Abstract

This article presents data from our investigations in Kristiansand, the largest city in Southern Norway, an area sometimes called Norway’s ‘Bible belt’. We investigate how social media is reshaping social relations in the city, looking especially at how social order is generated, reinforced, and challenged on social media platforms. Drawing on the figurational sociology of Norbert Elias, as well as findings from research conducted among Muslim immigrants in Scandinavian cities and their response to what they perceive as the dominant media frame, we focus this article on a less visible group of outsiders in the local social figuration: young ex- and non-religious persons. The mediated and enacted performances of this loosely defined group and their interactions with more influential others provide a case study in how non-religious identities and networked communities are construed not (only) based on explicit rejection of religion but also in negotiation with a social order that happens to carry locally specific ‘religious’ overtones. With respect to the mediatization of religion we extend empirical investigation of the theory to social media, arguing that what while religious content is shaped by social media forms, in cases where religious identifiers already convey prestige in local social networks, social media may increase the influence of these networks, thus deepening processes of social inclusion for those in dominant groups and the exclusion of outsiders. In this way, platforms which are in principle open and in practice provide space for minorities to self-organise, also routinely reinforce existing power relations.

Highlights

  • We present data from the project Cultural Conflict 2.0, which combines computational and ethnographic methods in its investigations of how local social conflict and stratification occur in local social media clusters

  • We have investigated how local social media clusters in Kristiansand and the symbols of prestige that circulate in these clusters tend to reproduce and reinforce the local social order as this is otherwise made manifest in the city’s history, its cultural economy, and self-promotion (Fisher-Høyrem and Herbert)

  • We focus on a particular group of ‘outsiders’ in the local social order, namely exor nonreligious youth

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Summary

Introduction

We present data from the project Cultural Conflict 2.0, which combines computational and ethnographic methods in its investigations of how local social conflict and stratification occur in local social media clusters. Religions 2019, 10, 611 we conducted 20 semi-structured interviews with young Muslims from Kristiansand in Norway and Herning and Copenhagen in Denmark (Hansen and Herbert 2018; Herbert and Hansen 2018), we find striking parallels between the two groups’ tactics in a local media environment they both experience as hostile We suggest that these parallels can be best understood in terms of the social dynamics set out by Elias in his theory of established-outsider relations

Elias’ Theory of Established-Outsider Relations
Social Order in Kristiansand
Locating Outsiders
Outsider Experiences of the Social Order
Public Rituals
Other-Religious Minorities
Ex- and Non-Religious Groups
Media Framing
Other-Religious Minority Tactics
Ex- and Non-Religious Tactics
Creating Alternative Spaces
Ex- and Non-Religious Minority Spaces
Findings
Conclusions
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