of blogs and social media, driven not only by spiritual and religious motivations but also by political, economic and institutional ones. Caught between the inabilities of the Orthodox Church to offer them a safe religious online framework to express themselves and their various personal and socio-political aspirations, Orthodox bloggers become religious influencers, theologians, but also promoters of disinformation and misinformation. Șamșudean chose Romania as a case study on Ortho-bloggers motivations, based on four characteristics of this state: the majority Orthodox population, a well-developed internet infrastructure, a local Orthodox Church active online and offline as well as the Geopolitical position of Romania, at the intersection of the clash between civilizations and cultures.
Introduction
Chapter 1. From Faith to Net. Framing Religion, Orthodoxy and Ortho-Bloggers in the Digital Era
Chapter 2. Blogging Your Faith Online: A Research Design to Find Out Why
Chapter 3. What is an Orthodox Blog? An Overview of the Romanian Digital Ortho-Sphere
Chapter 4. The Personal Motivations of Ortho-Bloggers
Chapter 5. The Institutional Motivations of Ortho-Bloggers
Chapter 6. The Systemic Motivations of Ortho-Bloggers
Chapter 7. Orthodoxy: Towards Faith 2.0
Conclusion. Why Ortho-Bloggers Post
Appendix. Semi-Structured Interview Guide
“Dragos Samsudean's is not the first book on ‘digital Orthodoxy’, but it is certainly one of the most complete and systematic ones. It provides a comprehensive theoretical framework for this subject, which can be helpful in studying various contexts. Dr. Samsudean's own context is Romanian, which he navigates masterfully. This context seems to be vibrant, tense, and inspiring for everyone interested in ‘digital Orthodoxy.’”
Dragoș Șamșudean is associate professor in the Department of International Studies and Contemporary History at the same University, in Cluj-Napoca, Romania.