Emoji Dei: Religious Iconography in the Digital Age

Méadhbh McIvor, Richard Amesbury

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademic

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Abstract

A recent proposal to create a hijab emoji raises interesting questions about the place of "religion" among the colorful pictographs that increasingly punctuate our texts, emails, and social media posts. In this exploratory article, we offer some preliminary – and, of necessity, inchoate – reflections on religious representation in the digital age and outline possible avenues of research for colleagues and students to pursue. Of crucial importance, we argue, are what religiously-themed emoji might suggest about the default world in which they operate; a default, we submit, that functions to affirm the normative ascendance of the secular.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)56-61
JournalBulletin for the Study of Religion
Volume46
Issue number3-4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 21-Dec-2017

Keywords

  • Emoji, religion, classification

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