Al Jazeera’s Framing of Social Media During the Arab Spring
Remixing the Spring!: Connective leadership and read-write practices in the 2011 Arab uprisings
The Islam-Online Crisis: A Battle of Wasatiyya vs. Salafi Ideologies?
Socializing on the Internet: Case Study of Internet Use Among University Students in the United Arab Emirates
Video Games, Video Clips, and Islam: New Media and the Communication of Values
European Courts’ Authority Contested? The Case of Marriage and Divorce Fatwas On-line
Unsolicited Religious E-mail: Researching New Context of Religious Communication
Most of the unsolicited e-mail is usually of business character and thus interpreted as something what teases and intrudes the privacy of mailboxes. It often ends in thrash folders, since it is considered as junk mail. However, specific number of the e-mails, labeled as spam, is represented by the messages with religious content. Religious spam mail represents entirely new form of religious communication and religious behavior - thus it deserves the attention of scholars, working in the filed of study of religion on the Internet. This paper deals with the descriptive typology of religious spam mail, distinguishing especially the missionary e-mails, chain letters and hoaxes in the new context of religious communication and Internet. The study also tries to analyze the scheme of production and distribution of religious spam, including the impact to the recipients. Analysis centered to both sides of process (producers and consumers), should be employed here due to the fact of interactivity of the Internet. Also the topics of stigmatization (black listing) of spam senders, attitudes of official religious authorities and “popular” question of cyber terrorism (terrorism online and online terrorism) are discussed here in the context of methodological notes.


