Squeezed out by the market, seeking strength in the network: Makeshift temples and the spatio-affective logics of survival in Singapore

This paper offers an understanding of the spatio-affective workings of religious organisations – and the marketplaces they operate in and through – that go beyond capitalist logics. We do so by examining how makeshift temples representing various forms of ‘Chinese religion’ survive in Singapore. Cap...

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Main Authors: GAO, Quan, WOODS, Orlando, KONG, Lily
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2022
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cis_research/20
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spelling sg-smu-ink.cis_research-10192022-11-03T05:18:03Z Squeezed out by the market, seeking strength in the network: Makeshift temples and the spatio-affective logics of survival in Singapore GAO, Quan WOODS, Orlando KONG, Lily This paper offers an understanding of the spatio-affective workings of religious organisations – and the marketplaces they operate in and through – that go beyond capitalist logics. We do so by examining how makeshift temples representing various forms of ‘Chinese religion’ survive in Singapore. Capitalist logics fail to explain how such marginal and precarious religious organisations, which might be ‘squeezed out’ by the market, nonetheless manage to survive amid competition. Moreover, scarce attention has been paid to how religion as a social-affective system might mediate the functioning of a religious market. This paper fills the lacuna by bringing an understanding of the affective resonances of Chinese religious practices into conversation with religious market theory. Rather than treating the market as a universal mechanism that moderates patterns of competition, growth, and decline, we focus instead on the spatio-affective conditions through which a plurality of ‘actually existing’ religious marketplaces is made possible. We argue that makeshift temples in Singapore create an alternative order of the religious market that is organised by the affective economies and interpersonal relationships within which different ritual service providers compete, cohabit, and cooperate. These temples dismiss the spatio-religious boundaries and regulation that define the neoliberal religious marketplace of Singapore by carving out sacred niches instead. 2022-10-28T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cis_research/20 info:doi/10.1111/tran.12583 Research Collection College of Integrative Studies eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University affect Chinese religion makeshift temples religious market Singapore Asian Studies Human Geography Religion
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic affect
Chinese religion
makeshift temples
religious market
Singapore
Asian Studies
Human Geography
Religion
spellingShingle affect
Chinese religion
makeshift temples
religious market
Singapore
Asian Studies
Human Geography
Religion
GAO, Quan
WOODS, Orlando
KONG, Lily
Squeezed out by the market, seeking strength in the network: Makeshift temples and the spatio-affective logics of survival in Singapore
description This paper offers an understanding of the spatio-affective workings of religious organisations – and the marketplaces they operate in and through – that go beyond capitalist logics. We do so by examining how makeshift temples representing various forms of ‘Chinese religion’ survive in Singapore. Capitalist logics fail to explain how such marginal and precarious religious organisations, which might be ‘squeezed out’ by the market, nonetheless manage to survive amid competition. Moreover, scarce attention has been paid to how religion as a social-affective system might mediate the functioning of a religious market. This paper fills the lacuna by bringing an understanding of the affective resonances of Chinese religious practices into conversation with religious market theory. Rather than treating the market as a universal mechanism that moderates patterns of competition, growth, and decline, we focus instead on the spatio-affective conditions through which a plurality of ‘actually existing’ religious marketplaces is made possible. We argue that makeshift temples in Singapore create an alternative order of the religious market that is organised by the affective economies and interpersonal relationships within which different ritual service providers compete, cohabit, and cooperate. These temples dismiss the spatio-religious boundaries and regulation that define the neoliberal religious marketplace of Singapore by carving out sacred niches instead.
format text
author GAO, Quan
WOODS, Orlando
KONG, Lily
author_facet GAO, Quan
WOODS, Orlando
KONG, Lily
author_sort GAO, Quan
title Squeezed out by the market, seeking strength in the network: Makeshift temples and the spatio-affective logics of survival in Singapore
title_short Squeezed out by the market, seeking strength in the network: Makeshift temples and the spatio-affective logics of survival in Singapore
title_full Squeezed out by the market, seeking strength in the network: Makeshift temples and the spatio-affective logics of survival in Singapore
title_fullStr Squeezed out by the market, seeking strength in the network: Makeshift temples and the spatio-affective logics of survival in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Squeezed out by the market, seeking strength in the network: Makeshift temples and the spatio-affective logics of survival in Singapore
title_sort squeezed out by the market, seeking strength in the network: makeshift temples and the spatio-affective logics of survival in singapore
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2022
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cis_research/20
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