African-derived religions on the Web: Cyber “terreiros” (places where Afro-Brazilian fetichism is practiced) and Global African Diaspora

Authors

  • Ricardo Oliveira de Freitas CNPq

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3395/reciis.v4i3.665

Keywords:

Internet, Afro-Brazilian religions, new communication technologies, media activism

Abstract

Through websites, mailing lists, social networking and blogs, which discuss issues associated with African-based religiosity, I evaluate the contribution of the Internet for the creation of a new social network that is being built, once the real terreiro is being replaced by the virtual terreiro. Also evaluate its contribution for the transformation of traditionally oral-centered religions into hypertext religions, as they are being reconfigured virtually, in an image-text space, hypertext space. Such facts show that there is a new reality: the democratization of knowledge (even the secret knowledge, liturgics), and the new path to establish the diasporal African-derived religious field as a space to globally forecast African-derived religions, with magic-religious services available or as a self resource ? when the Internet transforms the so-called minority religions in global religions, and they become, therefore, socially inclusive religions.

Author Biography

Ricardo Oliveira de Freitas, CNPq

Professor Adjunto da Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz – UESC, Bahia. Pós-Doutorando no Programa Avançado de Cultura Contemporânea do Fórum de Ciência e Cultura da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro– PACC/ FCC/UFRJ. Bolsista CNPq e FAPESB. Santa Cruz, Bahia, Brasil.

How to Cite

Freitas, R. O. de. (2015). African-derived religions on the Web: Cyber “terreiros” (places where Afro-Brazilian fetichism is practiced) and Global African Diaspora. Revista Eletrônica De Comunicação, Informação & Inovação Em Saúde, 4(3). https://doi.org/10.3395/reciis.v4i3.665