This is the first book to bring together many aspects of the interplay between religion, media and culture from around the world in a single comprehensive study. Leading international scholars provide the most up-to-date findings in their fields, and in a readable and accessible way.
37 essays cover topics including religion in the media age, popular broadcasting, communication theology, popular piety, film and religion, myth and ritual in cyberspace, music and religion, communication ethics, and the nature of truth in media saturated cultures.
This is the first book to bring together many aspects of the interplay between religion, media and culture from around the world in a single comprehensive study. Leading international scholars provide the most up-to-date findings in their fields, and in a readable and accessible way.
37 essays cover topics including religion in the media age, popular broadcasting, communication theology, popular piety, film and religion, myth and ritual in cyberspace, music and religion, communication ethics, and the nature of truth in media saturated cultures.
Introduction
PART 1: POPULAR PIETY AND MEDIA
1. David Morgan: Visual Piety and the Aesthetics of Mass
Culture
2. Erica Doss: Staging the Sacred, Mass Media Attention to the
Visual and Material Culture of Grief and Mourning
3. Kelly Denton Borhaug: How Do Women Internalise Christian
Atonement Symbols: Analysis of the 1996 Film 'Breaking the
Waves'
4. Ted Harrison: The Role of the Media in the Development of Modern
Folk-Faith and Popular Religious Movements
5. John Ferre: Religious Responses to the Death of Farley in 'For
Better or for Worse'
PART 2: MEDIA, MEANING AND IDENTITY
1. Stewart Hoover: New Paper
2. Hamid Mowlana: Media, Islam and Culture - and a Short Response
by Mona Siddiqui
3. Jim McDonnell: Desperately Seeking Credibility, English
Catholics, the Media and the Church
4. Philip Rossi: The Levelling of Meaning, The Religious Challenge
of the Culture of Unconcern
5. Lynn Schofield-Clark: 'If You Stay Away from Nintendo, You'll
Read the Qur'an More', Religious Identities of 'Others' in the
Context of a Christian
PART 3: MEDIA LITERACY, COMMUNITY AND YOUTH CULTURE
1. Daniel Stout: Mormons and Media Literacy, Exploring Audience
Dynamics of Religious Media Education
2. Ailsa Tomkinson: Adolescent Perceptions of Religious Identity
within Popular Broadcasting
3. Mary Hess: Media Literacy as a Support for the Development of a
Responsible Imagination in Religious Community
4. Jose Martinez-de-Toda: Youth, Media and Spirituality
PART 4: COMMUNICATION THEOLOGY
1. Peter Horsfield: Back to the Future, Media, Culture and Faith
Communities
2. John Forrest: Entertainment and Theology
3. Jeremy Begbie: Music, Media and God
4. Franz Josef Eilers: The Communication Formation of Church
Leaders as a Holistic Concern
5. Francis Plude: Communication Theology, Report on a Construction
Project
PART 5: COMMUNICATION ETHICS
1. Clifford Christians: Feminist Social Ethics
2. Andrew Moemeka: Communalism Versus Modernism, The Struggle
Between Ethics and Convenience in Africa
3. Cees Hamelink: Global Billboards, Religions and Human Rights
4. Richard Holloway: The Nature of Truth in a Media Saturated
Context
5. Bob White: A Historical Change in Communitarian Ethics, The
Emerging Communitarian Normative Theory
6. Mark Fackler: Communitarian Media Theory with an African
Flexion, and a Note on the Maelstrom
PART 6: FILM AND RELIGION
1. Steve Nolan: Representing Realities, Theorising Identity Through
Liturgy and Film
2. Linda Mercadante: Faith and Film, Teaching Theology Through
Film
3. Christopher Deacy: An Application of the Christian Concept of
Redemption Through the Cinema of Martin Scorsese
4. Jorg Herrmann: Religion in the Popular Cinema of the
Nineties
5. Jeffrey Keuss: The Sorrows of Young Annakin Skywalker, The
Notion of Bildung as Genre in Contemporary Film
6. Diane Winston: Devin in a Blue Dress or the Doughboy's Goddess?
Hollywood Images of Salvation Army Womanhood 1910-1955
7. Annalee Ward: Mixing Moral Messages, A Recipe for Confusion in
Recent Disney Animated Films
PART 7: CYBERSPACE AND RELIGION
1. Gregor Goethals: Myth and Ritual in Cyber Space
2. Anne Foerst: Myth and Ritual in Cyber Space
3. Stephen O'Leary: Y2K in Religious and Mainstream Media,
Techno-Eschatology at the Millennium's End
4. John Capper and Mark Freeman: Christian Community and
Cyberspace, A Case Study in Exposure to New Possibilities
5. Alf Linderman and Mia Lovheim: Internet and Religion, The Making
of Meaning, Identity and Community Through Virtual Interaction?
Index
Jolyon Mitchell is Principal of St John’s College, Durham and a Professor specialising in Religion, Violence and Peacebuilding at Durham University, UK. His research and teaching focuses on religion, violence and peacebuilding with particular reference to the visual arts. He has published extensively on the uses of different media arts in promoting peace and inciting violence. Dr. Jolyon P. Mitchell lectures in Theology and Media at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. Dr. Sophia Marriage is a research worker with the Church of Scotland.
'...comprehensive collection...full of interest...I will commending
some of the to the alt.worship and emerging church communities.
*ANVIL*
"...a resource for those teaching about religion and media...The
four annotated bibliographies alone are invaluable." -Teaching
Theology and Religion, 2005
*Teaching Theology and Religion*
"...the book is worthwhile for those looking for an update on
research programs at other institutions and key questions raised in
other disciplines that may be useful for developing one's own
study." -Religious Studies Review, April, July 2004
*Teaching Theology and Religion*
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