Gregory Grieve
Gregory Grieve is a professor of religious studies at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He studies digital religion, including how religious practices and beliefs are represented in video games.
Gregory Grieve is a professor of religious studies at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. He studies digital religion, including how religious practices and beliefs are represented in video games.
An April 5, 2010 first-person piece that explores the religion in video games for Kotuku-Australia. The author argues that video games and religion will always be in tension because video games place a high value on entertainment.
A July 2, 2012 article in IGN which investigates the claim that the video game Asura’s Wrath is offensive to Hindus.
Gallup’s page on religion provides a number of studies and research reports on religion in the U.S. Contact through the website.
The Reference Desk’s Religion page provides resources on all types of religion.
The University of Wisconsin Data and Information Services Center is a research organization that provides educational resources on social sciences, including religion.
Britannica.com has a religions page that provides educational resources and information on religion.
HinduNet provides thousands of resources and links on Hinduism, its history, its beliefs and its principles.
As Aseem Shukla, a doctor who is also on the board of the Hindu American Foundation, wrote at the On Faith blog for The Washington Post, that the Indian-American candidates for public office do not always embrace their Indian religious traditions.