RT Article T1 The Culture-Religion Nexus: (Neo-)Durkheimianism and Mediatized Confucianism in Korean "Piety Travel" JF Journal of Korean religions VO 8 IS 2 SP 91 OP 116 A1 Han, Sam LA English YR 2017 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1812420439 AB This article aims to ask why there is an oft-made elision between culture and religion. It views Confucianism (and Confucian values) in Korea as an instance of this. Offering a critical re-reading of debates spurred by Durkheimian social science, it analyzes what I call the "culture-religion" nexus. In doing so, this article tries to suggest that prior concepts deployed to address this nexus—namely, "popular religion" and "civil religion"—may need to be rethought to consider the significance of media, and the symbolic structure that it facilitates in the crafting of individualized moral-meaning systems or codes. As a result, I suggest that religion and culture, both, operate within conditions whereby individuals do not passively receive doctrine but rather interpret and construct "lifestyles." I demonstrate how this works through a media analysis of the recent trend of "piety travel" in South Korean television programming and its "mediatization" of Confucian values. K1 Mediatization K1 Religion K1 Culture K1 South Korean television K1 piety travel DO 10.1353/jkr.2017.0014