Exhibiting Faith, part II: Toward a Public [digital] Religious Studies
By Chris Cantwell
Last month a group of hackers and digital artists gathered
in New York’s most ironic borough for Brooklyn’s annual Art Hack Day. The end result was
God.js, a JavaScript based program that tacks onto your preferred
web browser and functions like, well, God. Once installed, God.js’s programming interface allows the user to input a religious
creed (or is it religious code?) for internet usage such as “Thou shalt not
‘poke’ thy brother on Facebook,” or “Thou shalt not have no gods above the Religion in American History blog.”
Break these commandments, and you face the wrath of God.js. On Facebook too much? God.js
plagues your screen with boils, frogs, or flies. Checking ESPN.com more than
this fine blog? Your web browser crashes as God.js
opens tab after tab of GIF-driven hellfire. Users are invited to code their own
“scripture language interface” and share it on GitHub, allowing for the emergence
of new browser-based religions as followers try to decipher your command(ments).
While this all may seem like one big crass practical joke, God.js’s creators claim to be trading in
much deeper stuff. As they note in the project’s description, they designed God.js as a way “to explore the idea of
religious instruction as machine.” Where others may look upon God.js’s emphases on rules and discipline
and exclaim “That’s not what religion is!” God.js
playfully asks “Why not?” American evangelicalism, after all, is no
stranger to web filters that block impious material and exact judgment by
emailing peers. But beyond such mischievous juxtaposition, God.js’s collaborative, yet autonomous, nature pushes its
interpretive reach even further. As a semi-sovereign computer program vested
with a kind of latent agency by the individuals who create, follow, install,
contribute to, obey, discuss, and even uninstall this patchwork of JavaScript, God.js’s “relationship” with its users
is not unlike the sacred figures and holy beings that inhabit the lives of more
traditionally religious communities.
God.js giveth, and God.js taketh away.
This ability to mock, explore, and interrogate the category
of “religion” is, I think, God.js’s most
intriguing contribution. It is also the central question of the field of
religious studies. But where God.js
has been the subject of write-ups by publications as varied as The Verge, the vast majority of religious
studies scholarship typically does not crack broader public discourses. In my
previous post, I suggested that there are important scholarly connections
between the fields of public history and religious studies that have yet to be
explored. Collective memory and public commemoration have been driving forces
of American religious history, I argued. But here, I’d like to focus on how
there are also important professional connections between the work of public
history and the field of religious studies. For in this climate of austerity,
where the humanities are in crisis and the relevance of the liberal arts is
openly questioned, it is incumbent upon scholars to make public engagement a
vital component of their academic profile. And the web, I think, provides one
of the most exciting outlets to realize this mission.
American religious history, of course, is no stranger to the
web. John Corrigan and Tracy Leavelle’s French
and Spanish Missions of North America project (which had the help of RiAH’s own Art Remillard) and the
University of Virginia’s Institute for
Advanced Technology in the Humanities’ Salem Witchcraft project
were some of the first digital history projects published. The massive
transcription projects of noted religious figures such as Jonathan Edwards and Joseph Smith have also migrated
online, providing searchable databases of key primary sources. And, of course,
there is Paul Harvey’s own pioneering work in fashioning this blog as a space
for public discussion of serious academic work. But in the rapidly emerging
field of the digital humanities, the study of religion is distressingly absent.
While a number of projects currently flourish that mine the topics of Civil War
newspapers, recreate the
landscape of Harlem during the Great Migration, or visualize Francis Bacon’s
centrality to the early modern scientific world, projects that make religion or
American religious history as their primary object of study are few and far
between. (The latter project, titled “Six Degrees of Francis Bacon,” wins the
award for best DH title in the world.)
The lack of digital humanities research within religious
history or religious studies is unfortunate in part because of the scholarly
and interpretive possibilities DH can open for the field. Over at the Juvenile
Instructor, Tona Hangen has dreamed up
an entire list of digital Mormon studies projects, from topic modeling Mormon
diaries to analyzing the networks of Mormon publishers. One could easily export
her ideas to other religions. How great would it be to visualize the networks
of liberal and orthodox Protestant theologians over a period of time to see
just how final the Fundamentalist-Modernist controversy was? Or make a deep map
of an urban Archdiocese to explore the complexity of American Catholicism?
This kind of public connection—and contribution—is vital in
age in which newspapers openly flaunt the supposed uselessness of a degree in
religious studies and state legislatures consider shuttering humanities
departments. But it is also a mutually beneficial endeavor.
So what about everyone else? What other outlets do you see
that could contribute to a publicly engaged religious studies.
Comments
http://oaopenaccess.wordpress.com/2013/03/28/conversation-with-two-religious-studies-scholars-on-committee-at-open-library-of-humanities/