Reinventing sacred space: From cathedral to mall
College
College of Liberal Arts
Department/Unit
Theology and Religious Education
Document Type
Archival Material/Manuscript
Publication Date
2018
Abstract
This article explores popular media as resources for judgment in how settled migrants in Europe imagine solidarities toward newer arrivals seeking entry into the region. It discusses the news and entertainment consumption of Filipino nurses in London and how this figures in their imaginary of social and political bonds with refugees. Drawing on ethnographic interviews, I argue that these Filipino migrants can only articulate a compromised solidarity: one fractured between empathy with refugees and concern about what these newer arrivals might mean for settled migrants in the city. I then explain how the media contribute to this fracturing. One way is that the xenophobia in popular media content on social media leads the Filipinos to assert their difference with other migrants, including refugees. A second is that the Filipinos deploy popular media content, especially on British television, to assert that they belong to UK society more than other migrants, again including refugees.
html
Recommended Citation
Corpuz, J. G. (2018). Reinventing sacred space: From cathedral to mall. Retrieved from https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/5947
Disciplines
Religion | Social and Behavioral Sciences
Keywords
Mass—Celebration outside the church; Sacred space—Philippines—Metro Manila; Shopping malls—Religious aspects—Christianity
Upload File
wf_no
Note
Presented at Convergence 2018, 1st Religious Studies and Theological Conference