Skip to content

Navigating Sacred Soundscape in the Post-Secular Age: A Critical Analysis of the (Re)Production and Consumption of Digital Non-Traditional Religious Music Among Chinese Youth

Wenwei Long

Religions February 13, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3390/rel17020230 via OpenAlex

Summary

Chinese youth, who generally do not identify with formal religions, engage with digital non-traditional religious music like electronic versions of the Great Compassion Mantra on platforms such as Bilibili. Through 15 interviews and a year of digital ethnography, the study reveals how music and its context influence feelings of tranquility, trance, and transcendence. It highlights the unique ways these youths blend spiritual and secular experiences in their navigation of spirituality today.

Study at a glance

Design qualitative study
Sample size 15
Population Chinese youth without formal religious beliefs or affiliations
Key finding The study identifies hybridized spiritual practices among Chinese youth that combine alternative spiritual elements with secular experiences.

Abstract

This research explores how Chinese youth, most of whom lack formal religious beliefs or affiliations, engage with digital non-traditional religious music, such as electronic adaptations of the Great Compassion Mantra chant, on platforms such as Bilibili. A total of 15 interviews and one year of digital ethnography were conducted to examine how various music mediators, such as music, technology, the environment, and the cultural context, shape youth’s affective states, namely their states of tranquility, trance, and transcendence. This study reinserts musicality into the social and cultural studies of religious music and identifies more fluid, contingent, and processual forms of associations and articulations between different mediators, along with the more emergent and ambient affective states brought about by such mediators, their networks, and related mediation processes. In addition, this study reveals Chinese youth’s hybridized and idiosyncratic practices that combine alternative spiritual elements with secular experiences, highlighting the context-specific ways in which Chinese youth navigate spirituality in the post-secular age.

Tags

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment