RT Article T1 Karaoke, Imitatio Prominentis, and Imitatio Dei JF Journal of religion and popular culture VO 30 IS 2 SP 131 OP 138 A1 Meinhold, Roman LA English PB University of Saskatchewan YR 2018 UL https://www.ixtheo.de/Record/1583824367 AB This article investigates the relation between the religious concept imitatio dei and the popular cultural phenomenon, karaoke, which is extremely popular all around the world but, in particular, in Asia. Imitatio dei, the imitation of divinity, can be linked to karaoke by tracing both phenomena back to a philosophic-anthropological feature: imitatio prominentis, the imitation of outstanding persons. According to research findings in comparative religion, imitatio dei, the imitation of god(s) in cultic-religious contexts, is found in several religious rituals in diverse cultures—for example, in transition rituals such as birth, initiation, marriage, and funeral rituals. It can be inferred that imitatio dei is a sub-phenomenon of imitatio prominentis, the imitation of outstanding beings or persons. It can be shown that imitatio prominentis is a philosophic-anthropological datum or a part of human nature. Karaoke must be rendered as a popular cultural manifestation of imitatio prominentis. The investigation takes a transdisciplinary-synthetic approach interweaving research findings from cultural critique, cultural studies, art theory, philosophical anthropology, and comparative religious studies. K1 Entertainment K1 Imitatio Dei K1 imitation of celebrities K1 Karaoke K1 Music K1 Philosophical Anthropology K1 recreational singing K1 Religion K1 Rituals K1 therapeutic singing DO 10.3138/jrpc.2017-0010