"Å være kirke på nett". En sosialsemiotisk undersøkelse av nettpresentasjonene til de skandinaviske folkekirkene

This article examines the official web presentations of the majority churches in Denmark, Sweden and Norway. These three Scandinavian folk churches experience a decline in membership and are challenged by religious change as well as changes in the media landscape. The textual representations of the...

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Main Author: Anne M. Foss
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Aalborg Universitetsforlag 2020-07-01
Series:Globe
Online Access:https://130.225.53.24/index.php/globe/article/view/5878
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spelling doaj-857286ab7edf4f7ba4cfe9b282df10852021-01-26T14:13:41ZdanAalborg UniversitetsforlagGlobe2246-88382020-07-0110"Å være kirke på nett". En sosialsemiotisk undersøkelse av nettpresentasjonene til de skandinaviske folkekirkeneAnne M. Foss0Universitetet i Agder This article examines the official web presentations of the majority churches in Denmark, Sweden and Norway. These three Scandinavian folk churches experience a decline in membership and are challenged by religious change as well as changes in the media landscape. The textual representations of the three websites are studied using tools developed within social semiotics and systemic functional grammar. The aim of the article is to gain new insights into how the churches choose to communicate with the public, and in particular how the role of the churches is constructed in the web presentations. Although there are some variations, the findings suggest that the web sites are mainly used to present information about the churches and their activities, and not to evangelize or to provide an opportunity for sharing religious beliefs and practices. By examining the speech acts, we see how the speaker mainly, but not exclusively, takes on the role of supplier of information, and thereby requiring the listener to adopt the complementary role of receiver. The extent to which the putative reader is constructed as someone who shares the Christian faith varies, and might, in part, be dependent on the membership numbers of the respective church. https://130.225.53.24/index.php/globe/article/view/5878
collection DOAJ
language Danish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anne M. Foss
spellingShingle Anne M. Foss
"Å være kirke på nett". En sosialsemiotisk undersøkelse av nettpresentasjonene til de skandinaviske folkekirkene
Globe
author_facet Anne M. Foss
author_sort Anne M. Foss
title "Å være kirke på nett". En sosialsemiotisk undersøkelse av nettpresentasjonene til de skandinaviske folkekirkene
title_short "Å være kirke på nett". En sosialsemiotisk undersøkelse av nettpresentasjonene til de skandinaviske folkekirkene
title_full "Å være kirke på nett". En sosialsemiotisk undersøkelse av nettpresentasjonene til de skandinaviske folkekirkene
title_fullStr "Å være kirke på nett". En sosialsemiotisk undersøkelse av nettpresentasjonene til de skandinaviske folkekirkene
title_full_unstemmed "Å være kirke på nett". En sosialsemiotisk undersøkelse av nettpresentasjonene til de skandinaviske folkekirkene
title_sort "å være kirke på nett". en sosialsemiotisk undersøkelse av nettpresentasjonene til de skandinaviske folkekirkene
publisher Aalborg Universitetsforlag
series Globe
issn 2246-8838
publishDate 2020-07-01
description This article examines the official web presentations of the majority churches in Denmark, Sweden and Norway. These three Scandinavian folk churches experience a decline in membership and are challenged by religious change as well as changes in the media landscape. The textual representations of the three websites are studied using tools developed within social semiotics and systemic functional grammar. The aim of the article is to gain new insights into how the churches choose to communicate with the public, and in particular how the role of the churches is constructed in the web presentations. Although there are some variations, the findings suggest that the web sites are mainly used to present information about the churches and their activities, and not to evangelize or to provide an opportunity for sharing religious beliefs and practices. By examining the speech acts, we see how the speaker mainly, but not exclusively, takes on the role of supplier of information, and thereby requiring the listener to adopt the complementary role of receiver. The extent to which the putative reader is constructed as someone who shares the Christian faith varies, and might, in part, be dependent on the membership numbers of the respective church.
url https://130.225.53.24/index.php/globe/article/view/5878
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