Sacred Snaps
Photovoice for Interfaith Engagement
William L Sachs author Catherine Holtmann author Roman R Williams author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publishing:25th Nov '24
£36.99
This title is due to be published on 25th November, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
Sacred Snaps tells the story of a new approach to interfaith engagement. It is an invitation to see and engage religion, diversity, and inclusion through the lens of the mobile phone camera. These days, just about everyone owns a camera equipped cell phone. What if we recruited these cameras for the common good? When religion shows up in everyday life—at work, school, the mall, or the beach—often it is not welcome. At a time when so much of the public discourse is around equity, diversity, and inclusion, religion seems peripheral to the conversation. Many embrace the wisdom that our workplaces, schools, and communities are enhanced when people can bring their whole selves into every aspect of their daily lives. But religion and spirituality are not gaining the same ground as other aspects of diversity such as race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and ability. To be more fully included in the cultural conversation about human flourishing, religion needs to be seen and heard in new ways. The old paradigm of interreligious dialogue is no longer adequate. A new paradigm focused on building relationships at the grass roots of daily life is emerging. This cutting-edge volume brings together Christians and Muslims in the United States and Canada to explore what their beliefs, practices, and values look like in everyday life.
‘This book will open your eyes—to the often-overlooked presence of sacred times and places in everyday life, to the possibilities opened up by that ever-present camera in our pockets, and most of all to the common ground that can be found when ordinary people of different faiths show each other what their life of faith looks like. It is a brilliant exploration that is as solidly theoretical as it is excitingly practical.’
Nancy T. Ammerman, Professor Emerita, Boston University, author of Studying Lived Religion: Contexts and Practices
‘Sacred Snaps showcases the many features of interfaith dialogue—that it breaks stereotypes, gives resilience to pluralism, and deepens participants' own commitments—with a twist. It does so through everyday experiences with the use of new technologies. As a creative method for grassroots engagement, blending visual sociology with structured dialogue, photovoice enhances religious literacy by transforming ordinary experiences into extraordinary ones.’
Mahan Mirza, Executive Director, Ansari Institute for Global Engagement with Religion and Teaching Professor, Keough School of Global Affairs, University of Notre Dame
‘This important new book provides interreligious practitioners with a user-friendly methodology for meaningful engagement across differences. The authors do so without losing sight of what is central to this work: people. Individual and communal relationships will always be at the heart of the interreligious movement. Roman, Cathy, and Bill help us think anew about how to cultivate, nourish, and sustain relationships in our interconnected and interdependent world.’
Or Rose, Founding Director of the Betty Ann Greenbaum Miller Center for Interreligious Learning and Leadership, Hebrew College
'In many western liberal democracies today, inter-faith initiatives are used to bridge the gap between people of different religious backgrounds. Such approaches often suffer from a lack of creativeness and imagination, as well as elitist and top-down approaches, not to mention the fact that they typically preach to the choir. Sacred Snaps is a breath of fresh air: it puts religion at the center of the conversation and uses an innovative methodology to bring life to inter-faith initiatives. Written by long-time researchers and practitioners in this area, the book is a trailblazer for new ways of thinking about life in religiously diverse environments, such as Canada and the United States. It is a must-read for students of religion, sociology, and multiculturalism.'
Abdolohammad Kazemipur, Professor of sociology and Chair of Ethnic Studies at University of Calgary, and a past president of Canadian Sociological Association
‘In an increasingly polarised world, Sacred Snaps is an illuminating exploration of how photography can be leveraged to build connections through everyday interfaith engagement. Using an innovative application of photovoice, this book re-imagines the way we perceive and discuss religion and can use images to foster empathy and understanding. By inviting individuals to capture and share moments of spiritual significance in their daily lives, Sacred Snaps reveals how we can explore our differences and discover what links us all, regardless of faith. This original interfaith photovoice method roots religion in tangible, lived experiences. In doing so, it provides a much-needed roadmap for building bridges between faiths and promoting dialogue at a time of divisions. The book is a must-read for anyone interested in interfaith relations, visual methods and committed to building a more inclusive world in which our differences are viewed as a source of unity rather than division.’
Tiffany Fairey, Senior Research Fellow, Kings College London
‘I’ve witnessed the power of photovoice to help bridge the world's deepest divides. Sacred Snaps makes a compelling case for how smartphone photography and structured dialogue can nurture interfaith understanding. The wisdom and the stories of hope that you will find in these pages are what we need now more than ever. Read it, be inspired by it, take it into your communities, and imagine a better future together.’
John Sarrouf, Co-Executive Director, Essential Partners
‘Sacred Snaps is an important and grace filled book that explores a new approach to interfaith engagement. Using photographs as a means of both artistic expression and personal encounter, this approach enables participants to stand in each other's shoes in a very existential way. Utilizing the mobile phone camera, each participant is invited to see through the other's eyes so that individuals from different faith traditions might understand one another more deeply. Sacred Snaps examines this exciting and creative approach to interfaith conversations at a time when constructive conversations are needed more than ever.’
Randolph Marshall Hollerith, Dean of the Washington Cathedral
‘In Sacred Snaps, Williams, Holtmann, and Sachs proffer an innovative study of grassroots interfaith engagement in pluralistic US and Canadian environs through the lens of photovoice. Exploring political polarization, race, socioeconomic inequality, gender and sexuality, and more, their work offers a compelling picture of myriad embodiments of religious and spiritual life.’
Celene Ibrahim, Faculty Member and Chaplain, Groton School, author of Islam and Monotheism and Women and Gender in the Qur'an
‘Sacred Snaps demonstrates that sociology can be a force for good. This accessibly written book is a wonderful example of applied visual sociology. It offers a novel and compelling approach for building a common vision for the common good in the workplace, organizations, communities, and beyond.’
Brian Grim, President, Religious Freedom and Business Foundation
‘I suspect many readers will find these photographs and the stories around them humbling in that they take the reader into the hands and minds of ordinary religious insiders. This book shows us how people literally frame and story their worlds. Not only does this help uncover new features of the people and communities that interest us, but it also demonstrates the value of ubiquitous technologies such as smartphones for the study of religion.’
Paul Bramadat, Professor and Director, Centre for Studies in Religion and Society, University of Victoria
‘During a time when cameras increasingly exacerbate our divisions and amplify narcissistic impulses, photovoice represents a new way of looking at ourselves from the outside in and within the webs of our relationships with others. Indeed, the book demonstrates that tiny but powerful cameras on our phones can be repurposed to help us bind together, which is one of the meanings of religion. By seeing others, we see ourselves and the many threads that connect us, thus augmenting our self-consciousness and galvanizing our bonds with those different from us. Photovoice holds much promise in revolutionizing the study of religion and society. I do not know many scholars or practitioners who have perfected such a cutting-edge tool as the authors of this book.’
Mohammed Mohammed, Senior Program Officer, Fetzer Institute
‘In a time when more Americans and Canadians than ever before have access to cameras on their smartphones, and when religion and politics can seem more polarized than ever, the authors of Sacred Snaps have introduced their innovative photovoice project. Based in three cities and drawing on Christian and Muslim participants’ photos, interviews and Williams, Holtmann and Sachs’ observations and theories on ecumenism and lived religion, the project’s contents were clearly meaningful to its participants. Sacred Snaps masterfully weaves together participants’ stories and photographs with scholarly content. I would recommend it to folks working in/on ecumenism, scholars of lived religion in Canada and the US, and to all readers interested in evocative stories and images.’
Jennifer A. Selby, Professor, Memorial University
‘We need these tools in our businesses, universities, and communities. Sacred Snaps presents a framework that can help us see each others’ dignity across our differences. Building on the truth that we are all better positioned to contribute in our many contexts when we can live according to our personal beliefs—be it at work, in educational contexts, or our communities—and recognizing that religious expression manifests itself everywhere, the frameworks and experiences presented in this book offer tools to better understand each other and build bridges across religious difference in everyday contexts, and in a time when we need it most.’
Paul Lambert, Director, Religion Initiative at the Wheatley Institute, Brigham Young University
‘As this book illustrates very well, people who participate in photovoice for interfaith dialogue will discover a dynamic relationship between similarity and difference as they share photos, experiences, concerns, and stories and become acquainted with the person behind the camera. The photos, captions, and stories shared in the book provide a window into the value of interfaith dialogue at multiple levels, including the personal, and show how interfaith photovoice exhibits can become calls to action for greater understanding and positive change. The book’s conversational style and real-life stories will encourage people doing important interfaith work to envision photovoice projects of their own.’
Laura Lorenz, Co-founder of Photovoice Worldwide and Visiting Research Scholar at Brandeis University
ISBN: 9781032856643
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 390g
194 pages